The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 13, 1921, Page 3

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OH, NURSE! SEE _ HER SATURDAY) * She'll Ask Your Name;| SECOND NEAR SENECA | You're to Write It “Pleasures are like poppies spread, / You seize the flower, its bloom is shed” — when city will put field day for signatures to ref dum 13, The referendum is in protest of sonate bill 180, which, the tors as jsert, will menace th th of the |etate by prohibitin Hical exams ona of school ¢ wo hundred nurses and 150 doo: |tors have volunteered for the big pro tent demonstration, It is planned to Jhave three doctors and four nurses f jat each station. The demonstration will begin at noon and | Seeretary ontinue for five hours. Joseph Gilbert of the | League for the Conservation of Pub J |lic Health, estimates 20,000 referen } |dum rignatures in Seattle alone by [Saturday night ) 1 T |There’d Have Been Real Mystery Then r DOUGLAS, Ariz, May 13.—An| - _ ee - —— cerry American line rider found a sup ae ST ES anedly new grave on the desert near Mot on the trail of a mystery and several companions started to dig. They found a coffin.shaped [Dox all richt—but it was filled with Had one of atruck it, well! ites Lad Sings Wa Into America NEW K, May 123.—Wifteen. old ™ ty” Mine from Edin. 99 sang the way for his parents | hia two brothers, his sister and him If thru the red tape of Ellis Island the United § o- Hie remark Jable voice at an island concert earned |them all entrance on the eve of thelr | pawerture |Now We'll All Find How to Speak Well) LONDON, } task bh W th the vyxt" (4th century Ker ¢ “Thou seest”) and a fi pure ish, the compilation of the Oxford New English Dictionary is finished, The completed work will give more than 2,000,000 illustrative quota-| ondemned ammunition the picks Here Saturday With Elaine Hammerstein and Marguerite Clayton It’s all about a wild young man who is spending his time and money on a wild time—until one day he starts on his last joy ride (but he doesn’t know it) and is caught and “tied up” to a country maiden! They go back to the city—but the fun just starts when they hit Broadway! Strand Orchestra | Under S. K. Wineland Mr. Frederick C. Feringer on the Organ 40 yearn’ ] am en word dialect ‘ We Feature Our Music LAST TIMES FRIDAY FATTY ARBUCKLE in ‘The Dollar a Year Man’ _ NEW YORK, May 13.—Mra Emma B. Garner of Jamaica, and her next- door neighbor, William Whalen, had hot words over the location of a in the llr Pane = mill bottle, | Not visit your parents again or speak | to them as long as you live, You ew @ $10,000 suit for slander has) + never goout of the house alone, and when you go out with me you | Must go Just where I choose.” These | were the rules laid down by Joseph | Webster to his 22-yearold wife be- | fore he would take her back after |he deserted her, She haled him to | court. Lays Down Rules for Wife; ‘Nix,’ Says She LONDON, May 13.—“You must Payroll Hold-ups | Have Become Trade NEW YORK, May 13.—Payroll | holdups have become a trade, accord- | ing to W. H. Pomeroy, head of the | burglary department of the Fidelity | and Casualty Co, who says that of | $10,000,000 tn burgtars’ policies writ ten in 1920, $3,000,000 was exclusive- |!y against loss by payroll bandita, TAILORED TO MEASURE Be sure your suit is made by LAFF. nn tee of satisfaction or money back on every garment. NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR EXTRA PANTS [Woman Wears Three Pairs of Earrings) PARIS, May 13.—Three pairs of! earrings were worn by a woman at- | tending a Horse Show. Set in the | ears were rather long diamond pend ants, and around them were two pairs of very large pet rings, one | within the other. The largest was | about two inches in diameter. | | | | Austrian Princess to | Wed Danish Prince | COPENHAGE May 13.—The lengagement of Princess Margaret, daughter of Prince Waldemar of Denmark, and Prince Rene of Bour bon, brother of the former Austrian Empress Zita, hag been announced METROPOLITAN 4 starting Wed., May 18 UNCLE TOMS CABI PLE «- ROWESTR 1G STREET PARADE - i> PONIES CHARIOTS FLOATS, DOGS &* Prices, 25c to $1 <¥A7s PLUS WAR TAX MATINER SATURDAY You get honest value here— hundreds of Seattle men come to me yeag alter year for clothes, Wesley Remember the address—my store is on the east side of Third ave., between Seneca d Spring, next to old Tele- phone Building. LAFF, The Tailor 1196 Third Avenue and Noa LAST TIMES TONI jome of the tig Successes COMING SATURDAY MARSHALL NEILAN’S ‘BOB HAMPTON OF PLACER’ With James Kirkwood Marjorie Daw MALOTTE on the WURLITZER THE Yaps Yap at Blue Law BRIGHT SPOTS "| Also They Lie Today" Wings Folded SEATTLE STAR Keep The wings thy of careful The main f of chitinoun te | ity double, t of butterflies a ny work is componed hich are t inner tube filled with air and th r tube with blood, or what corresponds with bie and which circulates me 7 the time that ing from chy | from the tin comes out of the stage until it is the full ings are well formed, net, suppor 8 which 4 clothed on b ith flatte peculiarly es, arranged in overlapping rows, like shingles on a roof. Butterflies at rest generally hold their wings 1, with the upper surface in proximity, that suri alone displa the color pattern to the eye. There are fe ceptions to this general rule, wh contrary moths nearly their wings widely spread | Spots on the wings of some butter files are their of two « might frighten a bird tempted to cap- ture it. In South America there is a but terfly that goes so far as to alight upside down, when the big wing *pots make it look remarkably lke an owl Woe be to the adventurous bird that would dare attack it, so the insect must think, secure in its natural camouflage. Snoopie’s a Dog; Weighs 20 Ounces PAMIS, May 12.—A tiny black andtan terrier named Snoopie. which i# attracting notice here, can , , é ait in the palm of a hand, and Mrs. Lillian Fisher, w York, who spent a year on “Thé| weighs only one and a quarter Island of Stone Money.” She was the only white woman there|pounds. it wears a camelhair robe «ilk trimmed, with a cowl, made by one of the best Paris dresxmakers. and has a silk handkerchief in its pocket. 2 Sons Barred From Will if They Drink LONDON, May 12.—In his will! the late C. ©. Atkinson stipulated that bequests to his two sons were nal on their sobriety. He left | te of over $75,000, and stated that should either of his sons take to drinking in excess, they are to be onsidered not capable of taking care of their inheritance, Both sons are during that time. NEW YORK, May 12.—Yap may] Island of Yap, which is now the cen be far behind the times in matters|ter of a cable controversy between of dren and currency, but the fem-|Japan and the’ United Btates. She inlet and blue law movements have | went there with her husband on a kained headway there, according to| trading trip Mra. Lillian 8. Fisher. “Woman ix treated more as an Mra. Fisher was the only white/equal by man in Yap than in any | other of the South ee islands,” says | Mra. inher. “Since the invasion of mimsdonaries the natives have about given up idol worship. But the missionaries are not respected. “They take excitement out of dance, fun out of life and kick out of hell water,’ may the Yapn.” Mrs, Fisher rays the Yapa lke gin te ji but they like “today” better, “Toa |*OUere | dy," made out of fermented julces of . . the cocoanut palm, has a greater| Anti-Cigaret Law idek than American home-brews, Mra. Fisher uned “toddy” breadmaking. “The Yap women cook by burying heated rocks about the food.” Mra, | Fisher says. “It ts thus cooked slow- ly and perfectly, “The most characteriatic sight In Yap ts the betel nut bag. They con- wtantly chew betel, which is lightly narcotic and turng the teeth and sa liva red. wes “The chief diversion {s gossip.| The worst peach bloom destruction They pay more attention to detail|!* done by cosmetics —Washington than the American backfence gos- Post. Proved Unpopular DES MOINES, Ia. May 13.—Iowa foes back to the coffin nail with the signing by Gov. Kendall of a bill pér- mitting the male of cigarets to adulta. In reference to the old anttctgaret law, the governor said ft was disre- garded because it was unpopular and “entails discredit upon all laws of eimilar character.” as yeast in THE GROTE-RANKIN GQ) for it. . The Thor Electric Saved From Death by a Pack of Cards VIENNA, May 13—A pack of cards saved the Jife of Franz Sieber, ipl ggasi who was fired at point blank by his employer, Theodor Friedman, a rich | passable for foot passengers. coal owner, In the latter’s apartment. | were employed to clean the A first bullet pemetrated part of the | the ordinary cleaners refused pack. A second shot grazed Sieber’s | Jeoptirdize their only pair of boots, , cheek and ear, and Friedman : then committed suicide. The coal} A Philadelphia capitalist says owner had a beautiful young wife,jmuch money is a bad thing. whom it is there's this consolation—not wieited. Open an Account ‘at Grote-Rankin’s OTTO F KEGEL, Preeideet Pike Street and Fifth Avenue ‘The New Thor Electric Washer and Wringer rua WASHING 1A Mr will do your family washing for you at a cost of 2c per week— and will do your wash- | ing quicker, better and more thoroughly than you can have it done by hand. suy a Thor Electric Washer—a small payment down and small weekly payments will quickly pay will do an ironing in an hour that would take an entire day if you were to do it in the old-fashioned way. Come in at your con- venience and have the Thor Electric Ironer demonstrated—you will be amazed how quickly and economically it will do a week’s ironing. Sold on Convenient Terms of Payment. ‘| Street Cleaners ‘ Won't Risk Boots — VIENNA, May 13.—A 10-inch gnowe _ Vienna a quagmire of slush, Tbe drains choked and roads became said ‘he secretary are afflicted with it.—Detroit laip.” — |_ Mrs. Fisher says Yaps chafe under Jap rule, that they like Americans |more than other strangers because |they have been fairer in trade Mra. Fisher in on the lecture tet of the New York board of education. Form of Lynch Law ITHACA, N. ¥., May 13.—Enforce- | ment of college traditions tn upheld by the Cornell Daily Sun, in reply to the statements made before the fac- | ulty by Professor George Lincoin | Burr. Professor Burr said the haz- | ing of Fred Morell!, a Cornell fresh. }man, for refusing to wear a fresh. jman cap, was a manifestation of | tyach jaw. ‘Moderate Modesty Is Asked in Canada MONTREAL, May 13.—Two thou-| sand women in the province of Que bec have joined the Christian Wom en's league, organized in protest against immodest dressing. No | standard length of skirts or sleeves | | is prescribed, but members are ex-| | pected to use moderation. |Modern Girl Suits Her Per-fect-ly! LONDON, May 13.—"I would not ‘Deny Hazing Is a Suit drama of frontier days, with hun- dreds of Indians, scouts, soldiers johange the modern girl for worlds,” | spect.” |Mother Sacrifices Life to Save Son LONDON, May 13.—Called to a pond near her home, Mrs. Florence | Gibson found her 3-yearold son Al- | bert in the water. In trying to rescue him she slipped into the water and | was drowned, The boy was dragged jout by a bystander, but died soon | afterwards. 00 shades, |Booze Is Too High for Harry Lauder LONDON, May 13.—Harry Lauder returned to England recently after a | tour years’ tour of the British em- He was asked if "Yes," he $1.6 $23.0 | pire and America. he got a drink in America, |eaid, “there's no use telling lies.” | And, he added, perhaps typically, | "But you don’t enjoy it when you | Barry have to pay too much for it, you know. Fancy, $25 for a bottle of | | Seoteh!” Clerk Job One | Family 134 Years LONDON, May 13.—For 40 years clerk to Dunmow petty sessional jcourt, W. H. Devins Wade has re \tired, He and his father and grand. father had successfully held the post \for 134 years, h Beery We Feature Hartmann Luggage GHT—“PROXIES” A Mighty Fine Investment These Days Is a Kuppenheimer At the New Low Price Level ivi id Mi Eleanor Doorly, head- and horses, vividly \chistrens «as tetckenheaen = Cueate portraying School for Girls. “The modern girl is an J more brainy, more athletic, more Custer’s last beautiful and cloaner-minded. She is| 9 stand as its | often selfish and flighty, but she is thrilling climax! | certainly not worse in these re. for virgin wool tweeds and unfinished worsteds in the late gray and brown Extra-Specials for choice of a lovely line of rich Silk Neckwear. for choice of a new ship- ment of Young Men’s Spring Suits—sizes 83 to 39. Quality merchandise at sane prices isthe motto of the New Cheasty Store, heast $5.00 snowing ot Duntap and Crofut and Knapp Soft Hats. In Seattle Since 1888 owen £5

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