The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 24, 1921, Page 9

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|Alkrecht to Mount Sealskins on Clay J, Albrecht, curatorof the mu |weum on the University campus, is PRT be UNIS 8 OEE LT ELEPHANT MEAT IS FAVORITE DELICACY ROME, May 24.—The Rev. PG Harbey has a precarious job, He's LS BOOZE 4 SEL & =O SHERIFF! PUBLIC TRYOUTS FOR “WAYFARER” c | | & sketch of his weal missionary to African cannibals modeling in ¢ . i _ Eaters of human flesh still || group. ‘These models will be mount: | - Proprietor of Place Near | avouna'in te Udangut rm ed with the skins of alx weals he snot June 17 Is Set for Tests at he writes, Fourteen i at Cape Flattery recently, and will ; Bryn Mawr Arrested —[] maae a feast of nine men, a|| te pinned in the moseunn the Stadium |] young woman and her child Miss Alice Carr, whdse bronzes of! Chamber of Commerce indorse Tn a cottage on the shores of Lake pant flesh is «a favorite animals attracted unsual attention of “The Wayfarer, lassion acy, Eighteen cannibals can vour & whole elephant Washington near Rryn Mawr deputy sheriffs, disguised as customers, ob. tamed a quart of finished whisky for $5 Monday night. Nt of America,” has been given civic bureau and board of it was ahnounced Tuesday |by the chamber. Resolutions adopt at the Fine Arts last winter, sophomere at the university studied the casting for her models with Mr. Albrecht, in a and }45 gallons of mash and confiscated a They arrested John Schultz the - - Jed call upon the public of Seattie to! proprietor, and placed him in jail on | stl! SHERIDAN, Wyo.--Alberta Nerd, support the enterprime, and every & $1,000 bond, on a charge of unlaw Sheriff Matt Starwich and his dep | , 2 years, and Hubert Nerd, § facility of the chainber in placed at fully selimg liquor uty Frank Andersen conducted the the, die In flames that destroy the disposal of the pageant fnanage During their home of Frank FB. Nerd, near Ve visit they destroyed | raid ment June 11 has been set as the date for public tryouts for speaking and singing parta in the pageant. These teats will be made before commit toes at the university Stadium It is expected there will be con. niderable rivalry for parts in the big show, In addition to a queenly look: ing woman to take the speaking part of Understanding, « beautiful woman Will be selected to take the part of Mixes Columbia in the great final scene of the pageant. This chacter has no speaking part, but in the soene of the pageant ters In the spect the characters ton, The character Then there are corke Washing Theodore others prominent in |the shaping of modern history, None of these characters has a speaking | part Then there are the 28 noloista to be selected and two yodlers, who will play sbepherda, watching their | Cocks on the plains of Judea, on the |nught the Messiah in born. Another jshepherd and a couple of wise men, one of which has a speaking part, also must be selected. Seattle's wine | men now have their chance, and any Person who believes he is a shephetd of Lincoin, Why is it the all-protecting soap ? Abraham | Roosevelt: and ve protect the delicacy, the soft youthful- ness of the skin when you cleanse away the dust of the day with a soap so pure as FAIRY . asked to @and forth and be } SOAP. It is made of exquisitely pure ingredients judged } —not a trace of artificial coloring is used. You protect your delicate fabrics by washing } them with this purest of soaps! Not a thread is | Missing | weakened. You will begin to notice that your | | | dainty stockings, your camisoles, your blouses, . | Relatives | = your embroidered linens and lace curtains yre tee wearing better. You are not called upon to j renew them so often. Bric-a-brac—oil paintings—aoodwork 3 Your painted vases, your dainty knickknacks, hangings, pillow-tops, all your washable furnish- ings are safest and best protected with FAIRY eee soap. There are no harmful ingredi- doly an Kaos of Detrott ch. ‘ ents in it—and it is economical enough | p Prec geen sonore ser Boone Prag Baye J to use on the woodwork! Wott, Walt, or Wart. She ix th ” there is a hand-size cake of FAIRY daughter of Mru A Le Knox of San r Francisco, who di- recently The . SOAP for the face and bath, and lane, wists Wineitn ben “Sante . @ larger size for the laundry and | oe Feat him money to come from 4 . household use. Both are identical in ‘| de Mublngeih Yeerks, u: Cote tasks te quality, both oval-shaped to fit the ‘| young man’s money and all his| ae hand. Be sure to put FAIRY SOAP clothes from the hotel room. In the | 4 I t toda: t clothes was the ™ ‘cas and name of on your grocery ls! y the sister, Knox had to beat his ¥q way to Seattic, where he arrived Sunday night, and is endeavoring to locate bis felative, e- Mrs. Emma Clifton sought by her cousin, 8. T. Clifton, of Bellingham, who has not neen her for more than ten years, came into The Star office today in response to the notice that was printed in this column last Friday, Mrs. Brundage is now Mrs. Emma Clifton Brundage ORACLE. FAIR BANK SSREAEY) . Brundage, _SOAP pure & WHITE & FLOATING SEATTLE ST DR. LOUGHNEY’S HUMAN BAKE OVEN In Olden Days Men and Women Were Burned for Sorcery, Now Dr. Loughney Bakes People Selman, and lives at 1810 Seventh She has communicated with ber cousin, ave New Spring Styles in Faces Are Here PARIS, May 24.—Many litte pe cullarities in feminine fashions are being seen for the first time, Pol ished rose finger nails are rapidly growing into disfavor. The “pale hands, pink-tipped,” sung in Indian love lyrics, which a year ago wns the mark of Partnian elegance, are seen no more, The mode of face powders also has changed. The pow. der used now mostly depends on the color of the hair. Brunets must have |eolden or orange complexions, | blondes, on the contrary, use more |carmine effects. It in unfashionable now to have a dark shadow drawn | under the eye SWINGS AXE "ON TEACHER |Mother Chops Into School Room; Attacks Teacher ROCKLAND, Mass, May 24,— Miss Mary Gavin of Natick, a teach: in the primary grade at the North Avenue school here, put up « furious battle for her life in her schoolroom when an infuriated mother of one tf her children broke down the class room door with an axe and attacked her with the weapon The teacher was attacked by Mrs. John Crane of North Union st., ac ording to the police and schoo! au thorities The latter intend to ask for a warrant for the woman's ar CA BETTER Soap for EVERY Use | | $625 f. o. b. Detroit What Henry Ford Says About Machine Power Farming ] sine ier” ™ PRY OM CHILD SENT HOME During the morning session Miss Gavin sent Evelyn Crane home be cause of an untidy condition of her hair Anticipating that she might have a call from the child's mother, Miss Gavin locked the door just behind her desk when the afternoon session began. Soon afterward Mrs, Crane appeared and demanded admission. Miss Gavin, fearing that there would be trouble, ordered the children to leave by another door and go to a room upstairs. A few lingered be- hind Mrs, Crane pounded the door with the axe and shattered it. She chopped away enough to give her room to en- ter, and with the axe in her hand set upon Miss Gavin. Miss Gavin grappled with her to ward off the blows, The children who remained in the room were terri- fied and ran out screaming. Fred McHugh, son of Patrolman McHugh, climbed out a window and ran he nd told his father Int meantime Stanley Chadwick, an older boy from one of the upper classes, entered the room and assist ed Miss Gavin. He grabbed the axe and threw it out the window. Mrs Crane then attémpted to strangle “In the tractor the farmer now has a machine in which is harnessed one of the most adaptable, efficient, economical sources of power in the world—the internal combustion engine. “The tractor will multiply the productive capacity of each individual farm worker from three to four times over. “It will put the farmer on a par with the city manufacturer. It will put his produce-producing factory—for that is what a farm is—on to an efficient production basis. “It will enable each worker to earn so much more that he can be paid more and.still leave a greater profit for the man who hires him. It will enable the farmer to work fewer hours in the days*giving him more time to enjoy life. “T believe the tractor will make farming what it ought to be—the most pleasant, the most healthful, the most profitable business oh earth.” CANAL MOTOR COMPANY CENTRAL AGENCY Westlake Ave. at Fremont Bridge F. (Bert) Blangy, M: Queen Anne 74 Broadway and Pike St. HUGH BAIRD Fourth Avenue at James Sifeet Elliott 750 L. M. CLINE MOTOR CO. 1102 Kast Forty Fifth Street CLARK-BAKER MOTOR CO. Tenth Avenue and Jackson Strebt Geacon 53% anager Kast 320 ALFRED G. AYERST, INC. 1830 Broadway, Cor. Denny Way Kast 126 WM. L. HUGHSON 500 Kast Pike Street East 104 for Health and Beauty THE ABOVE PHOTOGRAPHED STEER, weighing 200 pounds dressed was baked to an appetizing brown in the same oven, and at the same temperature, which is applied to many sufferers who are carried to these Human Bake Ovens and who are now walking testimonials of the won- derfullly soothing and healing effects of this unique invention. One crip- pled-up old lady remarked: “After Baking treatment one feels as though Nature had rolled back the years a decade. Every nerve is tingling with joy, the bakes are entirely pleasant’ to take and I look forward to each suc- © ceeding bake with pleasureable anticipation.” - Dr. Loughney is @ keen student of the principles of curative eat ing and the rapidity with which recoveries are affected at his insti tutions is in large measure due to the careful application of the principles to suit individual cases. Wonderful benefits are procurable in Albumurte Nephritis (Bright's Disease), and it t& especially bene ficial to Diabetic sufferers and to asthma and hay fever cases. It in applied to cause the blood to approximate normal. The process of repairs ix rapid under the baking process_in all ailments where repair of tissue ix possible through normal blood. Rheuma’ in its mankind, yet all these painful diseases disappear before the super heated dry air of the Human Bake Oven. As heavy fogs, snow and ” ice disappear before the sun's rays, so all these sicknesses fly before the Bake Oven Treatment. aie NOTE—Those who find it inconvenient to go to Dr. Loughney’s © Sanitarium in Kirkland may find Dr. Loughney in his Seattle offices, where he is. @ssisted by competent lady nurses. Many patients are _ | being baked there daily, between the hours of 10 a. m. and 5 p. m Address is 405 Olive st. Suite No. 1, opposite Times building. Tele ” many forms, stiff joints, Fibrous Ankylosis, Neuritis, Neuralgia, | phone Main 6242 Fmt Nervousness, Sciatic: Catarrh, Colds, La Grippe, Constipation, Have Dr. Loughney make a painstaking diagnosis of your case, Pan Stomach Troubles, ete., etc-—what a long row of the scourges of | Write for free information and references. cs iE | Miss Gavin, leaving bruises upon her | assistance, and with Chadwick fought | to the superintendent of schools and) Mrs, Crane has created disturbances” | neck Mra. Crane. Miss Margaret Merrill, | two members of the school committee | at the school before, Miss Gavin has been a teacher _ here several years and is highly, re garded | Miss Gavin and Mrs. Crane were | a teacher in another room, also went | who arrived shortly afterward. The} | struggling furiously, and the clothing to Miss Gavin's assistance, and when | school authorities said that they in. of both was torn Patrolman McHugh arrived the three | tend to prosecute the case to the full | ALL FIVE FIGHT | women and the two boys were in aj extent of the law | |IN HEAP ON FLOOR | heap on the floor | The school authorities dismissed | Anthony Costello, a high school| The police officer stopped the|the entire school, which was in an boy, who was told of the struggle by struggle. In the meantime Janitor | uproar. the McHugh boy, ran to the teacher's! Corbett, an aged man, had sent word According to the school authorities SAVE YOUR EYES Failing Eyesight’ — Restored by Our System IT Is THE SOMETHING SIDES GLASS IN OUR OUR OFFER: A pair of i, crystal spherical lenses for eitl P distance or reading, spectacle eye glass frame, complete for one | dollar and eighty-five cents, ime] cluding examination, DO NOT DESTROY YOUR | EYESIGHT BY WEARING OR GLAS DOUBLE VISION G! OVER 25 YEARS’ EXPERIENCE it YBARS IN SEATTLE U. S. OPTICAL CO. Exclusively Optical Specialiata 1203 THIRD AVE. Glassen Repaired and Broken Lenses Duplicated of | This remarkable snapshot, just received from Germany, shows the “boss of Germany,” Hugo Stinnes, and Frau Stinnes chatting in the street with General von Hindenburg,} former commander-in-chief of the German armies and still the idol of the German people, Stinnes is reputed to be the richest man in the world. He owns scores of mines, factor- ies and newspapers in Germany. This is the first picture of his wife to reach America; les

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