The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 27, 1921, Page 7

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LAST WEEK THIS SEASON TOM WISE specially selected cast including MISS NILA MAC, in the one-act comedy “MEMORIES” By Roy Briant Direction of Joseph Hart George Austin Moor € 201 04 stories | Byron & Haig “The Book of Vaudeville” Written and Staged by Claude W. Bostock " Pathe News Concert Orchestra Topics of the Day (; Minor Officers of |Damett Is Assistant ' Labor Federation| Corporation Counsel DENVER, June 27.—Minor off} Ray Dumett, overseas veteran, Federatiod | winner of the Belgian Croix de ,| Guerre and former University of Washington debater, has been ap potnted junior assistant corporation counse! by Walter F. Meier, head of the city’s legal department as wunanimousiy elected treasurer and Frank J. Morrison was unani-| mously renamed secretary. Will jam J. Spencer, of Washington, and J. J. Forester, of Cincinnati, were elected delegates to the British FOR ALL BOYS AND All you have to do is get two new subscrip- tions for The Star. Get your friends and neighbors who are not now having The Star de- livered to their homes to give you their order for The Star. Have them sign the subscription blank printed in this ad and then bring to The Star office and secure your fireworks. Re- member, all subscriptions must be for NEW subscribers. ICHINA BOY VOTUM DAN LAND Crown to the Genial Dan, but, alas, the contest has another Haven J. Titus, leader in the Homely Man contest, is getting winded. week 0 go. Hazen threatened Friday to see sink all his competitors in a sea Down in the Lyon building, of gold, but all that arrived was ambition is stirring the breast & bill of fareto-middling propor of Tom Page, attorney and bon tions, And it takes more than vivant. He would like to sit next a ftom bill to swing this here to and crown the Queen of election! Beavty on the Fourth of July, Uniess Hagen’s loyal bean but he faars that he is too hand. stingers can deal out more ple some, Evidently he has not money, the man who invented heard that a dotlar will buy a advertising will have to cat a hundred votes, and that an great, big, raw potato, Apollo with gold may win out eee from an empty-pocketed Dan Landon’s strength reaches Turpin. from Fremont to Georgetown. that all proceeds He numbers his admirers by the American Legion thousands. Monday a letter ar “ bureau for war rived from 9 friend in China We hereby accept Thomas’ : ination. town. It said: et “All Chinese. boys vote for Mister Daniel Landon. He look We got this letter from one Montana Pete; all same Chimpanzee!" This alone, without the ac- “I know Strawberry Wall and companying fat green bill, would will say he is some homely, I be almost enough to persuade the cast 10 votes for Strawberry and Jndge to hand the Raspberry one for Sam Shull.” WOMAN HALTS GOB Yo-ho and a Blare of Jazz Too Much; * 8 * * “Hooray, hooray for the navy!” _2 . Which, being interpreted, means | |that members of the Fourth divi: | sion, Seattle naval reserve, who crutsed the uncharted waters of Pu- | get sound Sunday, are convinced that the sailor’s lot is pot such a/ ° bad one, after all. 1 > Notwithstanding the musical bed | | | * * The navy’s the life for me!” wk ite tow . “57 BAL ‘ibibo 5 N | dition that the bell in the lighthouse rings, ding dong. ar | When U, 8 Eagleboat No. 57 |hoisted anchor and steamed awnay| !t was during thelr stay op the i» | from the Bell st. terminal, at 9 a |land that the most exciting incident Reservists Bi Herron, “the ho bridegroom,” is 4 late entrant, Bill's wife says he should have been one of the first gor, “the canny who promises Scots seldom run. Bruce is one of the survivors of the Prin cons Pats, Lowell Playford, the Kiwanis ely that organizatl lure,” says 1 all goes t the Americ One hundred votes for a president of is backed by nd in the t The Indians are plodding true to form. Bill Klepper has about as much chance of winning as a poanut has of surviving in the bleachers, tho his face, he de hares, ought to be his fortune Frank Lang, the stove man, should prove a hot favorite in the contest, Frank promises a» hot time if he's elected. John RK. Fox, of the Commer INVASION Bent anerenty | of the voyage occurred, During one of the showers (he jazz band artists were given a concert in an ap ently deserted shack, when they | heard a shrill cry above even the/| screeching saxaphones, It proved to be the woman who | owned the property, and at her ur gent invitation the entire force re treated from tts position and re paired aboard ship. eee Rol) call satisfied Commander En- sign Carl Hane chat the battle had| [resulted in no piped the signal for the homeward | voyage. im. she carried an augmented and) | motley crew. In addition to her reg: | | ular complement of regular sailors, la typical assortment of reservists paraded her decks Since they were not actually going to war, one-half of the 100 reeruits| were clad in civvies. These erring | ones lived to regret their folly, how- | ever, for they were assigned to the! LO® ANGELES, June 27.— Two pleasant duty of manicuring the lepers were taken by police authort spuds for dinner, |ties from among a crowd of 10,000 persons who gathered last night on « hill near Lincoln park for the min listrations of “Brother Isaiah,” faith healer, Both the afflicted men were Mext cans. Medical authorities today | would not committ themselves as to the probable results of exposure of the dreaded and contagious -<dlineane |in the tightly packed throng at “Mir ace HUIL* eee LOS ANGELES, June 27.—To the hilleide here where Brother Isaiah is restoring sight to the blind and |straightening twisted limbs, thou lsands of Los Angeles people are daily swarming for healing and to witness cures by the power of faith. faith. CROWDS GROVEL AT HIS FEET Altho the sun was hidden behind the smoke of battle—or the mists, or |momething—the dangerous depths |Deyond Alki point were braved with out mishap. Not a submarine was reported by the lookout. If the seagoing flivver rigzagged a bit, it was not due to the proximity of an enemy peri scope. multitude “The Miracle Man,” crip At eight bells the bunch ate| pics with every -affilction and in lunch. After that a landing party /valids with every conceivable mal- hich comprised ajl but a akeleton |ady are groveling in the dust to beg rew left aboard, was sent ashore for the bleaxing near the Moran echool, on Bain Some reach their goal. Otters bridge island. Here, between show-| press forward. inch by Inch, thru ers, © baseball game was staged be-|the throng, hoping at last to be tween the reservints and the regular touched by the white-maned healer's lerew. Reservists won; score, 97 to|hands or to be annointed with the oll he pours. GIRLS 0F SEATTLE A large package of fireworks containing FIRECRACKERS ROMAN CANDLES SKY ROCKETS PUNKS SPARKLERS will be given each boy or girl bringing the names and addresses of two new subscribers to The Star office. WIN AS MANY PACKAGES AS YOU LIKE Remember that after you win your first package of fireworks you will be given an additional package for each two new subscriptions you turn in. Subscription Blank I hereby subscribe to The Star for two months and thereafter until I order same discontinued. I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 50¢ per month. I am not now having The Star delivered to me. PHONE NO. sccccccrorecsssserseasecsssersssesesees saeeeee Taken bY cereccecceeeseeeeees Peceerererseseeccnseseesescesooes Subscription Blank I hereby subscribe to The Star for two months and therenfter until I order same discontinued. I agree to pay the carrier at the rate of 60¢ per month I am not now having The Star delivered to me. Name Address... Phone No Taken by LAUD ‘MIRACLE MAN’ At this man’s feet, styled by the) THRONGS | ] Under bedeh@et tents, with mea |ger protection from the broiling sun the eager faces of the suffering who |wait thelr chance may be seen by [the thousands, In the crowd are spectators of every variety. While Imntah | |Preaches from his Bi © virtue | jof faith and lays bis hands on the sick to demonstrate MN, popcorn a “hot dog” vendors | toy balloo jand inpw jac “SEEK YE FIRST | KINGDOM OF GOD” | But Isaiah keeps at bis work. | “In proportion to your faith you |} shall be healed,” he preaches. “What ji do, every real Christian can and | fi} ought to do. If you seek first the/ kingdom of God all other. things shall be added. And every man has) kingdom of God within him. | and honest striving after | | will reap the reward—will | |reap the reward of peace.” A little girl came to him on a) |atretcher. Her neck was too weak | |to hold her head and her legs were wasted away to bone She re ceived her ministrations, She lifted her head and arose from her cot She started to walk, aided by the would walk if her faith to grow, A young married couple, both mutes and partly deaf, spoke and heard after treatment. The woman turned to the crowd and said “Hel. | From 3 o'clock in the afternoon | until far past midnight—sometimes | into the dawn—Brother Isaiah makes men and women whole Some of hie patients show quicker re 3 than hers. i t is the measure of thelr faith,” Brother Isatah says. Once in the lat ting sun bea: | | ernoon the set straight into the eyes of the people in the throng Their discomfiture disturbed the prophet's” work. MANY SAY HE PERFORMS MIRACLES I'll fix it so it won't hurt you,” he sald. Then, with gten stared at the sun. Poised and without fl with his white beard chest, he wait A mist seemed and the eyes of the people r equinted | i R eyes he their hands when @ a miracle asked how many had ‘een per “Oh, well, the sun s setting, afyway.” | While the “Miracle Man” touches and annoints, men and wom en come from the crowd to the plat form to say they have been healed while they witnessed the | faith works of he could after standing, blind ng for a whole day. A d she had been helpless nonths, but while seated he throng she had received the REAL ES! REGAINS HIS A prominent estate sent a messenger boy to the hi with a telegram of joy It was re | aloud that the tate man was now able guish members of his famil automoh pass his house, altho he had « to the healer the day be fore without the power of sight Brother Isaiah accepts no money. “Thies is a ministry for all ra ys he explained, “It don't have no sal ary at all. It don't take up no col | lection at all, It don't ask nothing ata The “Miracle Man” came from Ne braska had been a horse doctor. He is now 74 and remarkably vigor ous. “A woman came to me,” he as serts, “She said she had been search: | ing everywhere for me. The touch} of her hand like an. electric shock, She told me I was called for thia work, and then she vanished like a star in the sky, She wag the woman described in the Revelations “I have never come upon any case of pain I couldn't rem the petitioners had enow “It is they who cure themselyes— not 1.” dealer It attested distin was No, Alfred, it is not the bad ges that produce the tough chickens | A boy pressed forward to tell that | [] Miss K. Worthington eg" | Boylston ave. N. casualties, and he| fi} She was promised | ]) lo.” The crowd broke into applause. | fi] Two-thirds of the multitude raised | [| talks, | f] PAGE | Worthington, capitalist, is the young woman chonen to be “Misa Liberty” 406 N. 48th 410 Lake hence. his 1 also, the no Hefiernan of whore busy, for the American Legion Fourth of | Mary Alice James ed July celebration here iron works fame, supporters are getting Seattle's homeliest man, yet to be anneunced, will crown Mise Worth ington as part of the July 4th events eve Broadway N Worthington was chosen be she was stately as well as ‘ful. Her father is president of the Washington Tug and Barge Co. and of the Sioux Securities company nor Ford, 120 Melrose ave. Ny to Be Miss Liberty * Mins Kathleen Worthington, of 403 daughter of BE. K. FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET DOWNSTAIRS STORE| Especially Interesting Groups of Midsummer Hats in Felts and Fabrics $5.00 $7.50 $10.00 S an instance of the Midsummer vogue for Felts, a Sailor in tangerine shade is pictured, with yarn and ribbon garniture. Others are in orchid shade, paprika, pearl, sand, leather and lemon shades, with worsted flowers or ribbon bows. An especially attractive showing at $5.00. “a TAFFETA HATS—Another Midsummer whim, par- ticularly exploiting navy with white straw facing, self bows and flowers. White Taffeta, White Georgette and White Satin are also featured— $10.00. : AT $7.50—Hats of Georgette Crepe in white, pearl and blue, and Grosgrain Ribbon Hats in sand, blue and white. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE 500 Men’s Silk Ties, Special 50c Each EATURED Tuesday at this low price, Flowing-end Ties, in excellent assort-- ment, featuring scroll and striped patterns of taffeta, satin and rep. Special 50¢ each. 144 ALL-LEATHER WORK GLOVES, in wrist and gauntlet styles, reduced to 50¢ pair. MEN’S COTTON BATHING SUITS, in black with red or white trimming— $1.50. —THE DOWNSTAIRS‘STORE 9x12-ft. . Chinese Matting Rugs $4.50 and $5.50 R summer cottage and camp use and for porches and bedrooms, these cogl-looking Mat- ting Rugs in tan, red and green effects, with plain and figured centers. 9 Rugs at $5.50 each. 24 Rugs at $4.50 each. 60 “Cottolap” Rugs Special 75c Each These are in 8x4-6 size, with smooth linoleum- like surface—easy to keep clean, and sanitary. Spe- cial 75¢ each. 15 MATTING RUGS in 27x54-inch size, tan, green and-red patter 55¢ each. 10 MATTING RUGS in 30x60-inth size, tan, green and red effects, 55¢ each. 8 PRINTED MATTING RUGS in 86x72-inch size, 55¢ each. 117 CRETONNE LAUNDRY BAGS at 65¢ each. 17 TAPESTRY COUCH COVERS in red and green- striped effects, $2.50 each. —THE The Popular Styles in Vacation Shoes Attractively Priced MISSES’ AND CHILDREN’S “BAREFOOT” SANDALS in tan and smoke color, with oak- tanned leather soles, sizes 8% to 11, $1.75; 11% to 2, $1.95 pair. MISSES’. AND CHILDREN’S TAN CALF PLAY OXFORDS with leather soles, sizes 8% to 11, $1.65 pair; 11% te 3 $1.85 pair. MISSES' AND CHILDREN’S PATENT “MARY JANES" with hand-turned soles, sizes 5% to 8, @2.25 pair; 8% to 11, $2.95 pair. WOMEN'S WHITE CANVAS DOWNSTAIRS STORE covered military heels, sizes 6 to 8, $1.95 pair. BOYS’ AND YOUTHS' BROWN CANVAS “HYKSHUS" with heavy rubber soles and heels, sizes 11 to 2, $1.95 pair. MISSES' LACE SHOES in tan or smoke color, with oak-tan- ned soles, sizes 13 to 2, reduced to $2.95 pair. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Scalloped Shadow-proof Petticoats, $1.00 OR wear with — sports skirts and wash dresses, these Muslin Petticoats with double panel in front and ma- chine embroidered scallops at edge. Ls) Blue and White Cups and Saucers 6 for $1.25 HOICE of the tasteful bamboo pattern (as pictured), and the blue phoenix design. Both pat- terns in the graceful ovide shape, and substantial without being too thick. Set of six, $1.25. ~—THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Lengths, 34, 36 and 38. Priced low at $1.00, WHITE SATEEN PETTI- COATS, with drawstring top and hem, excellent values at $1.25. —THE hemstitched DOWNSTAIRS STORE Decorative Bunting Special 7c Yard HREE styles at this special price — tri- color, plain stripes and stripes with stars. Special 7¢ yard. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Large U. S. Flags Suitable for Public Buildings At Very Low Prices LIMITED QUANTITY only of these large Flags of U. S. Navy standard cotton bunting, © sewed stripes and stars. Note the very low which make it possible to replace tattered flags on public buildings at almost nominal expense: 26 (only) U. S. FLAGS, 10x18 feet, $4.50. (only) U. S. FLAGS, 8x12 feet, $3.50. —THE, DOWNSTAIRS STORE 25 Her ladies-in-waiting are’ Mise IeWe elyn Atkinson, 616 Kinnear pl; Misa Mins Florence Alada | Doyle, 608 Harvard ave. N.; Mre, Ble Miss Bonnie Belle Wiggins, Anmecort PUMPS with rubber soles and - i HOMELIEST MAN IN SEATTLE ee

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