The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 26, 1921, Page 4

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Correct Apparel for Women Newly Silk and Cloth Dresses $25.00 ely Come Down NEW YORK, Aug. 26.—Money tighturess has caused pawnbrokers to reduce the size of their loans. They have mow fixed a limit of $75. The ‘a ‘DEODORANT FOR | GARBAGE ASKED leat Makes Suggestion After Investigation Arrived Recommendation that the city gar bage dumps, or “sanitary fi be treated with phenol solution, | odorizing compound, during the sum- mer months, made by Mayor Caltwell Thurvday, following an tn vestigating tour of several of the 16 garbage dumps maintained by the city, The mayor indicated that no change In the existing method of gar: bage disposal was contemplated at this time, “By taking proper precautions in providing an earth cover for the san- itary fills and by spraying the gar bage with a deodoriaing solution tm mediately after it la dumped, most of the disagreeable features of the fills will be eliminated,” the mayor sald Health Commissioner Read, who| accompanied the mayor on his In spection trip, declared that the sant tary fills are in no way a menace to} health, and that reports of their of fenaixe oder are exaggerated. Use of the phenol solution was con templated at the beginning of the | summer, but was abandoned on the ground of eoonomy. In the winter the sanitary fills do not smell at all, the health commissioner sald. ADMIT ARRESTS WERE MISTAKES) ‘Police Release 3 Sailors) Wrongfully Taken NCLUDED in this I new shipment are straight-line frocks as well as circular-skirt-* ed models, smartly em- bellished with beading, embroidery and braid. Many splendid dresses of navy tricotine are fea- tured at this attractive price, Smart Utility Coats $25.00 Advance autumn modes of all-weol ¢ nos, half sik lined and warmly intertined, are offered in navy, brown and beaver. High conver col- lars, French set-in- slee ip belts are subtle points of interest. Sizes range to 44, in- cluding misses’ sizes. Admtiting that it was a case of| ‘mistaken identity,” police Thursday afternoon released Milton Phillips STT0 26th ave, N. BE.) Andrew Jacob: son and Harold Johnson, sailors, who | were arrested Wednesday night as suspected motor bandits who had held up G, F. Roe, of Everett. The trio had amashed their car at | 22nd ave. N. W. and Market when they returned from a with another car to tow their ma chihe in, they were arrested by Pa trolmen J. L/ Williston and J. R. Mo | Millan, of Ballard police station, Captain of Detectives Tennant or \dered the case diemissed when he had reviewed the ta Every gorment in this double offering has been newly received, and a value of partioular inter- ext at the very opening of the fall season. Air Mail Service Suspended 3 Days WASHINGTON, Aug. 26.—The San FranciscoSalt Lake air mail| service will be suspended for three! days, etarting tomorrow, the post.| office department announced today ‘The suspension ts caused by a/ | change in landing fields at San Fran-| cisco, | Eh, Bien! Madame RE agrees omeg sag ie > 7 NON, 5 Was Tightwad, Yes? |... Skagit county, treasurer, and PARIS, Aug. 26.—Mme. Lenoire Dwyar McLean, member American | Beguette, lost 6,000 francs at the! Legion, in race for appointment as | Gare du Nord. A rafway guide found | postmaster here. James Boughter, | the and returned it, His re-|incumbent, mid to have submitted ward was one franc (20 cents). reaignation, M.A.GOTTSTEIN FURNITURE CO One Dollar Will Start an Account It is possible for you to enjoy the use—now—of many qrticles of homefurnishings you have long wanted. Besides those mentioned below we have many other useful items for the home that may be obtained on the very easy terms of $1.00 down and $1.00 weéekly—no interest. THE SEATTLE STA CHILDREN OF EXILED AUSTRIAN MONARCH This is the latest photograph of the children of Carl, exiled emperor of Austria, and ex- Empress Zita. From left to right they are: Feliz, Karl Ludwig, Maria Antonia, Adetheid,| Thia is the first picture received in America of | the newest babe, Recent stories from Europe say that Charles again will attempt to re-| sume his old throne. Other rumors are that he wiil leave Switzerland for Spain. | Crown Prince Otto, Rudolph and Rovert. A Story So Different BY D. A. WHITAKER Of Reno, Nevada HORTLY after my arrival in Seat-Jis everybody this morning?” tle I was taken down with| I arose to see who had entered\and smallpox. I was detected by keen-|I was met by a litte man whom I eyed, good-natured Health Officer | belleve was built for that very place. Edwards and Dr, J. C. Snyder. | He and his staff cuve me the once ‘They told me I must go to the City |over. He smiled and said Isolation hospital. 1 was horrified] “Noy, you sure have got ‘em, but at the thought of golng to @ “pest just be patient and follow our direc house.” Uona and you will be # new maf in When I arrived at the expected | about two weeks,” which I sure tried |* “pest house,” which I imagined was|to do. . a little shack out in the woods, to| s tne nub “0 aaciee pea a my surprise I faced one of the most | ceived any better care if I had been magnificent institutions that I had|tnger the tender hands of my own ever seen. To wy the least, it W84) mother, My food waa prescribed by just lke going home, I was met bY|ine tue man, Dr. Feaman. It met the head nurse, who, Roppeghrs my hearty approval. afterwards, was more like a little Atparingn th mother than anything else, She met u an pp me with a smile I shall never forget. 3 b * she said to the ambulance . “put him in No, 18," ‘The meals are unexcelled and the tender care which I received coult lave been no better, and that good hearted mother nurse, who watched) over us by night, was so watchful, and I was awakened many times at | night to find her standing ov bed, with those kind worda, “Are you resting good? Can I do some- thing for you?” In my opinion, these are God's chosen people, and when I was in }formed that this institution ts ¢on- | jducted by the city of Seattle, 1 was | surety parptiow Seattle has a warm | |epot in my heart for many years to/ | come j | I have heard many citizens knock: | ling Seattle and its council, but if 1 knockers will get into thelr ma- | chines and pay Firland a visit they will be convinced that the little mts |takes made by the council can easily lhe burs y the thousands of ocd | things that they are doing for un- fortunate ones I can only say, to the good peo ple who attended me, and to the good city, “I thank you 4 thousand times. I never knew there were so many | good people in the world. I am a Looster fer you.” LARGE, AIRY ROOM SURPRISE Now, I thought, was this a cell? But when I entered 18, I found my- self in @ fine, large, airy room, with private bath, and as clean as could be made, When the angellike woman returned to my room to take a history of me, 1 changed my mind about the socalled “pest house.” Everythirg was nice and clean; beds as white as snow; nice, clean bath; lota of towels, soap, hot and cold water, disinfectants of all kinds well,” I sald to myself, “this is fine.” ‘The next morning promptly at 19 o'clock my door opened and I heard someone may gentle voice, “How to Start BOSTON, Aug. 26.~—Ladics, look to your inches. Not around, but straight up and down, The honorable Mr. Ziegfeld has Just sourfded the death knell for the tall girl. He's thru with tall girls and thru with them for good, he saya, And worse than all—the matter be ling duly investigated, Boston em- | Ployment experts and character an alyata, who have the employment art |down“to a “T” are prone to agree with him; one psychologist there's acientific fact behind it al “Your height, your form, your ure, that's the way we judge, now, say the learned ones. “These quab ities are an index to everyone's char- acter,” they say. “Zierteld is perfectly right,” sald the employment manager of one of Roston's large retail stores inter. viewed on the Ziegfeld edict. “We can tell a good deal about a girl by her height and her form. And | give me the short girl every time in {preference to the tall girl. The tall | Oh, You Tall Girls, Somebody Is Trying Something ities which make for success in busi- neat, perserverance, determination, ambition. The small girl will be Hkely to be more energetic, more em during.” “The taf, alim girl, on the other hand, is the typical lady of leisure. | Her mind ts more quiescent, she is Spt to be an idler. Languld, per- haps vain, tho possessed with many fine attributes, she fits much better }into the social life than into the into the social life than into the busi- ness world. The tall, stately type doesn’t poseess the fighting qualities t your shorter ,petite girl has; she up easily.” en, find it #0,” says Mrs. Lamping-Nolan, Boston's foremost benuty expert. “Undeniably, pe tite girl has got the brains. The tall girl may have dignity, form, stateli mens, grace and charm, but her medi- um-sised sister makes up for it with quick wits, and an alert, ready mind.” As for the girls themselves, what do they think? From a group of j eirls, stall, medium-sized and tall, Special Price Basement Special lots of smart apparel arriving daily at prices that are unusually low for the quality of merchandise carried in the Special Price Base. ment. New Plush Coats Special Values at $25.00 Salts’ Black Plush Coats in Two New Styes for Fall Three-quarter length Coats. One style with large collars of black dyed opossum; the other style with large col- lars and cuffs and 12-inch } band on the bottom of on weds | brown Conéy. * Special Values in Gingham Dresses} Reduced for Quick Selling $4.95 Smart Gingham Dresses of checks, in pink, ] ~ blue, lavender, green, brown and black; also, § ~ a few plaids. Some self trimmed, but the ma- jority organdie trimmed and finished with wide sashes. . Cheasty Junior Shop | irl in apt to be languid and dreamy. | employed in a Boston insurance of- | The short girl, on the other hand, is | fice, came 4 terrible outburst of pro- more vivacious and alert, she's quick: | tests, ridicule and disdain of the er, her mind really seems to work | Ziegfeld ultimatum — mostly from faster, In this store, I think 90 per those over the five foot five line, cont of the girls are of the type jot so Much brain known as petite, and that's the type |" of girl we're always looking for. She | “ |] \ gets ahead, she's got the brains, all! anyway? right.” stenographers in the office are the | One of Boston's professional char. | allest girls and are getting the larg acter analysts was of the same opin. | ¢#t salar’ were the various re. i}}ion in regard to stature and the | pli ‘here's no doubt,” she sald, “that! Whistling is prohibited in the col- the short girl, of course, generally | ery district in England. ’ Rich oil deposits are believed to to go those qual | exist in Kansu, China. Makes it possible for parents of Seattle. and vicinity to fit out their boys in the ] best Junior garments made in the U. S. A. at very reasonable prices. You'll forget what you pay for clothes, but you don’t forget how they look and wear. “Chi Jr.” Sui ith 2 pairs full-lined Knicker } - Aral ht pa $15.00 to $35.00 | You get a new suit in exchange for any “Cheasty Jr.” Suit that fails to give satisfaction. Hats and Caps to match our Suits and Overcoats ....$2.50, $3.00 and $3.50 Coal—Combination—Wood PAY ONLY $1°° DOWN And we will install in your home any Heater you select from our large stock of varied styles and sizes— Then Pay But $1.00 Weekly Don’t Delay—Be Prepared for the Chilly Days of Early Fall vee a % | f. Along with medium stat ure are most a SPECIAL! BRASS gq 99 OUTFIT Regular Price $57.50 UT) | ( SPECIAL! 7.PIECE 4 99 $ 48” DINING ROOM : SET Regular Price $60.00 A Simmons 2inch, post Brass Bed, 5 filler bars—good 40-Ib. Felted Cotton Mattress—quality Ticking—Simmons Steel Spring— “Built for Sleep.” i Special Price $46.75 Easy Terms—$1 Down, $1 Weekly - Solid Onk 421nch top Table, extends to 6 feet—6 Genuine Leather Seat Solid Oak Chairs. Special Price $48.50 $1.00 Down $1.00 Weekly Buck’s Furnaces Second Floor Bedroom Furniture Rugs Draperies Third Floor Dining Room, Living Room Furniture, Stoves, Ranges, Furnaces The most complete line of Furnaces made. We have th: Fu e best adapted to your home. Phone Main 6921 M.A.GOTTSTEIN FURNITURE CO. SEATTLE’S POP ARNIS S POPULAR HOME FU ANISHE RQ Louis Kretlow, 78, Chicago, and Helen Brown, 12, Newark N. J. are the oldest and youngest memberg of the National Association of Dancing Masters. Here they are demon- strating, at the New York dancing convention, one of the new stately dances which will replace the shimmy and toddle, Opens Tuesday, September 6th 1514-16 Second Avenue, Near Pike Street

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