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FRASISR-PATIERSON Co. SEQOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET wil ets in Bound with three-inch 66x80. Special at $6.95. Blankets, SE TET he Annu SST | Sale of Bedding Offering Large Quantities of Good Bedding at Money- Savings of Vital Importance ill pay’ those who will need Bedding this Fal and Winter to buy Among the many special sale lots are the following: $5.95 Comforts $4.95 86 Quilted\ Comforts, filled with white cotton. some with sateen borders to match. Both dark and light colors; Plaid Blankets $7.95 50 pairs Wool-mixed Plaid Blankets. , blue and tan Blankets with three- soiesette binding. Very special at $10.00 Blankets $7.95 ight gray Wool Blankets, with pink lue borders. Size 70x80. $9.50 Comforts $8.35 12 Quilted Comforts, all sateen with sateen borders. Half wool and cotton filling. Excellent variety of colors. White and Plaid Blankets $6.95 75 white and plaid wool mixed Blank- old rose, tan, gray and blue. solesette. Size $18.50 Blankets $14.95 All-wool St, Mary’s Plaid and blue block ‘T2x84. ‘ $3.45 Comforts $2.65 60 white cotton filled Comforts, with silkoline covering. colors. Good variety of $7.50 and $8.50 Comforts $5.00 25 full bed-size Comforts, of good grade white cotton filling. Made with bor- ders to match. Large variety of colors. Soiled and Odd Blankets Greatly Reduced pairs §0x90 All-wool St. Mary's $35.00 4 All-wool St Mary's $27.50 Bs, dialer pei . 35.00 91.80 5 4 All-wool St. Mary's 06 ARR TS a0 cesses 29.90 18,80 1 palr 72x84 Allwool Pink and Plaid Blankets .......... 16.50 11.50 1 pair 12x84 All-wool Gray Plaid Blankets ......00c 50005 20.00 © 14.50 1 Single 72x84 All-Wool Blanket Bite Chock c.ec ecco se . be 11.80 1 Single 70x80 All-wool Blanket, Dink CHECK 26. ceceeeeceesreee 10.00 759 3 pair 60x76 Tan Wool-mixed Blanket ...,....55-5 10.00 = 7.80 1 pair 56x76 Gray Woolmixed DRARNO cds gee seen ges sees 10.00 8.60 Dark Blankets Greatly Reduced © paire 46382 All-wool, Dark Red es coos eh $25.00 $21.00 6 pairs ‘ 15.00 11.00 15. pair Cree 15.00 11.50 6 pairs 62x80 Gray Wool Blankets 12.50 19.00 ~Second Floor All Wool Blankets $8.35 rol See aR this year we are 35% lower. Strapped Slipper — low heel—brown and black— Strapped Sli — mili- tary heel—brown and pertiza f reais Ponts Puget Sound Navigation Co. 50 All-wool Plaid Blankets in pink and tan. Size 66x80. ‘The Star office. — Advertisement. NE BIG GAMK’ A Piay = Punch Eves: 26¢ to = Mate. Plus Tex PANTAGES Matinees, so. we ew CHARLIE MURRAY IN PER: “Rising Ge "Rese Meen, tagencope. a Advatsaton: Matinees, 25e; Nights, 400 Now riar'sg LONE STAR Un DAISY DBAN @ ©O4 DUEL LECTURE PSYCHOLOGY —BY— DR. D. V. BUSH America’s Greatest Orator ARENA Subject: “Life’s Greatest Bet” Little Widow Aided by Star} proved opportunity. “I've got a Job now,” she said. After the shuw, we'll go to Boidt's. Nights, 7 end © larry ‘Three Wh Kuhns, Agnes Johns & Ceo. Pan- LOEW’S PALACE HIP a WOODY) RODER & DEAN; TOM- { MY DOOLBY . THE SEATTLE STAR Judge Not Hastily ‘How Poisoned Dumplings Caused Girl| to Hang | “(Bditor Note-—Attention today ts riveted on the great number o, ‘oumatantial evidence murder cases about to go to trial on the Pacific c The Star haa induced Walter & Fulton, Seattle attorney, to write a of articles dealing with famous cireumatantial evidence cases. The series) indicates that ciroumstantial evidence ia often unreliable and dangerous to justioa. These articles, however, are not intended in any way to influence sentiment regarding any of the murder cases about to come to trial, This Mrs. Turner ordered Mildred to make some yeast dumplings, When dinner |time came, the three older Turners and the daughter, Mary, sat down at table and began to discuss the wavory dish. | ‘The dumplings had scarcely been tasted, however, when the three eld. od with sharfand «gon. ‘The dish was taken Into mn and there Mury, the , partook of It, and also fell violently 1. Mildred herself next ate of the dish | er a Tieney, because she wan pH ln mca lie woe Henry, |[RUnRry. Having tried tn vain to per- |and Sarah, the maid, who hid dined | Made Heople that (he poison was in ; , ne milk, she turned around and de- | saree oe ee, teat the dumplings | isred that. it was in the pa The | | a yeast was proved by analysis to be! Eng perfectly pure. | ‘The physiclan who was called do | SENTENCED clared the symptoms of the sufferers ‘4 |]\to be those of poisoning by arsenic. |Then every component part of the |dish of dumplings was examined, It |}iwas clear that the poison was not in the sauce, of which the elder Turner had not partaken; neither jwee it In the Nour, for a ple crust |made of the name flour had been ‘eaten by Henry and by Sarah Peer with impunity. is the fourth article of Fulton's series) By Walter S. Fulton 1 doubt If there ever happened a} Henry, was on the point of eating more melancholy inttance of what fa|some of the dumplings, Mildred termed “Judicial murder” than the|urged him not to do #0, saying that cane of Mildred Adams. The tragic | they were cold and heavy, It was history of that unhappy girl ts as|in evidence that Mildred had noi) followa: taken the poisoned food until she ob | | Fair, 18, of more than average in-|#orved Its effect upon others, and! telligence, bright, coquettish, well |!t Was thence inferred that she elther disponed and amiable, she wan em-|'00k It to conceal her crime or with ployed as cook in the family of | *Uicidal idea Waldo 8. Turner, a wealthy broker| Tt moreover eppeared that Mil. in New York, The family consisted |4red’s statements about the matter| of Mr. and Mrs, Turner, their two|¥ere inconsistent, contradictory, children, Mary, aged 6, and Henry, #84, 1n some instances, untrue. She aged 14; Sarah Peer, a housemaid, | @eclared that the poison must have Sad Sitinved Addon, the otek. bees fn the milk, and not in the | On the 17th of March, 1899, Mr, | Umplings ; : Now, the mifk had been fetched by Turner's father coming to dinner. | earn Danes it sed Ekenam satemrer that she was trying to divert sus |picion from herself to her fellow ner jvant, The analysis proved con: | clusively that the arsenic was in the dumplings, and not in the milk To further disprove the pre sumption of innocence rained by her | jeating of the poisoned food, herself, | jit was shown that she had shortly |before had a hearty meal off a beef. | | steak ple, and therefore was not likely to have eaten the and | heavy dumplings” as she Here, then, was @ group of im portant circumstantin! evidence. Op | portunity was provided, so was en instrument (the arsenic) at hand in @ drawer to which she had free access, land a desire betrayed to conceal the -jcrime by diverting sunpicion to an- other, and by telling untrutha, Upon the evidence, as I have sketched It, Mildred Adams was con. victed and sentenced to death. The cane, however, created so wide spread an agitation tn the public mind that justice hesitated to ex- Some of the dough of which the dumplings were made was examined and polson discovered therein, It [finppeared that Turner used arsenic! cite ite fatal decree. The utter | for killing rats and was in the habit) ! jabsence of conceivable motive was of leaving it carelessly in gn open la gerious blew tm the cabs. i] drawer. } Z Why should this light-hearted, ralgned on @ charge of attempting | ROW? fault was her coquetry, pol- to polson the Turners. From the|" * whole family? Her counsel, exclaimed in burning eloquence againet the horrible cruelty of her roved fate. She was reprieved for three BRD Bsa Fi Bag a montha, in the hope that new evi- 4 " dence would transpire to save her. jumplings; the circumstantial evt-| 36 was forthcomi: dence went to show that no one else wbpee Rowdee sey pe ys could have had access to them un- ened ide ti est excitement thru the metropolis, they were served upon the table.| 14 on g Seotecial Gar th She had been tn the kitchen all the| 2.) s, Cae @e aes ie ie oF tne tt tne, Best) en, was aa ne Pra mem -— her pat! > ix young rebed white, from her humble home to her final resting place. It was shown that when the boy, | wong, “'? lived amid those scenes After the show, we'll go to Boldt'a | “Foor Mildred Adanty! ~-Advertisement, Bo young, fo fair, so innocent! Cut down even in thy morning with all life's bright- nena only in its dawn! Little did it profit thee that a city mourned over thy: early grave and that the most eloquent men did justice to thy memorvf For almost a decade the guilt or innocence of Mildred Adams was a disputed point. Then the confession in 1909 of the victim of a gangsters duel betrayed the truth. The confes- sion of the real murderer, made on his death bed, was with such par tloularity that Mildred's innocence was established beyond a doubt. Turner household and being familiar with the situation of rooms in the house, had slipped up to the kitchen and placed the arsenic in the dumplings and escaped unobserved. Pageant Finances Now Being Audited A financial statement on the Way- farer pageant has been prepared by the Wayfarer society, and is now in| Bi the hands of Eli Moorhouse & Co., public accountants, for auditing, ac- cording to Montgomery Lunch, head of the society. It will be published ag soon as the accountants pass on its correctness. The future of the pageant ts to be discussed, Lynch announced, by mem- bers of the Wayfarer society at a luncheon Tuesday. a fortune to keep some kids in shoes, but lots o' Seattle mothers have learned how our economy plan eaves them real money. Good looking, sturdy shoes for hard school wear, Upstairs Prices, $2.00 to $6.00—pernonal fitting by the Boes himself, and his idea ts to treat you 0 you'll come back. Davis & Morris Shoe Co. 302 308 Seaboard Bidg. 4th at Plke | _ The death mask of Enrico Caruso was made by Cifari- ello, Italian sculptor, shortly after the tenor’s death in, | Naples, Italy. This is the first picture showing Cifari ello’s work to reach America. a FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1921. FRASER: PATERSON Co. Special Price Basement The Special Price Basement carries nothing but special sale lots—but we always have enough-of these “specials” to make things interesting for any woman who wants to dress attractively and save money at the same time. ) Splendid Values in Women’s and Misses’ } Fall Coats In Three Special Price Groups At $25.00 ; Bolivia Broadcloth Velour Suedine Plush New Fall models in belted and flare models. Some are fur trimmed. All full lined. Sizes for misses and women. In brown, blue, gray and black. At $19.75 Velour Bolivia Goldtone Smart velour models, full lined, with large fur cqjlars; bolivia and goldtone in both plain and fur trimmed styles. All the wanted shades of blue and brown. At $15.00 Velour Goldtone Silvertone The Velour Coats are made With’ large cape collars and are full silk lined. The goldtone and silvertone models are.in the latest belted models with or without fur-collars. Full and semi-lined. Sizes for women and misses. Smart New Styles in New Fall Hats Most Atsractively Priced at $4.95 A wide selection of velvet and duvetyn in the desired Autumn shades. Becom- ing styles in close fitting and medium shapes suitable for women and misses. Trimmings of fancy feathers, pins and stitchings. Very Special Values at $4.95. © Girls’ School Coats SIZES 10~12~14 Remarkable Values at A particularly fortunate purchase of New Coats at much below the ordinary price, Blue Brown Burgundy Green 50 Smart Models in belted and flare-back styles, with deep cuffs, ts and belts. Some have fur collars, others fur cloth and self material. In broadcloth, velour and silvertone. SURPRISING VALUES AT THIS LOW PRICE 200 Pairs Black Sateen Bloomers In two Special Price Groups: 100 Black Sateen Aprons at 79c 45c and 79c Wellmade Bloomers, with elastic knee and | Black Sateen Aprons, in waist waist. * style, with large double pocket Children's sizes 2, 4, 6. Special 45c. ; : Girls’ sizes 8 to 20.' Special 79¢. aeroas the front. Your Fall Suit and Overcoat Are Here and the new season’s BRADBURYS are ahead in { the downward march of 4 prices. Open a Credit Account and wear the best hand- tailored clothes, at prices that combine their quality with real economy. — Ready-to-Wear, in the latest fabrics and styles. Visit our Separate Men’s Shop Second Floor