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THE SEATTLE STAR JOBS! from Chief Seattle || -, MISSIVES FROM A FRIENDLY OLD SPIRIT) MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1921. FRASIR-PATERSON Co ‘SSCOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET = FREDERICK & NELSON | Um! Jam and Jelly! FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Made in Seattle. Buy Them. Jobs for 1,000, | ny Seattle organizations ha taken action on the trade- at-home-and-make jobs propost tion, They say that they are for tt. They say that they will individually get behind = the movement and use Seattlemade and other = madein Washington goods, This means thousands of con sumers, but hundreds of thow sands are needed. Hore’ the point—VOU, YOURSE! ARE |To James E. Mahoney Jim Special Price Basement | I thank you for one thing ing story and sickly sm: something. You wiped Fatty Arbuckle’s reek off page one for a few days, And that was CHIEF SEATTLE. To Hugh C. Van Amburgh, Parts Unknown) Dear Hugh: I want tg congratulate you for what was probably the most herole and difficulf act of your life, For services rendered as a dispatch rider you won seven decorations and citations from army navy and marine corps of America, Belgium and France, But I do not refer to those I apeak now of the clean breast you made Saturday of the Arthur Thust kidnaping. You committed the crime and got off at the trial by alleging that Arthur was a party to it That cast a mean, unfair slur on an honest, upright youth, It was a square thing for this late date, to set the matter straight CHIE To the U. of W. Freshmen Dear Young Men and Women: I note that there ta a limited regis tration at the University of Washington this year—that there wit! be $00 lens than Inst fall. That meane that you, who are fortunate enough to be admitted, should make the best of your time, If you don't, you are cheating the stat nd perhaps some other person who in really anxious for an educatic CHIEF SEATTLE To Motorists Dear Sire The rainy season ts back and automobile accidents ap pear to be increasing. Take a little more care when the pavement is wet and there will be fower amashups CHIEF SEATTLE Where Goods Are Bought for Less and ||| Sold for Less Cloth Frocks, Finely Tailored Smartly Individual in Style and Moderately Priced $29.50 and $47.75 RICOTINE AND POIRET TWILL TROTTEUR FROCKS in Navy, Black and Brown are represented in these groups, » with the straight “chemise” lines, flowing sleeves, unusual girdles, “bateau” neckline and uneven hem line, sponsored by authori- tative designers. Cire Braid and hand-made French knots elaborate all-black frocks, and there are models which reflect the vogue for colorful effects, with duvetyn band- ings, gay embroideries, colored beadings and crepe facings. TYPICALLY SMART, with its orange duve- tyn bands, metallic embroidery, flaring sleeves and loose bands from waist to hem, is the Poiret Twill model pictured, at $47.75. A Very Special Purchase of 200 Wool Sweaters NY hen you spend that dollar for Kastern-made goods, you had just as well kiss it good bye. So far as you are con corned, it in gone forever, Spend the dollars at home and they will come rolling around your way again. Spend your dollars for Seat themade products and our job- less will have jobs. Build up our local industries and they will pay more taxes and more industries will come to Seattle to help pay these taxes. Krvery dollar they pay means a dollar less for the rest of the taxpayers. Where are your jams, jetties, and marmalades made? Seattle makes ‘em, and good ones, too, Did you ever try Case's products, of all kinds, or Phelps’ or KEamay's jellies, or Gee's marmalades? They are Seattle made products, Ask your grocer for one of these brands nex! time and try them. * According to P. J. Case of the Seattle > 5m as } To Movie Patrons Dear Seatticites: 1 presume that many of you haye at times been peated in a theatre next to a person who considered that both arms of the seat he occupied were for his own use, That's a pecullar idea, jen't it? cHipr SEAZTIL Misses’ Sweaters $3.75 Regularly $4.50 and $5.00 Misses’ and girls’ sweat- ers in Tuxedo and coat styles. Sizes 26 to 34. Colors include turquoise, brown, navy, maroon, buff, lavender and Copen- hagen. To Certain Businessmen Dear Fellows: 1 notice Unat many of you ate able to dictate good letters, but when it comes to signing your names, alas, the signatures cannot be read) When Newton D. Baker was secretary of war, there was an order ismued requiring all official correspondence to have the name of the signer typed as well as written, It worked out well from Baker down, for the former secretary's signature closely resembles « wavy line. Why wouldn't tt be a good plan for you all to adopt the achome of having your name typed en your correspondence? ‘Think it over. CHIEF SEATTLE $4.50 Regularly $5.00, $5.50 and $7.50 Women’s sweaters in Tux- edo and coat styles — smart and well made. Colors include honey, pea- cock, navy, salmon, \ Mo- hawk, silver, buff, brown, Copenhagen and and white. —SECOND FLOOR To the Playwrights Dear Authors: For years I have noticed the playlets that you have been turning out for use tn vaudeville. It meema that 90 per cent of them open with the ringing of the telephone bell Dont you think that te rather hackneyed? Why not change it once In awhile? I know it would be a keen surprise to the vaudeville patrons CHIEF 4-pieceFireSets | _ Special $4.50 and $5.00 HE four-piece Set consists of Stand,” Poker, Tongs and Shovel, 24 inches high, excep- tionally w eé11- finished, with square handles cap- ped with round knobs. IN ALL-BLACK FINISH, special, $4.50 set. BLACK WITH ANTIQUE - FINISH BRASS HANDLES, AT REDUCED PRICES Reduced to 25c Muslin Aprons of very good quality, cut in round style, with deep hemstitched hem. Reduced to 50c Waitress’ Aprons of good qual- ity muslin, cut square at the bottom, and with five gores, double-stitched, to give smooth fit. Reduced to $1.00 Waitress’ or Maids’ Aprons of good quality muslin, gored, and double-stitched. With deep pock- ets and bib with bretelles, as SEATTLE. To Vancouver, Wash., Deputy Sheriff Dear Sir: You certainly @id good and speedy work in capturing the men who robbed the Sells Moto circus in your city recently. Bay, by the way, deputy, you might send your formula for making captures to Warden Maloney. Just addreas him care the pen at McNeil intand CHIEF SEATTLE. e Women's Silk Pantalettes ~ Specially Priced at $3.19 100 silk Jersey Pantalettes of excellent quality; finished with elastic shirring and accordion- pleated ruffle. Colors: Gray, rose, Copenhagen, Mohawk, ma- omy taupe, Patsy green, wistaria, cardinal and To Some Spooners Dear Young Folks: Some of you who are conducting your court shipa on the dance floor, at the movies and at the side of the road are removing it from the category of a private affair and making it a public nulsance. Please spare the rest of us from being part of the andience. lt may be sublime to you, but keep it to yourself CHIEF SEATTLE To the Manager of the White Lunches Dear Sir: I congrgtulate you. There's nothing Uke a little tangible evidence in the leaky seam of a change pocket that the cnet of living is really dropping. You have furnished it by your announcement of “free coffee.” Incidentally, you slipped one over on Portland, where more on our small fruit farms and they would spend their money in Seattle and help Se atile business and make still preserved prod uets bs a big one from the stand point of jobs. Three hundred fifty would be given immediate employment, 300 amore in the fields, and many more in box factory, bottle works, label tn dustry and the printing bust news. New Series Pre-War Prices Beaten Chassis, o= = sow $485 Roadster,’ wa 095; =e 595 Coupe,” =: 00; =e +850 Willys-Overland Pacific Co. 12th amd East Pine Phone East 0660. JITNEY HOPE IN N. END SLIPPING LOEW’S PALACE HIP |'Matter Up for Settlement ALL-oran vacpevite |/ With Council Hostile Werth & witl- Whether or not jitney bus licenses | will be issued for the North Cowen | Park district was to be definitely set- Canadian foreign trade for July, 1921, decreased by over $115,000,000, ‘Bs compared with July of last year. council PANTAG ES | ment among the city fathers, there Matinees, 2:20. Nights, 7 and 9 | will not be wufficient votes necessary | to give the North End jitney service. Councilmen Oliver T. Erickson and William Hickman Moore went on record at Thursday's meeting of the utilities committee ag favoring the triet, and Council President Robert |B. Hesketh also has advocated the insuance of permits, but Councilmen John &. Carroil, Philip Tindall, Lou | Cohen, C. B, Fitzgerald and A Drake are all said to oppore allowing | any jitneys to operate in competition with the municipal) railway. Missing Boy, 15, Sought by Police Police here are seeking 15-year-old Arthur Collins of Mossy Fock, re ported missing by his father, G.-W. Collins, since September 18, He was wearing a gray tweed sult, khaki sbirt and green cag “The Three Rubes” Calvin} Jack Hughes Deo THEA’ PLAYERS _ Elliott 2525 Thia Week—Mats, Wed. and Sat. tied Monday afternoon by the ety | i Unies there is a change of gent: |.” inwuance of fitney permits for the dis. | CALL ISSUED FOR APPLE PACKERS Jobs for the jobless! More than 100 experienced apple Packers and at least 50 sorters are wanted at Yaktrna immediately, it was announced Monday by J. H Shields, superintendent of the ctty. federal employment office. Packers receive 6 cents per box Sorters are paid 30 to 36 cents per hour. Women sorters also are in de mand Wenatchee ts urgently In need of many packers at 6 and 7 cents per box. Packing wil start Monday. The farmers are asking for workers with | camping outfita, if possible. The valley is overcrowded with pickers, as the hop picking, which | employs about 4,000 pickers, is fin- | ished. - HERE’S MORE ABOUT JOBLESS STARTS ON PAGE ONE brief speech outlining the program in « general way. “DOLE” SYSTEM IS BRANDED VICIOUS The “dole” given unemployed in other countries is “tbe most vicious jot systems ever introduced into gov ernment,” Hoover said. It must not be employed here, he warned, if the United States is to be saved from destructive paternalism, Outlining the general program of |the conference, Hoover said Ms first task in to get the "facts about unem ployment, as to its volume and char acter, “because the proposals you make depend on the weight of the problem.” Next, he maid, the immediate need for the coming winter must be coped with. Then restoration of com- merce ang employment generally to normal must be assisted, In accordance with resotution ‘passed by the conferees, Hoover |named the following permanent com. imittee to prepare the conference | Program, select committees \sign to them various phase |unemployment problem James Couzens, mayor of Detroit M. Tarbell, New York: Thomas V. O'Connor, president of the Long |shoremen’s union, Buffalo; Charles \M. Schwab, New York: ©. H. Mark {ham, Chicago, president of the Illi {nots Central railroad; Matthew Woll, Chicago, vice president of the Amert {can Federation of Labor; Samuel Me Cune Lindsay, New York, professor of social legislation, Columbia univer: sity; Julius H. Barnes, Duluth, Minn, Clarence M, Wooley, Detroit, presi dent of the American Radiator com: pany; Henry M. Robinson, Low An |geles, former member of the United | States shipping board. The administration believes three |main problems must be solved by the conference if industry is to be re vived and work found for the mil- lions of men. These are: 1. Raliroad rates must be reguced and railroad labor must accept a eut \in wages. 2, Bullding must be speeded thru settiement of certain labor questions jana reductions in prices of building materials. they are bragging about their restaurant men who refill coffee cups at 3 cents each. CHIKF SEATTLE. To the Uncles of Little Men Dear Men: Retnember Mahoney. lDyearold neice who sits beside Remember Ittte Margaret, the him each day of the murder trial She is & relative, so she cannot be barred from the courtroom. But she’s a child and she should not be der, Perhaps she will forget, but main with her always. Uncles—fu waret. Dear Friends: “Keep ‘em out of aixte, A couple of days ago I saw very contented. You were readin, out about a foot. A young woma the alale. The baby tripped. That have a fascination, to be sure. There kre court officers sworn to that you spend the time searching Dear Fellow: |What's the idea? weeks ago. now see what you've @one—gotten charge, Just because you WOULD ductor and started for the end of the car. Resides, you were treated pretty well, weren't you? Next time you'd better not be in quite such 4 rush about being playful, there. She ts made to hear and see things that cause older people to shud. more likely will the experience re- emember Mahotey, remember Mar- CHIEF SEATTLE. To Those Who MUST Carry Canes the aisle—especially the etreet car one of you on a trolley, You wef ig the news, You're cane reached nm leading a baby signaled the con- Your cane still stuck out in ‘a all, CHIEF SEATTLE. To the “Morbidly Curious” Dear Frienda: You could do better than listen to murder trials. They But the only real interest the publie has or should have in them is to see that justice ts fairly administered. do thin. Better, then, friends, that you remain at home doing the cooking and looking after the babies, or for some useful work in the world to do. There is plenty of it, and it needs to be done CHIEF SEATTLE. To Dr. Durand of Everett - You had al the fromt page two And yourself in jail on another lunacy throw rocks and turn on the hose. ' CHIEF SEATTLE. TEARS, SMILES AT THE WILKE Old-Style Melodrama Is Well Portrayed Here BY Glenn Hughes the old tricks of pathos and comedy, found at least a moderate number of enthusiasts at the Wilkes Saturday, when “Daddy Dumplins,” by Earl Carroll and G.. B, McCutcheon, opened for a week's run. The plot concerns the struggle be- tween two elderly gentlemen who in thetr youth loved the same wom an, and who have spent the inter vening 20 years in the attempt to |break each other, financially and otherwise. One man is a hard, relentiess old fellow with a white goatee and a jaunty, gold-headed cane. The other is a mild-mannered, kindly soul whose penchant is for adopting or phans and jogging them on his knee in the firetight on cold winter even ings. act, he is driven from his hearth and home by his enemy's ruthless. ness, and the orphans are scattered to the four winds by their guardian's impending poverty, the audience sniffles audibly John H. Elliott assumes the prin- nas role in the production—that of Daddy Dumplins, and Alice Elliott appears as Florence, his oldest ward, who is really the daughter of Sidney Danks, the villian with the hirsute adornment. Were it not for the amusing char acterizations offered by Howard Russell and Georgia Knowlton, but a. Industrial strife in the mining industry must end, The price of coal | must be reduced and wages of the miners in some sections cut | A three-act melodrama based on | When, at the end of the second | ler and housekeeper, respectively, the play would be sadder than it in. There are several children in the | play, and thowe who enjoy homelike scenes on the stage will be pleased with the Christmas Eve party in the first act. There will be performances every night this week, with matinees | Wednesday and Saturday, eee |\CLEVER DANCERS |AT PALACE HIP A pleasing combination of divers fied specialties that provide an ‘tertaining whirl of color and action, {is the new vaudeville offered at | Loew's Palace Hip yesterday. \ In a “Dancing Honeymoon,” | Kitty Faye and Jack Thomas give a terpsichorean demonstration of the fact that it is as expedient and di- verting to “step lively" after court- ship and marriage as before, Pretty Rose Kress and Harry Avers are likewise worthy of special mention, for they provide some speedy and ploturesque features as “steppers of 1921—on roller skates.” | Worth and Willing are comedy |favorites whose character blackface fun is highly popular, The sketch is a bit of character comedy entitled “The Messenger | Boy,” and played by Lew Leonard, Rose Green and Wesley Bald. There is no perceptible plot, but the non- sonse of the absurd messenger boy | who contrives to work for rival com. panies at the same time, creates laughs. Charles Reader ts an artist in his playing of the xylophone. “A Perfect Crime” is the feature photoplay, with Monte Blue as the star, ORPHEUM BILL IS “ALL RIGHT, EDDY” Tt is fitting to my the Orpheum bill for this week is “All Right, eddy.” “ddy" is not booked as a head liner, but he scores numerous knock outs, He wears a shiny evening sult, a red nose and long hair parted ! sketched. —SECOND FLOOR special,, $5.00 set, THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE BRUMFIELD HAS | RECOVERED NOW Apparently ‘Memory Lapse’ Has Left Him ROSEBURG, Ore., Sept. 26.—Dr. Richard M. Brumfield apparently had | recovered today from his “memory lapse” of last week, when to all in- tents and purposes he failed to recog: nize his ‘wife, his legal counsel or his jovial jailers. Sheriff Starmer and Jailer Hop- kins, who have’witnessed many of Brumfield’s peculiar actions during the past two days, are convinced that the accused dentist, charged with killing Dennis Russell, is trying to bolster up his lapse of memory plea. Officers say they will not be surpris- ed if the accused mar “throws a fit in the court room itself when the trial is galled October 6. ‘The high light of Brumfield's be- havior yesterday flashed when he greeted Sheriff Starmer by leaving his cot on all fours and coming growling like a wild animal to the barred door of his cell. He sings but never in the middle. finishes, Mise Afleen Stanley, “the phono: | graph girl,” was billed as one of the chief attractions, She has a singing | voice of unusual sweetness. Wood | and Wyde also performed well. Others on the bill are Jack Hughes’ Duo, Wallace Galvin, Elisa and Eduardo Consino and Felix Ad ler and Frances A. Ross in “Every- thing You Like.” When Buying a SPEEDOMETER For Your Ford Be Sure It’s a BI rt Speedometer has 100, 000 mileage odometer. Mi speed dial, Absolutely correct at all speeds, REAL STEWART SERVICE Your Ford Dealer Selly Them Stewart Products Service Station 1515 Broadway A Reliable HOT-BLAST Heater For Coal or Wood $24.50 NLY a few of these cool, Autumn days are re- quired to make the need of a Heater appar- ent. The Heater pictured ts of new design and construc. tion, fitted with oblong firebox with duplex grate. It also has nickel trim- mings and mica front, and is suitable for heating large rooms. A very good value at $24.50. —STOVE SECTION, DOWNSTAIRS STORE FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET METROPOLITAN ONE WEEK Commencing SUNDAY, OCT. 2 RALPH DUNBAR’S Famous Production of the Greatest of All Comic Operas— “ROBIN HOOD” SEAT SALE NOW ~ SAT. Orchestra $1.43 Balcon. + 10 Gallery ... 5S MAT.