The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1921, Page 2

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Credit Is Good 40 sample cane living room THE —we say to you, the new customer, the prospective homefurnisher, to get acquainted with the wonder- ful advantage of this store’s credit service, come, make your selections of homefurnishings up to $100— WITHOUT A CASH TIME OF PURCHASE. PAYMENT AT —the balance to be paid in small weekly or monthly payments to meet your individual requirements. suites of the better kind REDUCED 25% —now enters an event of most unusual importance—a sale of magnifi- cent cane living room suites that are a revelation in beauty and richness. 40 suites in this lot. You take 25% off the regular price. —this sample value: 12 of these 3-piece living room suites greatly underpriced for this sale— ‘A LUXURIOUS FINISHED CANE SUITE MAHOG $195 regular price $260 ACT QUICKLY! NO MORP WHEN THESE ARE GONE —upholstered in blue or mulberry velour; dav- | —chair and rocker have loose pillow comfy spring enport has loose pillow comfy spring seats | that rest on a coil spring base; also has three loose pillow-back-rests exactly as pictured. \ SECOND AVE. AT PINE ST. IAYMOND. — Yeggs secure $15 iN of Raythond service station, falling to crack safe, { Wednesday is the _ last day of the Anniversary Sale Fraser-Paterson Co. L. SCHOENFELD & SONS Founded 1864 seats that rest on coil springs; also loose pillow- back rest exactly as pictured; regular price, three ieces complete, $260—; $195—. special for this gale, FURNITURE COMPANY TACOMA L, SCHOENFELD & SONS Won't Buy Coal; Costs Too Much LONDON, Oct. 18—The British Public is refusing to buy coal at its present price. As & result great No Place Like Home LONDON, Oct. 18.—Within a day jafter he had been released from the | years, Johg Bartlett decided there stores are atcumulating, but dealers| was no other place in the world so @eclare there is no prospect of a de-| nice as his little cell and no job equal crease, to his hard labor under guard, So = when he found a “bobby” handy, he Girl Digcharged; deliberately kicked in a plate glass window. The policeman acted ax Revenge Is Murder) John expectes and the latter was re- BERLIN, Oct. 18.—In revenge for | tFned to prison to do a threemonth being discharged by her employer, | “*etch. Baroness Tulmein, a maid kidnaped an the 10-month-old baby of the Barno-| Record Bee Hive eas and held it beneath the surface 350 Pounds Honey ofa nearby stream until it drowned. | — LONDON, Oct. 18.—-A single hive of Double Inducements Tomorrow LADIES’ VELOUR COATS hn i |bees in Wiltshire has produced 350 |in the largest single hive production ever recorded. |Weathers Big War; Dies From Scratch HORNSEY, Eng., Oct. 18—Henry $35 Values, Now $25.00 nim fro ey We're offering you coats of the finest quality of velour, lined i throughout with fancy lining and interlined. They are made with the swagger back and belted front; velour button trimmed; colors This coat js sold all over the United are beaver and cordovan. | aROny three days after a nail in his shoe had scratched his toot slightly. | He fought in 10 great battles of thé wit ‘eceiving a wound. | pounds of honey this #eason. ‘This! : Business Increase ORANGE, N. J., Oct. 18—~The flea plague is on the increase hore. shore or mountains have found their houses tenanted by great swarms of the pests, Fumigation companies are making a harvest from the many calls for assistance. The plague ix expected to last until the cold weath- er comes. Darky Chauffeurs Ruled Off Streets JOHANNESBURG, South Africa, Oct. 18--Owing to numerous fatal motor accidents for which native drivers were held responsible by the police, it has been decreed that here- after no colored person shall be al. lowed to drive motor cars in this city. Manufacturer Dies From Excitement ROME, Oct. 18.—Signor Enrico Car- reno, 80 years old and a retired man- ufacturer, died while taking his first motor ride. According to his physi- clan the unusual excitement brought on an attack of heart fallure. States for $35.90. Our October price is $25.00. Children’s Bloomers 49c to $1.00 Extra fine quality of black sateen bloomers for children; good weight and cut full size; band or clastic waist; elastic knee. Ages 2 to 16. Priced 49¢, 65¢, 75¢ and 91.00. Ladies’ Corsets Special $1.75 A serviceable corset, de- signed for the normal, aver- age figure; medium high bust; double skirt; pink cou- ti Bizes 20 to 30. A big special at $1.75. | Ladies’ Union Suits $1.50 and, $1.75 Serviceable fleeced union suits; medium weight; Dutch neck and elbow sleeves or Jow neck and sleeveless; an- kle length. Sizes 34 to 46. SAVES VOU MONE V’| Women’s Hose Pair 35¢ Women's heavy fleeced stockings of a superior qual- ity; black only; ribbed top; reinforced toes and heels. Sizes 9, 9% and 10. Three pairs for $1.00, Hair Ribbon brat 5 Yard 25¢ For effective and stylish hairbows we are offering taf feta ribbons; 4- and 5-inch widths; shown in plain and floral designs; colors are red, blue, green, etc.; 35¢ quality. o Shy deoet you in this, health of remedy that yo ‘oumVhat Is Ladies’ Bloomers Special 39c Regular 50c Quality ~of Jersey knit bloomers; medium weight; elastic at waist and knee; pink and white. Sizes 5, 6, 7 and 8, lef o! msi 01 Diarrhoea ; allayin of "6 gnletion ?? are but éeparina idren—Experience Never attempt to relieve y u_ would ic, Drops and 8: Brita, Be Mine ‘nor, other aaotoibe sgubetenn ‘Por ry} m, Filatul Buea lency, Wind Colic and es the Stomach and Bowels, 3 givin; a fi althy Bears the Signature of Have Always Bonght has bo the ai; ture of 5 itcher, | Sy aerate pry as been made under his iow no one our baby use for STOR tute for Castor ourself, ares For been tn constant use forthe arising therefrom. » alds the as- nai e | in Use For Over 30 Years SEATTLE STAR Austrian Capital Is Recover- ing From War NEW YORK, Oct. 18.—Would you deport Molsche Shulman? | On September 12, 1920, this 10 year-old lad landed with hie mother and sister at Bilis island, New York, |refugees trom Red Russia, They came to join the father and two sons, who had been residents of the United States for eight years, | For the last three years the father, | Nathan Shu and had adv » had. been « citizen d to a position pay ying him $100 a week. | In the examination of Molsche at Ellis island, pe was classified as de ficient mentally, due to a physical disorder, and ordered deported. His mother wag given the choice of remaining in this country, with the reat of her family, or of being deported with the son. Bond was furnished and the boy was allowed to land for the period of a year, Must Molsche retirn to the terrors of starving Russia? Tho law says that he was deficient) at the time of ‘his arrival and must eventually be deported. From the @ge of 9, Molsche had lived in @ country torn bythe rav. ages of war, | fancy was ¢ shrapnel, Schooliig he had none, for the schools had been swept away tn war's wreckage, For over @ year before coming to America, with his mother and sister, had gubsisted on the berries! they could find in the fields. To them the «light of a uniform meant terroriam, abuse, oppression. Is it any wonder that the boy, faced by the uniformed inapectors at Bilis island, with memories «tilt! fresh in his mind of the meaning of other uniforms, should shrink from them in terror? Is it any wonder that his mind, un trained in any school, should fall to pass the mental test required? But mark what food and care have accomplished: In November, 1920, he started to Public school. - For the first month, his grades showed an average of 31, Then he began to gain, Month by month his averages picked up, unti] from March July, 1921, he averaged 10 Mis proficiency in mathematics has astonished bis teachers, He now ts able to speak, read and write English, Much of his time {s spent in study, yet he has the normal boy's fondness for play, The bathing beaches on |“ Island are his delight. troyed by bursting But one cloud remaing on the hori- non of his life, The immigration authorties have |agreed to extend the time of depor tation for two more years, but yet, In the end, he must be deported—un- leas the president intervenes, That, or changing the law, Molsche’s only hope, ‘The law says that thone of feeble mentality must be deported. It does not differentiate between thore canes ‘which are curable and those which are not. ‘The law was passed by congress. Should it be revised? What do you think? BOY MUST G0 BACK TO RUSS is Released From Jail, |Fleas Cause Great _| Child of U.S. Citizen Will Be Deported VIENNA, Oct. 18.—Vienna has | prison where he had served several) Wealthy families returning from pea. |De*M described as a vast metropolis in which desolation reigns. Well, that is not Vienna! By day there is an animated air about the beautiful city. By night ‘the terrace restaurants on the wide boulevards are crowded with people sipping coffee or eating ices. And the shops, especially the ones that deal tn luxury articles, are well stocked, o ‘Tho there fs still much unemploy- ment in Vienna, much begging on the streets and much bitter poverty which American relief organizations are striving to alleviate, the Vien- nese think the worst ts over, It is not only that the league of nations is undertaking a scheme to help finance the state, but that busi- hes# men are beginning to feel that Vienna has not been hit an absolute- ly crushing blow by the. peace treaties which carved the once mighty Austro-Hungarian empire up and left Austria a small state with one-third its population in the cap- ital, Captains of commerce and finance in Vienna believe their city is des- tined to remain the most important place in Southeastern Europe, not mnly because the streams of trade naturally flow there and meet, but jbecause of the effective commercial and financial organization built up in Vi nce in the past few months has shown that buyers from the Balkan states still prefer to come to Vienna to make purchases. This is due to the fact that Vienna offers wider attractions, has better hotels and amusements and in Ger- man has a language that most of the buyers understand. Speed Gets ’Em, We'll Say It Do! | ROME, Oct. 18--A motorcyclist bandit, with a machine of marvelous speed, is terrorizing the motor roads of Central Italy. More than 100 mo. torists have been held up in a single day. Man Is Smothered by 10 Tons of Sand NEWHAVEN, England, Oct. 18, GAYER VIENNA | IS DEVELOPING | Sta “The bodies of the dead lay un- heeded in the streets, while thousands of people, sick and starving, search for a bit of bread.” This, according to Dr. William E. Doughty, is the condition in the Near Kast, Dr. Doughty, associate general sec retary of the Near Hast relief, told of the things he had seen during re cent travels thru Armenia and Geor Near Wast relief workers of Western Washington, who met in annual conference at the Wash ington Hotel Annex Monday, The address was made at the conference luncheon. SAW CHILDREN DROP AND DIE “1 have seen thousands children clothing,” E “and when denied, fall on the streets to die, I have seen chil dren knocking at the gates of our Near East orphange, and de- nied because we have no room.” Near Wart workers of America are) caring for 200,000 children in or phanages. Three hundred thousand more children, however, will frepze and starve to death if further aid is The home he had known since In-' not given, according to Dr. Doughty. | The condition has been made worse, | he says, by the war between Turkey and Greece, “Our people of the Near ; Dr. Doughty told his audience, “do not @peak of thone who have de. stroyed their homes and their cities an “Turk They call them “beast.” 'W the beast came’ in what they sa OTHER EXPERIENCES TOLD TO WORKE! Other experiences among the Ar- menian people were told to the ar Wast relief workers by Dr. EB. T. Allen, who spent the years of the ~ Millions Use “‘Gets-It” For Corns Stops Pata tnstantiy—Removes Corns Completely. Everybody, every know millions of ‘ned about where, needs to fol "Ge painless corn Ged Your Comms With “Geto.” Seep Faated. ep vayiehly when jeep roo “Gete- It" ives. Wonderfully sim- ‘4 yw erful. because ope. t ply make corns money back if on the genuine. everywhere. Co., Chicago. Ow! Drug Co. Offi. Clean, pure, healthful heat, always ready. No fires to build; no ~ dirty, dusty ashes to remove and litter up the rugs and floors. ~ Te HUMPHREY | Because of the high flame intensified combustion made Arthur Hibling and two children were buried in a cavein of 19 tons. of sand. The children crawled out and went for help. Hibling was! smothered when they returned, | David andGoliath | All Over Again NEW YORK, Oct. 18.-A rat 21 inches long was caught by a weasel only seven inches long on board a vessel which arrived here from! Mediterranean ports, wonderful new safety burner. Because this heat, coming lace-like heating elements, becomes further in- tensified, making them glow tensely hot. rving Children, — Refused Food, Drop in Street and Die the | TUESDAY, OCTOBER DR. H. T. HARVE (Ex-President Michigan Sta’ Board Dental Examiners) Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist “Ray Laboratory Highest Order of iicstoration Ww ‘ork Done Examination and Estimate Free 504-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE war in Armenia and who is at pres ent professor of Biblical Uterature Jat Whitman college. “War, pestilence and famine have brought the numbers of Armenian peoples down from 150,900 to 80, 000,,' declared Dr. Allen, “The story of old Job, his suffering, his misery, is being written over and over again in the Near Bast, All those people have had hag gone in a night. I we do not save them, we will have nothing left but a heathen East | under the rule of the Turks.” | . He Oughta Be in the Regular Army LYONS, France, Oct. 18.—A hun ter waiting for « train at the Oullins| station accidentally discharged his} gun. Four persons standing in a! : line at the ticket window were|| Teeth in which badly wounded by the same buttet. || he nerve bas _ been killed may | become ab neessed. If they } De do they are dangerous to health. The XRay & the best way so far devised to determine whether or not a tooth Is ab- scessed. We tooth for you without charge, Our examina tion Is as per fect as skill,| | scientific in, struments |] |] and years of experience can devise, } 1514 Westlake Ave. Between Pike and Pine Sts. Times Square Sixth and Virginia Saturday, October 22, Our 11th Anniversary See Our Birthday Cake : Containing $500 a Go Con FLOUR SPECIAL EXTRA, $1.78 DELIVERED TO YOUR HOME Sugar Stall Lower Section. i Brown, 2 lbs. Cube, 3 Ibs. .....27c Powdered, 3 lbs. .27c Lower Section. d Cor adiant Is Absolutely Odorless! It Will Give You More Heat for Less Money Why? temperature and possible by ouF Because this incandescent mass throws out Pure, radiant heat waves all over the lower part of the room, warming you instantly. Because of these things, there are no un- burnt gases, therefore, no oder, no noise and absolutely no fire danger. It is a perfect hygienic fire and wonderful for a sickroom, On Sale and Demonstrated at in contact with and become in- RADIANTFIRE SALES CO. 15164, Third Ave. Elliott 1671 ome Dr. L. B. Clarks will X-Ray one if 4 i é

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