The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 5, 1921, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

on Exhibit Here’ ) Arthur B Wilmot, Wilmot, formeriy John Lindh Co., re "wntly returned from New York Where he succeeded in obtaining one Wf the hovel. paper sults, made in Poasermany, The sult is on exhibit at Their store, 1123 Third ave. Johnson & Wilmot are inviting thelr Sel friends and the general public to in their now locat of Johnson: | on out of the city con- ine last few weeks and ae “4 the unemployed ques- this Woek. unemployed, the trampa, thi the L W. W's, are all or ‘ot economic environment They nvironment, bu y are by it and direct product of me heres om which displaces right as mt fundamental get, dependa human — existence eat tone (for work) aa lity asking for the right na he who deprives one of Bi means of living) is taking s right to live. Some one| ht to tell this to some member 3 a council and civil service "We hear. about erer-qrotnets = the cause of hard Umes and i but the fact ia there over-production. “4 ho tamer | Bar <4 purchase necessities of life, reali what appears to be over- fe-labor ba tone, Ff be retrieved. Wage-labor seria of on labor-power ¢ price of labor-power mined by the cost o gince the laborer must ower by consumin, J ent shelter, the lower his s lower his standard of ats r and t disease and contagion his leasened resistance, th: will wear out and die Feligion (I distinguish here gion ristianit te mak if him think he w' happy hunting ground, b ust pot ask for Deefateak here CAPITAL HELPLESS ie helpless beeause the ef labor must be taken as land November 5 and @ . |ington State college missed a class Notes and Comment on | THE OLD HOME TOWN Herbert Choynski, grand ‘vice president of the Bagles, will be the featured speaker at an open meet ing of the Snohomish aerie, No, 192, to be held on November 9, The pub- He will be Invited. The Girls’ and Boys Glee elud of the Port Angeles high school are making preparations for a comic op. eretta, “Pocahontas,” to be pro. duced early in February. eee Congresaman J, W. Summers has recommended Cyrus F. Morrow for | the fouryear term as postmaster of Walla Walla, eee Snohomish breeders of prize Hol stein stock will be represented by six head of cattle at the Pacific Ln, ternational Livestock show at Port Profeasor ©. A. Iaaacs of Wash thie week, It was the first time in 25 years that he had been absent on account of illness, He has an attack of the flu. oe. October was a delightful Indian summer month in the Kittitas val- ley. eee A big future ts predicted for the pottery industry in the Nortfrwest by the federal bureau of mines, The materials available in the Pacific Northwest hold gigantic possibilities for the development of a hight-grade | white ware, according to report. eee M. L. Brooks, well-known resident of Puyallup, has sold out his inter ests in the Independent Fug! Co. to his partner, F. M. Kent, and will leave on an extended trip in the East and California. eee A carrot was used to lure away a porcupine which was found under | the desk of Principal Rolof, in the! Pasco high school recently. ee Catherine Ralston, of Port An. geles, and Emma Abbot, of sero.) Woolley, have been picked for the! hockey squad at Washington State college, eee “The Sales Tax” will be the subject for discussion at the regular meeting of the Puyallup Commercial club, Monday noon, ee ° The postoffice department at Washington has called for civil serv. ice examinations for the appointment of postmasters at Okanogan, Repub- Me, Yakima and Medical Lake, eee Eleven barbers of Toppenish have petitioned the city commissioners to pass an order providing that barber shops should be open only from 8 a ™, to 630 p.m. The present custom prevails for an hour more work than {coms | ‘Bat of the proposed schedule, Says the Walla Walla Union: “New ‘anes |{28t Overseer Voliva bas decided wi s are high and he can- e. tries cannot reign coun: consui Product of labor except on and if we of exchenge tn “this exchange. @ because the standard of living loited fore, orker is than ours. ‘The wi ed made one shall right a to enjo) pike fun fruite ot e us ents C our ~ St te that patriot rinone and la di ies fo made to ° eo product of their toil CURSE OF THE AGE prive men of thelr Fegardiess of their ability civil services commission @ sack of sand, salgning 125 for a man to juggle and do He vodeville stunts with when lies for a job, so that by and custom men who fe-bodieuw but over the age to fifty years, are sent human junk-heap, while some man, with less responsibi!i- kes bis position, His family now the struggle for ex- gst « Job and rks but father. ne: “Every- If we refer city councils, jee commission or legisia- ies who Be reies @ real day's bard live by their wite—the ters. EDWIN J. BRO that the earth isnt round at all, what are we going todo ‘with its axis” ee Nearly twice as many births as deaths occurred last month in Walla Walla county. There were 54 births and 29 deaths. eee Preparations are being made by Evening Star lodge, Knights of Pyth- las, for entertaining hate visiting | | Knights December 12. Nearly Half Plays F ail Producers WonderingWhy Irene Fenwick, who vamps John Barrymore in “The Claw. a low, Fenwick and Barrymore sketched in opening act of | play. All Pythian lodges in Whitman county will par- ticipate in the big Ira BE Clark class initiation, eee More than 3,000 Clarke county people are expected to attend the horse show at the Pacific Interna: tional Livestock exposition at South Vancouver, on Clarke county day, Monday. eee Exch Elke’ lodge tn the state will be asked to build a cottage at the proposed camping resort at the sum mit of Snoqualmie pass. eee Michael Dunne and the former Mrn. Alberta Myers of Mount Vernon are on their honeymoon now, but nel, Sasa er ee 6 Tee Dandeuffs again. After their wed- ding ceremony Thursday night, jovial friends shackled the pair to gether. Then somebody lost the key. It was four hours before an- other key could be found to unlock the handcufis. eee The Ingram Alr Locked Rtm Co. of Walle Walla will begin the manufacture shortly of auto rims The company has secured a three year lease on @ building at 606 W. Main st. PLAYING The Best Dressed Woman on the Screen— BEAUTIFUL ELSIE your drugsist or fer eeape petagueteaen ree sample. NA-DRU-CO,, INC. FERGUSON In the Record-breaking New York Success “FOOTLIGHTS” S Stirring Drama of Life “Behind the Scenes” COLISEUM CONCERT ORCHESTRA PROGRAM SUNDAY SPECIAL CONCERT AT 12:30 or ee pA rement Wrom the “witth Symphony Soprano Solo—Aria From “Afraid of His Wife” Hilarious * Gino Pills are recommended and Wa “Carmen” (a) “Piuette” . (b) “Cavatina” , (ce) “Arubesque” Itz—“Artists’ “Panamericana’ in Seattle by Bartell Drug , Swift's Pharmacy, corner nd send: Pike, and other reliable “mf AU MUTLA Pek ana ls . Hite THE SEATTLE STAR Alaska Railway Co. | Planning Extension WASHINGTON, Nov. 6.--The Alaska Fatiway Co. appeared before the interstate commerce commission today, asking authority to issue shares of common stock, for exte ing the main line several miles be yond the present end, at the Alaska Pacific Coal Co., In Canyon Creek National Educator Heard by Chamber The importance of the public schools In aiding eltizenship building was emphasized by Hugh 8. Magill, field secrptary of the National Indu cational association, who spoke Fri day before the members’ counell of the Chamber at Commerce. | Department Store Investigator Held CG EB, Schulta spectal investigator for a Second ave, department store, is held in city jail on an “open” charge following his arrest Mriday noon by city detectives. Coody stolen from the store are alleged to| have been found in his home. Extension Service Starts New Class Dean F, & Bolton will instruct a class in the tmprovement of teachers to be given by the University of Washington extension service this winter, The class will continue 24 weeks and will be held each Wednes- day, at 4p. m,, in room 1043, Henry building, A small meving plictura, machine |is made to be clamped to the wind |shield for making movies of scenes |while on tour, | his wife, A mob stones his window. He drops dead. The best part of Barrymore's act- ing ts the completeness with which he allows himself to be ruined, Irene Fenwick is the vamp of vampe who ) aocomptiahes all thia, Boat Sc I =—SAVE MONSY= ‘94 i 7rave/ by sfeamer BY JAMES W, DEAN | NEW YORK, Nov, 6.—Twenty-tx | of the 62 plays produced in New | York this season have failed. Producers are wondering why. The. answer that the public this season is not paying just to go to the the atre, Several plays falling In New York | have been sent on the road, heralded | “attractions from Broadway.” =| ‘They failed on the road, too, One comedy, featuring two stars, opened to $144 the first night in Cleveland, and drew only $158 its second night. Meanwhte, “The Bat” is still run ning strong in New York, after two years, One company ts playing it in Chicago, another in Philadelphia, and two on the read, The royalties ot Avery Hopwood and Mary Roberts |i Rinehart are reported to be $6,000 a pars a? MIpNIGUT te Victoria ttle Bat. Ni; NU POINT incod HOOD CANAL PX 7 Ne an Bay «~ Way P. Barrymore | Paris publisher who betrays his par ty because of the Influence of a young vampire whom he marries The end of the play shows him a blabbering- lipped old dolt, taced by | complete dishonor and deserted by Her heart cries out to tell him! She’s the finest success in the world — yet to him? A fraud! He loves the famous Russian actress—does he love plain Lizzie Parsons? tions in “Foot- lights,” each costing a young fortune, Pathe News First National Kinograms Slow Motion Pictures of “The Art of Self Defense” sreees Buppe aphalnowaly “Herbert APONTE HTT NAY all nl COU et CONTESTANT } Miss Nancy Palmer, 162 26th ave., employe of the Western Electric company, is another candidate for first honors in the Shrine popular- ity contest, the winner of which will be announced at the close of the circus now be- ing held in the Arena. The prize is a $2,850 Paige car.— Photo by McBain studio. To Use Shotguns on Alaska Terns A combination of Dolly Varden | trout and Alaska tern is creating havoc among the salmon in Alaskan streams, according to D. Winn, field superintendent of the United States bureau of fisheries, who has just re- turned trom @ trip to the North. Ho said shotguns would be used on the | torna, Jobless Ask Kansas Executive to City Gov. Henry Allen of Kansas has been invited to attend the public en- tertainment to be given by the Seat- tle Association of Unemployed in he 3 ‘Sin of Father Already Visiting Itself Upon Children of Brumfield BY ARTHUR SULLIVAN ROSEBURG, Or, Nov. §.--Kich ard M, Brumfield sinned, He wil! pay with his Uife for his transgres sion. Hig wife, Innocent woman, wuffer. Soctal ostracism disgrace are her lot. “Doo” Brumfield'’s payment will be light—a month in a death cell & march to the gallows, @ drop, then oblivion, The wife may week other climes She is still pretty and may find a new mate She may be able to forget, “And 1 visit the iniquities of the father, even unto the fourth genera tion,” read the scriptures. The scriptures speak the truth For it is the second generation of the house of Brumfield that feels most keenly the disgrace of its erst while head The condemned dentist has three small sons, Richard, Gilbert ant Robert, aged 11, 9 and 7. The! three small boys suffer most be cause of the father’s crime, see Children ape their eldera Tots are naturally eruel. Mature Roseburg turned its thumbs down on the dentist and demanded his life. Young Roseburg, unheeded in the council of the elders, turned to Brumfield’s sons and punished those helpless tots for the father’s offense SONS NOW LIVE IN SECLUSION The three youths, with their mother, several relatives and friends, have been living in a se ctusion in a house in North Rose burg. Richard alone braved the storm of popular censure and at tended sehool, He stood it for days. Then came the climax, at midnight, when the jury ‘returned the verdict which doomed the father to a disgrace- ful and ignominous death on gibbet, Young Brumfiel4 brevety startet for school the next morning. must | and) Brumfield. He'll get what he had coming.” ‘The brave little fellow could stand it no longer. He leet hig nerve, burst into tears and retreat ed to bis home For the rest of the day he and his brothers re- mained im hiding. MOTHER MAY FORGET, BUT CHILDREN NEVER Brumfield has his Bible mn ft he seeks consolation. He finds hope in the words of the gentle and merciful Man of Nazareth, In @ month, man will have wreaked bis vengeance on the mortal clay of fuchard M. Brumfield. His case will then go before a real Supreme Judge. The testament gives him hope that bis troubles may end. A bushand t# an tmportant part of a woman's life. But a mate not an integral part. Divo courts prove that. One may pans away, others can be found. Mra Brumfield may seek happiness anew. Man has but one father, one natural parent. The average youth prides himself on hig father. To bis juvenile eyes, the male parent is usually the personification of masculine perfection. Imagine, then, if you can, the three young Erumfields. Imagine their life im Roseburg. Imagine | that taunting ery that will probably follow therm thra life: “Gee, your dad got hung.” Bureau of Missing Relatives ‘The Star invites its readers to use finding locate her brother, Jacob Spangler, Their mother ts dying and wants to see ber boy. GRIFFITH” Crowning Work of Genius! THE DRAMA OF AMAZING SCENES AND CROWDED EMOTIONS! LILLIAN GISH as “Anna” RICHARD BARTHEL- MESS as “David” —and— Burr MelIntosh Kate Bruce Creighton Hale Mrs. Morgan Belmont Strand Orchestra Under 8, K. Wineland Playing Lallaby”

Other pages from this issue: