The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 24, 1921, Page 2

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[rr IDAY-SATURDAY SPECIALS— —no C. 0. D. or phone orders; one to a purchaser—these specials will not be delivered; can be easily taken by purchaser. | smokers’ Boetand: af specia : Hy ; priced— et! 98 regular price S173 in fumed or natural oak: hetght 28 Ins, nd holder: special— 35C¢ complete regular price S3e si pi STAR —6500 of these large MAIN F FEATURE ze, 12 in. high. dogs, exactly a» ictured, go on sale Friday and exactly as pictured; height complete, 12 ins; mahogany fin- ished, brass lined candlestick; assorted colored candles; reg- ular price S5¢; spe- cial Friday-Saturday, 33e. reduced— $395 wegular price 96— \ boxes in black, ee gray? miso patent leathet in biack: complete w mirror and 8 ay Fae a is; regular ie : Sai liaay“Raturday, 93.96. oven he ono regular price $t— uine cowhide leather Toston ge sizes; black am re p Beturday, S215. Saturday. TOY TOWN IS READY! —Toy Town is rendy and BUSY, too. Bring in the kiddies and get their idee on what THEY would iike. Buy those toys NOW. “Chinese baskets: special priced — 98c. regular price $2— —fancy Chinese bamboo bas- kets; decorated with coins, sitk tassels; 12- ; regular price ; special Friday-Sat- special — $535 regular price 96.50 —fine quality cotton wool- nap blankets in large size, SECOND FLOOR — : THESE BUBBLE BOOKS: extra special — each book contains 8 records of Nursery rhymes and Mgther Goose stories, sung very distinetly by H tive gift for children; regular price $1.2 Saturday ry Burr: an attrag wat reer 7QC VOOR eed —covered with Can- ton flannel, col- ored crystal eyes, leatherette —col- lars — while they last, 35¢ each. aluminum Tice boiler: special— $148 regular price $2.75 —1\%-auart aluminum rice boiler; heavy gauge. pol- ished finish. LS inter tar ths Toy C mise (out it out) —will get one of these little battleships; nicely decor- ated in colors and with American flag. (no mail orders) TOY DEPARTMENT. IDAHO BANK CLOSES IDAHO FALLS, Idaho, Nov. 24.— order of the state bank examiner, State Bank of Idaho Falls closed doors yesterday. Siow liquidation | bee: Horlicks ed Milk of paper, whieb in ordinary times | Dog would have been good, is said to have m the cause of the bank's failure. (Ex-President Michigan State Board Dental Examiners) Dental Surgeon Diagnostician Pyorrhea Specialist X-Ray Laboratory Highest Order of Restoration 604-12 Eitel Building SECOND AND PIKE SEATTLE Well, Once Again Mr. Gobbler tpone Trial of Judge in Auto Case! PASADENA, Cal. Nov. %4.— United States Judge Hage Morris, | district of Minnesota, scheduled to go to trial here yesterday before Police | Judge Frank Dunham on the charge jof having injured a woman while |driving bis automobile in the heart lof the city a month ago, did not ap pear in court. Judge George E, Waldo, represent jing him, succeeded in having the case postponed “indefinitely.” ‘Hope Abandoned for ‘Youth Brother Shot | TIETON, Nov. 24,—-Charies Pat | terson, 10, accidentiy shot here by | nis brother, is sinking, and hope has been given up for his life THE SEATTLE STAR ‘And Not Only for Life | Mrs. Emily Laberteaux Drake ANN ARBOR, Mich. Nov. 14.— | What should a 100-yearold woman |give thanks for on Thankagiving | day? | Why, for being alive, of course. But, more than that, for having! jlived thru a whole century and thaving seen the world develop in) | the most wonderful century of its! | history, says Mra, Emily Laberteaux | Drake, who's “going on 101." When Mrs, Drake was born in 1s21— Everybody traveled on horseback Jor in horxedrawn vehicles All of North America except the Atlantic seaboard was a howling | wildernes: ) Napoleon was still living and BG jrope was just getting on ite feet] fter the war into which he the continent f WATCHED THE | UNITED STATES GROW The United States was about as impertant as CzechoSlovakia is to- day And I'm going to give thanks for the privilege of seeing the world! grow from that to what it is now,”) Mrs. Drake says. “I watched our country grow up! T lived thru the gajd rush to Cali- fornia and the latet gold rush to the Klondike, “1 saw the automobile replace the | horse, ‘And, let me tell you, I don’t} Jobject to a spin now and then, my-/ we “Then I saw the telegraph de | | velop and. later the telephone that! j lets me ‘call’ on my friends while| j 1 stay right here at home. | “When the world war was on, I | read about submarines and remem beved that when I was @ girl the| | fastest Ahip was a sailing vessel | that took months to cross the At-| | antic. WOULD LIKE TO FLY | AN AIRPLANE "1 saw the airplane come, too, and nothing would make me *hap-| 1921 Record of Pedestrians Hit by Automobiles 2 theecgncconp ir Paro |injured at Sixth ave. 8. and Welter | St, Tuesday, by 8, Shimada, 1222| | Weller st., who took the injured man | |to city hospital. 70 —Kenik Sturges, while coast | | ing down a hill at Harri-/ |#on st. and Yale ave., was struck by | |A. Duffy, 2558 Westlake ave. N., Tuesday. The boy was slightly burt. | 70 ~An unidentified man, be coming confused in the street at Second ave. and Madison st., was struck by R. H. Pease, 1420 N. 35th st, Tuesday. The man said he was junhurt and walked away. |Bogus Check Sleuth Accused of Forgery Hirnself an expert in tracing bogus checks, T. B. Blake, alias T. B. Reid, former private detective, ig charged with forgery in the first degree in a} complaint filed Wednesday before Justice of the Peace C. C. Dalton, according to Prosecuting leolim Douglas, passed an $700 of worthless checks le, and a like amount in Ta-| His “system,” Douglas says, was to tender a large check in pay.| ment for goods, ordering them went | to false addresses, and to keep the change. Blake, | Attorney mor in com |] The pier than to take a flight some day I'm going to do it, too, if I get a chance “Now, wouldn't any old Iady be ungrateful if she didn’t thank her Creator for letting her see all these changes?” Mrs, Drake was married at 17 when Andrew Jackson was presi- dent. She reared nine children and survives six of them. As a young bride, she was a plo- neer in the Michigan wilderness She went to her first “soclal func tien” in @ cart drawn by « team of oxen " Woman Thankful at 100 One for aroma. TURKISH | ‘The finest tobaccos aged and blended. Teeth In which the nerve has been killed may become ab- ncerned. Ie thay, ‘ do they are dangerous to health, X-Ray te the best way so far devised to determine whether or not @ tooth Is ab scesned. We will X-Ray one tooth for you without charge. '| The Regal Dental Offices DR, L. R. CLARK, Manager 1405 Third Avenue Corner Third and Union Dr... R. Clark || THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1927, course will start with the dramatic, period of Shakespeare and the) | Blizabethane, taking the students to YBOR CITY, la sumption of olf wage cigarmakers go on strike. Class in History of English Drama A university extension class in| the beginning of the eighteenth histe pf the Bnglish drama will! century. Registration ts now open be organized in room 1043 Henry om 1044 Henry building, Main building, Monday at ip. m. The 7 YAKIMA.—Temp ma valley drops to 6.5 de Copyright 1921 Hart Schaflnes & Mars Important for Parents Half-Price Sale Hart Schaffner & Marx BOYS’ SUITS ad OVERCOATS We've selected over 350 Boys’ Suits and Over- coats from our regular stock, two, three and - four of a kind, ages 8 to 19, and for the next 8 days you can buy them at one-half of regular. prices. You may be able to find lower prices; you can’t find better clothes. These clothes cost you less by the year than any others. They outwear other clothes. positive guarantee of satisfaction or money back: Sale Ends December 3rd Hart Schaffner & Marx Clothes Shop Corner Second and Seneca Where Aphrodite Wears Her Pearls— GREETINGS! HOW DID YOU ENJOY THE FOOTBALL Mebbe we didn't do so much this year, but watch Coach Bagshaw’s boys next season, GAME TODAY? Keep an eye on this year’s frechman crop. We'll tell the entire universe and Tacoma that they’re But, Oh, You Ought to See What Romeo and Juliet Wear AS GOOD AS ALASKA GOLD —The stuff is there—and its only a question of diggin, out—AND eee TWO-FISTED MEN —and courageous, stout-hearted women in that wonderful North. land conquer nature's obstacles— - “DOUBLING - FOR ROMEO” rezine UH Ne’er to Return “Road” eau" drama of an Alaska railroad building aS ti NID) mother love! “THE IRON TRAIL” Evea_ more thrilling on the screen than in the book. And meet romance as only REX BEACH can tell it! He tells it in the best novel he has written since “The Spoilers”-—it's In the role of the ek Demanding re. cae, 8,900 | That isn’t talk or guesswork; we back it up with a | TURER OF HAMS HAS AROUND THANKSGIVING TIME? And who do None but charming “THE WONDERFUL ste is? Norma Talmadge » THING” Kat Hearty! Bnjoy selves at home and FE __ Hoor GiBson | x New playing tn a “SURE FIRE!” learns: her husband COMA They don’t go good with’ Cranberries, eh, what? dust, the same, that isn’t worry- ing the daughter of the biggest ham manufacturer in the U, 8.— Folks UM she is?

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