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Kuppenheimer Society Brand Rosenwald and Weil BROTHERHOOD OF AMERICAN } YEOMEN members in Seattle have} Pledged themselves to a nation-wide ¢ampaign to raise a fund for the pro-| "viding of homes for motherless and Bs fatherless children 4 ‘wash it with. ie @Pd entirely greaseless), ts much bet "and cleanses the hair and scalp thor. nd easy to manage. for Washing Hair If you want to keep your hair in| goed condition, be careful what yoy! Most soaps and prepared sham | contain too much alkall, ‘Thie| the scalp, makes the hair the, and is very harmful. Mulaitieg| eocoanut ol shampoo (which is pure ter than anythihg else you can use for shampooing, as this can't pos sibly injure the hair. Simply moisten your hair with water and rub it in. One or two) fteaspoonfuls of Mulsified will make ‘an abundance of rich, creamy tether, | oughly. The lather rinses out easily, | and removes every particle of dust,! dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it Jeaves it fine and siiky, bright, Qufty | You can get Mulsified cocoanut ofl | Shampoo at most any drug store. It} fs very cheap, and a few ounces is| enough to last everyone in the fam-| fly for months. Te sure your drug: gist gives you Mulsified—Advertiae. | ment. | Geo. “Pop” Durgin Dies Sitting at Desk BREMERTON, Jan (Pop) Durgin, 44, Kitsap county iff, mayor of Charleston and prest ee r ident of the Charleston chamber of | commerce, died of apoplexy yenter day while sitting at his desk in Port Orchard, Durgin was born in Romeo, Mich March 15, 1874. At the age of 16 jhe joined the navy. Bremerton in 1911 as chief gunner’s | mate and took up hin residence in Charleston, where he becaine one of the city’s leading citizens. He is survived by & widow and a 13-year-old son, Charles. Bremerton lodge of Elks will have charge of the funeral #ervices Sunday after noon in Charleston. | Surrenders to Face Trial in Bond Sale E. C. Hart, indicted Iast summer | for complicity In the sale of worth leas Skagit tide lands, together with E. Dye, Oliver M. Sparks, | Charles A. Sparks and Dell Lamp. | man, has given himeelf up to federal | | authorities, furnishing $500 bail and waiving extradition. The case will be tried in federal court February 28. MONTH: EAL, Que — Puring the 1921 season no leas thah 807 trans. Atlantic steamers came in or went out of this port, their net tonnage being 2.598.495 Liven Up Your Home With Music Music is a wonderful cure for lonesomeness —an outlet for pent-up energy—or a sooth- ing balm for a weary worker after a day of toil. being a musician. You can have and enjoy music without VICTROLAS $25 to $300—Easy Terms From the four corners of the globe have been collected the finest musical numbers of every type and description, faithfully recorded, that you may enjoy them at will in the privacy of your own home, That is what the Victrola offers you. We have all the popular models in the various wood finishes. Come and hear, “Seattle's Musical Headquarters” He retired at| THE SEATT Beautiful Soul or Face-Which, | 0 You, Seattle? De Washington citizens prefer beautiful faces to beautiful souls? Figures insued by the Seattle Chamber of Commeres statistical bureau raine the question, For Washington had in 1920, 2,078 mon barbers, hairdrensers and manicurista, and 641 women in the same occupetions, Mean while only 1,607 men were active in the clerical profession, with 42. women, Women of Washington, cording, to the figures, seem de termined toy establish and main: oan equal right in all indus tries, There were in 1920 no lens than 48 womdén fishermen and oystermen. In baggage smashing to be come & perquisite of the eternal ferninine, too? ‘The figures show seven listed as draymen, team stern and expresamen, In 1920 there Was but one venturesome daughter of Bve tn thin work | Lopenboring, thought of aa a * lor eo hy emt, ker Notes a nema cuscumbing jp Suniiag SAN to Roosevelt Post ‘EXTRA TAXES T0 PAY VETS’ BONUS | Administration “Le aders Agree on Plan mvt eee NC WASHINGT n of $1,600,000,000 in ext 1 of 30 months h 1 by admpintr aya means of sing the soldier | bonus before British debt bonds be: | come avaliable for that purpore. } Taxes manoline. checks automobiles, increased portage and « sales tax on 100 selected articles are to provide the money, MARTIN 20.--Raistng taxes n a deter leaders on bank according to} ne present plans. | This plan has been worked out In recent conferences between Presi dent Harding and senate leaders. | | Meantime every effort ts to be! centered on getting the foreign debt | funding bill thru. | The sooner that the funds for the | ained from Amer the better it and po-| } bonus can be tea's European debtors. | will be, both economically | tically, party leaders hold. nuce to Five women were trundling freight trucks > 1920, Twenty- four women were engaged in shipbuilding a laborers, with 261 as buliding and 133 sawmill and planing mill laborers. ‘The figures even show that the powder puff and the hairpin entered the lutnber camp and forest Washington tn 1920 had 53 women lumbermen, raftamen and wood choppers. Khowtng that the women were prepared to fol low the lumber to the consumer, there were 283 women sawmill and planing mill laborers and 261 women building laborers. ‘The professions, too, have their share of ‘There were in 1920, 29 women lawyers, Judges and justices, 1.464 musicians and teachers of music, 177 physicians and surgeons, 5,765 school teach- om Next Tuesday evening Roosevelt post Will attend in a body the un | vetting of a painting of Theodore Roosevelt at Fort Lawton, following the regular meeting of the post at T p.m. The principal address on be half of Roosevelt post will be detiy ered by Capt. Ewing D. Colvin. [There will be unveiled at the same |time a portrait of President Hard ing. an address on whose life will lhe delivered by James A. Henderson lof Seattle post 18, American Legion. Pee ay There are 220 unemployed veterans | being cared for at Roosevelt hall at/ the present time. Three meals a day are furnished them, the food being | provided from funds raised by all veteran organizations and prepared | at the hall itself, Among the un- }employed are one lieutenant colonel. | | five majors, four captains, one first | sergeant, 10 duty sergeants, four cor |porals, one former leutenant-com: | mander of the navy, four naval liew ltemants and eight ensigns, All but 115 of the unemployed are American born and all of them except five | served overseas. o- ‘The Veterans’ federation met at Roosevelt hall Wednesday evening. January 1%, and perfected its organt zation for 1922. | It ts composed of three delegates from rach Grand Army post, camp of Spanish American War Veterans and of varioux posts of Veterans of For American Legion as well an Disabled American War Veterans jin the city of Heattle. Its function | is veteran affairs which cannot be handied by @ single organisation. Comment on THE OLD HOME TOWN Kiddies tn They're going t The city ¢ have a& skating dn have decided to riate in the neighborhood of arrange a place for the not to mention the old to skate ‘There are 626 illiterates in Kittitas ee county, according to statintics com Ralph A. Horr, former senior com-| plied by Mra. Cora Wilson Stewart mander of Toonevelt post, returned | educator lant week from an extended tour/in the state for tiliteracy, thruout the country in connection | being Ferry county with the ho«pitaligation work among e jdimbled veterans. He reports that Seattle clube are deing formed among the different posts of Veter-|Ine, of Puyallup. Lagerquist suc ans of Foreign Wars in the Bast to| ceeds Fred L. Chamberiain, who hae | provide means for sending large dele-| been president of the concern since gations to the national convention |its orguntzation nearly three years to be held here next August. wien Department Commander Howard Nelson has been 2S abe! chairman of a committee to amsist/ Tacoma will be the epeaker at the In the organization of a ladies’ aux-|Civic club meeting Mary for Roosevelt post January 27, He will take for his | Commander Harry Young, at the| subject “Wh We Can Do for Our liast meeting, announced the appoint-| Boys and ( ment of the following committees: | | Entertainment, James Frazier, Louis | Keaster, W. J. Mullin; delegates to| $25,000 hardiare store butlding oa the Veterans’ federation, Philip Two-| Laurel st, It will be built by } roger, W. J. Downing, Sterling F.|tinger Brotfiers. Construction wil | Roone: color bearers, George Tow-| be commenced shortly efe, Ed Garrick i ’, Hf ASSOCIATION concluded a two-day |Publisher s Heirs conference Thursday with a meoting | Start Court Action st the New Washington hotet OUT AND ITCHES APPLY SULPHUR the $560 a month provided each of mond sign W youngsters to take care of er folkw the first JobA Lagerquist is the new preat dent of the Grange Warehouse Co, . . Commiaxioner Fred Shoemaker of Port Angries is to have a new NORTHWEST PAPER DEALERS’ |the five children of the Portland Oregonian publisher in his will be paid thern from the date of his | death, January 28, 1919 | The petition, signed by three of | the heirs, is an action to have the! jcourta clear up an obscure passage | in the will which is not clear wheth- | er thie payment Is to be made from |date of death or from the time the| Ellensburg are lucky. {greatest munictan The county ranks second | LE STAR Cadman Is Haman, Is | Discovery %:: Great Musician Is Just a Fine Man, Wanda Realizes WATER SHUT.O} NOTION Water will be shut off on W 76th wt. from Ww. to 24th ave. N. W y from 9 to 4p. m 20th ave, turd am oe od Let'n see didn't things Cadman can do. ye arted when very young STARTED WHEN asusT uM “Yor 1 started moanonger fr Charles gentleman resident of the Carnegie Steel com. pany in Pittsburg. 1 believe I waa just about 14 “Put,”* weld 1 Ald mean profenonally | j | ano was looking him over, “T A—when | Charles W. Cadman By Wanda von Kettler Supposing you'd heard of bim erica’s “renowned and “master musician. And fully expected to talk to somebody who was—a—very temperamental. And then a human being Wouldn't you would. And I 4i4 last night In the Wash ington hotel lebhy, when a tall man / in & gray overcoat, with dark hair faintly intermingled with a few strands of grayness, a regular) emile, and two brown eyes that sort of wughed, sak to me, “Yea. I'm Cadman—now where do you suppose would be the best place to talk?” THAT WAS “ADMAN That was Cadman! Charles Wake |field Cadman-—known as America’s compomr of four operas, including | feel relieved? 1 muccessful The Witel fa an dredn 4 ba day night in acheduled to « Beattie love t the potitan We }a table in grand of of songs ar mu und that place to “talk” at ¢ lobes And I did, after dine ne thing about Cadman in which he differs from other men. He doesn't like to talk about him. self. “Well, let me see." he began to} my, “you know I live in Hollywood —when I'm at home, Sagi'm fairty well acquainted with the movie peo- posing you'd found | ‘young girls. |achieved by Win Fox and Florence did you first study music? | “On, replied Cadman took lessons from a little plano teacher there in Pittsburg when I was quite emall, Learned to play « masurka and “The Stars and Stripes Forever’ and ‘The Maiden’s Prayer’ and some of thone 80 I asked Mr pomnibly “pelieve I adman if he didn’t something—a pampb let something—that might by chanes tell the real things about himaelf, And finally a little book wan produced from his pocket, and I learned from that book these facts Charles Wakefield Cadman was bern in Johnston, Pa, in 1881. He is ealled America’s “Master Mu jaictan,” not only because of hin ability to play and create, but be cause he all American and all human, He seta no verwe to munic that is not composed by an Ameri can author, He in not a Sazzist, but he does believe in mingling the classic with something that really lives. That in why he has written “At Dawning” and “From the Land of the Sky Blue Water,” that live as the rarest of |pepular music in America today Best of all he has made himself. He grew as he told ma from a memnenger boy | Cadman thinks much of bis home in Hollywood where be lives with| his mother in a little “pink and biue cottage,” he says “with green/ abingien.” | “ve just away from the! place a few days.” he mays. | | “I happened to be home last week | for & great time. Mary and Doug | came back to Hollywood, so we fave A homecoming dinner, The best of the whole thing,” he added| | joyously, “was an impromptu pro- andcon debate, beautifully satired| on “The Purity of Hollywood.” | Bomebody please page Paderew |akit Who's afraid of. renowned composers and master musicians? DANCERS HEAD PALACE HIP SHOW Whether the taste is for a high degree of art an expreased in} dancing or melody or for something | ter vein that will bring pus laughter, there is sonr. | he new show that opened 5 Pa Hip yesterday Jappeal to all The big feature of the bmn in the! terpeichorean divertinerment in which Kdward Stanisioff and company are | Economy Basement 99 have or All-black kid, 9-inch lace, leather French heels; a good $10.00 value, in sizes 2% to 8, width AA to D. see.” 25) at bee: Women’s Shoes with mili- tary heels, in black or brown; $6.00 values; in all NOW Children’s Shoes, values to | $3.50, sizes 5 to 12, $1 95 Boys’ Shoes, sizes 4 to only, at noes, ines 82.80 Mail Orders Postage Prepaid Satisfaction or Money Refunded oe to A Fortunate Buy Made Such Values Possible MAIN FLOOR MEN’S| SHOES Brown Calf Lace Shoes with welt soles. Made over stylish, good fitting last; $8.00 values; $3. 80 all sizes; now. MEN’S SHOES 200 pairs Lace and Button. Made by Hurley, Boyden and Rice Hutchins. Nearly all sizes and plenty large sizes. Values to $15.00, aa $2.95 Chal 660 se0e cee SS PUMPS AND OXFORDS, Values $7.50 to $12.00— seen. Annisting him are four pretty Fox and vans are comedians of the minstrel school, whone blackface fun inspires laughter and who _—— ja wicked foot in “eoventric ‘The laughing hit of the ie in Kelly tn their glimpse of donrsticity Goiter Removed. jple, I wonder if you know that Chartle Chaptin is a truly remark.|In three scenes, fittingly labeled able violinist? Most people don't| "Good-bye Forever.” know it, but he is. And did you| Bernice Barlow is « diminutive so- know that Wally Reid can play just | prano. about any instrument on the mar-| The Faber Brothers open the bill ket, and that with hand belancing. sald 1 “Who Am IT" in the feature photo- “T didn't. But map| ) [Posing we talk about some of those play. The Spring Season is approaching—soon every one will be busy and it will cost you more to decorate those rooms than it will right now. trustees take charge of the estate. ig AMUSEMENTS — Just the moment you , apply Mentho-Sulphur to an itching, burn-| ing or broken out skin, the itching stops and healing begins, says a noted skin specialist, This sulphur preparation, made into a pleasant cold cream, gives such @ quick re. lef, even to flery eczema, that noth ing has ever been found to take its | Because of tts germ destroying | | properties, it quickly subdues the} itching, cools the irritation and heals the eczema right up, leaving a clear, | smooth skin In place of ugly erup:| tions, rash, pimples or roughness. You do not have to wait for im| provement. It quickly shows. You can get @ little jar of Mentho-Sub |phur at any drug store. IN OLD RECIPE | TD OMRKEN HAR Common garden makes streaked, hair dark and ye gE SORE THIS Mi THEATRE VAUDEVILLE *: mamO7T. William | Cameron Gaxton Sisters “Kisses” Rhythm Study TWKE DAILY 20.8 mee 15°50" miours AL WOHLMAN CLAUDIUS AND 6CARLET THE FIVE AVALONS RASSO LYDELL & MACY in “Old Cronies” ¢ and Sulphur led or gray ithful at once Almost everyone knows that Sage |Tea and Sulphur, properly ‘com. pounded, brings back the natural color and lustre to the hair when |faded, streaked or gray. Years ago |the only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mussy and troublesome. Nowadays we simply ask at any |drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and | Sulphur Compound.” You will get ja large bottle of thia old-time recipe improved by the addition of other Ingredients, at very little cost Everybody uses thie preparation |now, because no one can possibly |tell that you darkened your hair, jas it does it ac urally and evenly. | You dampen a sponge or soft brush | with it and draw this through your jhair, taking one small strand at a |time; by morning the gray hair dis. |appears, and after another apptica tion or two, your hair becomes beau tifully dark, thick and glossy and you look years pane area] Master Pian Monday Kye, The ment. Costs But Little It is not necessary to spend a lot of money to make your rooms attractive. A dollar or two will buy enough wall paper here for most any room. Dainty Bedroom Stripes and Allover Effects at 5¢, 7¢, 10¢, 12¢ and 15¢ roll. Kitchen Papers at from 5¢ to 25¢ roll. Living-room Papers in the New Tiffany Blends and Rich Tapestry Patterns at from 25¢ to the best. Kalsomine| Paints In Following Colors Our splendid Wear- White, Ivory, Cream, we ag ig eaee ens i ‘ here in Seattle—and ev- Tan, Blue, French Gray, “as teed, Yellow, Green, Pink, etc., if sa aie iga at, choice, 8¢ Ib. Outside and inside Gloss White and colors, special Made in Seattle. at $2.35 gallon. BRUSHES—ALL SIZES AND PRICES And they are also manufactured here. —Buy wile. Products— , Smith's Wall Paper House 1621 Fourth Avenue—Opp. Ritz Hotel able to the public. eral market. sists sell at $2.00 per tin and & tins are sufficient for the average Goiter. pamphiet treating on Goiters. Small Expense A new preparation for removing Golter, called OZ-MO, is now avaik Dr, Clark has used OZ-MO successfully for ser- years and only recently consented to its being placed on tho O7MO is applied externally in the form of poultices. Drug- Write Dr Clark OZMO Co., Inc. Seattle, OZ@MO is guard Wash., nteed. for a special 42-Story L.C. Smith Bldg. Restaaraats, Inc. MRS. CHAUNCEY WRIGHTJONNSTON President —== Announcement Commencing Saturday, January 14, 1922, and EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT thereafter, we will give a SUPPER DANCE From $:00 Until Midnight “A LA CARTE SERVICE” With no cover charges for those who do not dance—for those who do dance, a nominal charge of 35¢ per person will be mada whieh gives full dancing privileges for the entire evening. “EXTRAORDINARY FOOD AT ORDINARY PRICES" 42-Story L. C. Smith Building Restaurants, Inc, MRS. CHAUNCEY WRIGHT-JOHNSTON, President Velvet | “Golden Special” | Brick Ice Cream and EVERYBODY’S DEMANDING Arctic ] () Cc Bars The New Chocolate- coated Ice Gream Con- EVERYWHERE NOW! —They’re Wonders! fection with the won- Velvet Ice Cream Co., Inc. derful center. Main 1827 East 0272 Special Saturday