The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 13, 1922, Page 7

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BONUS FOR ALL STATES What Various. Legislatures | Have Done, as Compiled by Marine Corps Say, buddy, have you collected your bonus? You probably have, if you en- listed in this state—but if you were somewhere else at the time you may not have learned of the provisions made for you. ‘The marine corps recruiting office, | 103 Maynard building, is distributing pamphlets, “What the States Are Doing for the ExService Man,” and the follewing Ust has been compiled from one of these circulars. Additional information may be ob tained from the recru'ting office. ALABAMA; Soldiers’ settlement MONDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1922. LAWS UPON | | COLOR THIS FOR GIRL CHUM | —_— | | } | | board. ARIZONA: Wttempting to settle soktiers on land. ° ARKANSAS: Land settlement commission, | IFORNTA: $1,000,000 appro. n for land settlement. CONNECTICUT: $2,600,000 appro- Priation for veterans relief. DELAWARE: $25,000 appropria- tion for soldiers’ settlement board. Distributing state medals, FLORIDA; Cooperating with U. 8. government in land settlement. IDAHO: $106,000 appropriation for land setthement. . ILLINOIS: Cash bonus $15 a month; maximum $300, minimum $20, effective if confirmed by ern J think that will be dandyz November, 1922. Free normal school | Wie Wee we CFUP UE Wee AMMO bene othalarhion. | Yor you to give to your girl friend. Cut it INDIANA; $15-a- month bonus bill) of cardboard, Then color it neatly. to be voted on this year. | ott wt TOWA: Cash bonus $15 a month;! | maximum $260, minimum $30, ef- fective if confirnmmd by people No- vember, 1922. KANSAS: $1.aday bonus bill to be voted on November, 1922. KENTUCKY: Free scholarships state university. MAINE: Cash bonus of $100 flat if application filed before January 1, 1922. Testimonials distributed and land met aside. MASSACHUSETTS: Cash bonus of $100 fat. Officers above captain ineligible. MICHIGAN: Cash bonus of $15 a month and relief fund. MINNESOTA: Cash bonus of $15 & month, maximum $600, minimum $50, if application filed before this ear MISSOURL Cash bonus of $10 ao month, maximum $250, not payable until about May 1. MONTANA: Cash bonus of $19 0 month, maxithum $200, to be voted on at next general election. NEVADA: $1,000,000 appropria- tion for land grants, $10,000, for vo cational training. NEW HAMPSHIRE: Cash bonus of $100 flat. NEW JERSEY: Cash bonus of $10 a month, if application filed before November 21, 1921. NEW MEXICO: $20,000 appro- priated, to be distributed by soldiers’ settlement board, cooperaging with U. S government, tp develop state lands. NEW YORK: Cash bonus of $10 a month declared unconstitutional, but fight on to get new bill thru. NORTH DAKOTA: Cash boous of $25 a month, minimum $25, maxi- mum $400. Must be spent in state. OHIO: Cash bonus of $19 a month, maximum $250, officers above cap- tain ineligible. OKLAHOMA: Loans for purchase of homes. OREGON: Cash bonus of $15 a month, maximum $500; loans up to $3,000 at 4 per cent, with 2 per cent returned euch year; $100,000 for vet erans’ relief, with $25 a month for education PENNSYLVANIA: Cash bonus of $10 a month, maximum $200, pending. RHODE AND; Cash bonus of $100 flat SOUTH DAKOTA: Cash bonus ot! $15 a month, 50 cents a day, maxi mum $400; loans up to $10,000. TENNESSEE: Soldier settlement board. UTAH: aid soldiers to get farms. Assistant in re-education and vocational train ing. VERMONT: Cash bonus of 919 « month, maximum $120, for enlisted men only. Free scholarships in state institutions. VIRGINIA: = Soldier settlement commission. WASHINGTON: Cash bonus of $15 a month, maximum $465. Land grants. WEST VIRGINIA: Commission to aid soldiers in sattiing go land. WISCONSIN: Cash“bonus of $10 ® month, or $30 a month for educa- tion WYOMING: settling on land. Vets! Don’t Start if You Can’t Finish Cldude H. Anderson, chief of the rehabilitation division of the United States Veterans’ bureau in the Pa- cific Northwest, today notified all vocational tri ne supervisors in Washington, Oregon and Idaho that the law does not provide for refund- ing of money to veterans in case the homesteader finds that his health will not permit him to carry out the SPECIAL TOMORROW PORK CHOP, FRIED EGG, POTATOES, Bread and tter— 30c IN THE FOLLOWING COLEGROVE’S RESTAURANTS EGYPTIAN KITCHEN 7 1524 Third Ave. Loans for soldiers AUTO KITCH Pi and Broadway SPECIALTY FOOD &Hor 110 Pike St. (Business In Geting Better) $1,000,000 appropriated to! } am | I've Laban you to movie shows And bovaht you lots of candy Now if you'll be my Valentine Cynthia Grey: Husband, Haunted by Jealous Fears, Makes Young) Wife Miserable by Taunts and Insinuations | How utterly foolish a child-wife can be and how terribly) \@ jealous husband can make a woman pay for her indiscre-| | tion is related in a sirangely frank letter: | “I was not 16 when I married a boy of 18. We were per-| fectly happy for a few months. Then his work kept him) away from home evenings and I was very lonely. Once I went to a dance with an old friend, and then for several auto} |rides with a young man I had known for years. | | “There was nothing more to my} —— ime than what I have told, and No excuse for me but loneliness, But ‘of course my husband and 1 quar-| reled violently. | “This happened over two years ago. | I have been married three years and my husband is still punishing mo for | my folly. “He refused to pay the bills when |[) my little baby came until he saw | plainly that his child was the very |]) image of himself. “Having set out to be unkind to me, he never has compromised. | Readers wishing suggestions for a George Washington's birthday party may obtain same by writing to The Seattle Star Washington bureau, 1322 New York ave. Washington, D. C.. and inclosing & self-addressed and stamped en- velope for reply. Nothing I say or do pleases him. But | he will not discuss divorce. | “I have always loved him, but I/ think three years of this kind of tor- |[/ ture is enough. | “He and the baby are very fond of each other. “When I have tried to make up he invariably Peters to thowe old dances, | gets furious and utterly unreason-| able, i “I am not 19 years old. I want so much to be happy. 1 can't bear to face the rest of my life is he is going to make it like the present. if he only would be kind, he and I and baby might «till have so much pleas- ure together. | “Why is he so unforgiving? How can I make him see the truth?” | | It used to be the o to consid- er jealousy a4 pure selfishness, which could be overcome if the individual \willed it so. But according to the; ideas of modern students of human | behavior, jealousy cannot be s0 easily alain, | Often it is @ symptom of a newro- sis, a certain kind of nervous disease. |A marriage with a neurotic, even if he were a genius, is always likely to} | prove disagpointing. | Obstinate and persistent jealousy may be due to mental impressions received in childhood for which the adult tyrant is mot responsible | This knowledge doean’t help to! |make a suffering wife especially pa- tent with a tyrant husband, but it does explain why the condition of ob-\ | stinate ugliness ob wen the husband. | | Perhaps the man can be educated | out of this emotonaliem, but his case! in for the physician rather than the| Smartly-Styled New Serge Frocks For Business Wear ' $6.50 RIMMED only with wife. a Oe Marines’ or braiding, these excel- Pay || lent-fitting Frocks in Navy Serge answer ad- mirably for business wear. Long-sleeve style, straight-line or long- waisted effect with plait- ed skirt, as suggested in the sketch. Sizes for women and miss | Priced low at $ —THE DOWNST STORE | Dear Miss Grey: Does a marine's | wife still get her allotment from the government. How much pay does « sergeant of marines ge 1} } A MARINE’S WIFE. | No, the wife of a marine no longer | gets her allotment from the govern-| ment, unless her husband makes a voluntary allotment. If the man was married before he enlisted then he should have had an affidavit stating that it was with the consent of his wife that he enlisted. | In barracks, @ marine sergeant re-| ccives 354 a@ month, While in the tropics, or on board ship, he geta an increase of 20 per cent. Also for each qualification, such as expert rifle- man, he receives additional pay. Toilet and Bath Soap, 5c Cake | RAGRANT Soaps of | free-lathering varie- ties, in Japanese Bouquet, Sweetheart, Rose, Violet and Lilac odors, oval and round cakes, priced low at 5¢ cake. What 1s the shortest chapter in the Bible? ' Paatm cavit. This ia also the mid- | dle chapter of the Bible. ' Miss Grey will receive callers in her office Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 1 to 2 p. m., and on Tuesday and Thursday from 11 a. m, to 12 m, each week. Please do not come at other times as it seriously interferes with her writing. EB DOWNSTAIRS ORE | Women Ve contrasting stitching’ THE SEATTLE STAR WOMEN VOTERS’ | Mrs. W. S. Griswold Re- Elected President Mra, W 8. Griswold o tof the L/ re-elected pr ue of te Saturday at the close J of the second annual league conven tion at the Hotel Washington, Oth ers reelected were Mra, FR. B. Haw sell, Seattle, vice president; Mrs. William B, Belote, Bellevue, secre tary; Mra. Helen N. Stevens, direc tor first district; Mra. N. 8, Me Cready, Snohomish, director second divtrict}; Mrs, Overton G. Ellis, Ta coma, director third district, and Mra, J, M. Simpson, Spokane, direc tor fifth district, Only two officers were elected to serve their first term Mrs. F. R. Harlow of Bremerton was chosen for treasurer, and Mra, Will jam Goodyes Pullman for direc: tor of the fe Twenty thre with laws and inatitu and h district ne for women hildren, were adopted. An op: poxjtion stand was taken toward mil itary training In the schools Notes and Comment on THE OLD HOME TOWN Ground was to be broken Monday for the new $22,000 clinic and hos pital in Puyallup. The hospital ven ture in being financed by Edward Hamann, bullding contractor. The building will be ready to be turned lover to doctors of the city on a lease jagreement June 1, it t» planned. eee Spurred on by the emg industry in the territory center ing around Chehalis, the Washing ton Co-Operative Egg and Poultry association has begun an ve cam. paign to increase ite membership to 2,400 by the end of the year. 4 Capitalize at $2,000,000, organiza tion of the Toledo Savings and Loan amociation bas been completed in Toledo. ore Girls of Centralia have started an carn a Dollar campaign to raise money for furnishing a rest room for girls at the high school. Washington's unmarried male pop ulation over 15 years of age was 212,021, or 28.8 per cent, according to mi census figures In 1910 the percentage wan 48.6 Enoch Bagshaw will be one of the npeakers at the Father and stitched hems. Women’s Union Suits 35c fine-knit Union *, in low-neck, sleeveless nd knee length styles, with beaded finish at neck and cotton tape drawstring, Sizes 36 to 44, very low-priced at 5c. Women's Su Boys’ Union Suits 50c Boys’ fine-ribbed knitted Union Suits, high-neck, short sleeve, knee length style. Sizes 6 to 16, low-priced at 50e, Changeable Taffetas $1.95 Yard SOFT, lustrous quality of the Changeable Taffeta so much in demand for home deco- ration, as well-as for breakfast coats and frocks: Emerald and Rose, Orchid and Sapphire, Copper and Sapphire, American Beauty and Emerald, and many other combinations. wide, and $1.95 yard, 36-inch Charmeuse, $1.65 Yard Admirable for dresses of the type that require draping, is this good quality Charmeuse, in Jade, Purple, Brown, Gray, Yellow, Pekin Blue and Price $1.65 yard. ° Navy. resolutions, dealing fast-growing | FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Hemstitched Table Cloths Special $1.00 Each "THERE are 240 of these Full-bleached Table Cloths to sell at this very low price, Tuesday. They are of good quality.-mercerized cotton damask, in several pleasing floral patterns, with well-finished hem- Featured Values in Women’s and Children’s Knit Underwear of the High School Boys’ elut from Harry Gr FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET Waterproof Aprons SPECIAL 35c EACH N exceptional value in Bib- style Aprons of rubberized waterproof ma- terial for use in laboratory, kitch- en or garage. In Light Gray, Dark Gray, Terra- cotta or White— Special 35¢. —Notion Section, Firet Floor Featured Tuesday, Third Floor: 1,200 Yards of Printed Linoleums Special §69e S4¢. Ya. Six patterns to choose from, including Tile and Conventional effects. Size 58x58 Inches Special $1.00 each. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Pettibockers and Bloomers Low-priced VERY soft, shimmer- ing-finish sateen fashions ‘these Pettibock- ers with plaited finish over elastic—at $2.50. Bloomers in the same material, with elastic at waistline and knee, are $2.25. Jersey Silk Pettibockers, Children’s Waist Union Suits 50c Children’s fine-ribbed Waist Union Suits, in lowneck, sleeveless, knee-length style, sizes 2 to 12 years, 60c. Children’s Waists 25c Children's fine-ribbed Knit Waists with securely taped well-finished and rein- buttons on which to fasten undergarments. — Low - neck forced, $4.95. Bloom- w style, sizes 2 ers in jersey silk, Unusual values 83 75 DOWNSTAIRS STORE Wide choice in color is ° offered in these under- garments—Black, Taupe, Gray, Navy, Flesh-color, Rose and Purple. THI Pownerarns STORE Correspondence Stationery 25c Box HOICE of white, blue, buff, pink and laven- der in this good, quality, smooth-surfaced Station- ery—-24 sheets of paper and 24. envelopes — the box, 25¢. It is 35 inches THE DOW PAIRS STORIE 2 DOWNSTAIRS ORB | Three Killed, One Hurt in Auto Crash dredges at Tokeland, Wash. PAGE 7 (CLIMBERS FAIL TO REACH TOP © } BALTIMORE, Feb. 13.—-One man were made was in a howpital here today, se-| PARADISE VALLEY, Wash. Fete to the departn t of H th verely injured, while the bodies of | 13 —The first attempt of three Alpine 9 ram catenargt age anaobee itor: |three others jay in the morgue aside , si and development for t of land ‘ a the result of an dent | Mountain timb Se to a = mid- ig the White Bluffe-Hanford soldier Toke Point Company IS) yesterday. The ¢ into| Winter ascent of Mount Rainier tall- | settlement areas. j jan iron trolley pole. victima | 4 yeaterday | ee Biggest on Coast | were hurled 100 feet away Accompanied by Charles R. Perry: y he Ray i“ Man, & news weekly mot jcture R. W. Uhiman, Wollochet Ba PORTLAND, Feb, 13.—~The largest | ., 7 man, « news weekly motionog merchant, is building a new ware ‘ reducing enterprise on the laude B. Starr, president; William | ™man, Jean and Jacques Landry and house on the dock, according to word| «oir. us A TG MOMEL |, president, and C. C,| Jacques Berg t out from Anvil from Gig Harbor iece ey Merge ged por pogecred rer. rock at 4 Bundey morning in an ab © otk with the filing of articl he = Amalgamat into the new cor climb the mountain via the poration of the Toke Point Oyster) poration are several smaller corm r trail to the summit. Valen H. Honeywell of Morton has | compan The concern ia cap t have hit ed in Six hours later they were foreed ta 7 purchased the Katonville Dispatch | at $600,000 Ita ficers ine! nt The holdings of the cor- abandon the trip when they ran a well known Portland business into on Willapa bay in Wash-|a blinding snowstorm, and returned: w miles north of Astoria,|to their base at Anvil rock to await ise 1,159 acres of what is | more favorable weather conditions, » the best oyster beds any-| A strong wind was drifting snow + docks, warehouses, boats and/at Anvil rock early today and the = thermometer registered below Zero, 4 FREDERICK & NELSON The Second Week of the FEBRUARY HOUSEWARES SHOW Aluminum Ware At Exceptionally-low Prices Aluminum Percolators $1.00 = Six-cup-size Percolator with ebonized wood handl@ hinged é cover and glass top; excellent (= value at $1.00, Lipped Saucepans—70c, 85c and $1.00 : Saucepans of pure aluminum, with dou- ble lip; 3-quart size, 70¢; 4-quart size, S5¢; 5-quart size, | $1.00. Aluminum Covered Saucepans 50c to $1.00 Aluminum Saucepans with aluminum covers and well-riveted han- dies. One-quart size, 50¢; 2-quart, 65¢; 3- quart, 95¢; 4-quart size, $1.10; 6-quart size, $1.40. Aluminum Covered . Kettles ; $1.00 to $1.75 Aluminum Covered Kettles with bail, handy for so many — uses, low-priced as follows: 3-quart size, $1.00; 4-quart | size, $1.15. 6-quart size, $1.45; size, sizs° — Aluminum Lipped Fry Pans Fry Pans of pure aluminum, with cool, hea’ tinned steel handles; 614 inches in diameter, : 74-inch, 75¢; 83-inch, $1.10. ° Aluminum Omelet Pan $1.35 It is easy to turn an . omelet and have it come out of the pan in fluf- fy perfec- tion, if one of these Aluminum Hinged Omelet Pans is used. Exceptionally low-priced at $1.35. Aluminum Pudding Pans—32c to 75¢ sizes in these handy Pans for baking, and = mixing—1-quart, 1% quart, 40¢; 2-quart, Squart, 55¢; 4-quart, Squart, 75¢. Several Aluminum cooking B2¢; ASe: 65¢; Aluminum Measuring Cup 8c Graduated Measuring Cup with double lip, marked with embossed figures for 14-, 14- and 34-cup meas- urements. Unusual value at 8¢ each. —Housewares Section, ~ THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Cut Glass Tumblers Special 98c Set of Six HESE thin—blown Tumblers are cut in the popular star or grape design, as pictured— sparkling and clear—and exceptionally low-priced for the set of six, at 98¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE

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