The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 10, 1922, Page 14

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is SSS inv ¥ , 0° Better Values— nee 2-Pants Suits Sutts with af the map and FO that young mon like, and More conservative models for those advanced in years. They're all wool cassimeres, Velours, worsteds, sercea, eto. in every new pattern that you CAN wear now and for summer. Pt That extra pair means prac Hy | Ueally two suits, at $35, $40m$45 i BOYS’ CLOTHING Most Remarkable Values All-wool Spring Suits, with extra knickers, Just arrived, a shipment of fine clothing; wulte tail ered in the most perfect manner and a large assortment of models and colorings to choose from. The suits are truly exceptional values and have a manly style that pleases the boy and mother alike; sizes T to 18 years; for Saturday welling at $12.00, $15.00 and $18.00 A Guaranteed Watch FREE with Boyw' Suits, Boys’ One-Pants Suits at $8.50 ‘our money will be refunded upon jaent If for you're not satisfied with! your purchase, f EKLY Being an Accoun | | | | | “The Ways of Laughter,” |New York, $2. |. “Je New York, | _ “Without Compromise,” by George Hubbard, Century Co: New York, $2. | & Publishers’ Co | “The Flight of Bkinavark, a \A. MeCloskey, Authors’ & | York, $1.50. By Sam Tt weems the correct and prevail | im writing this column to make a few | bright erucks about the title Althe I attended school in the days of my | My ignorance of the meant | words, ” is of the | kranates I have forgotten, or, I can never hope to attain to the Oratorioul brilliance of Homer Brew, and culture of Bob and George. Re |porters are never credited with | brains. ‘The editors are the lads who wear the intellectual pants around | the office, to use « rather trite met | aphor As the Ross wae absent, Hank took CHARGE ACCOUNT SERVICE You are welcome to have your purchase charged and payments for it arranged on a weekly of semi monthly basis. This service patronized and appreciated by hundreds of thousands. ot Tg, Ai Sl eee | around the coffin-fillers, Aa noon as George had lighted his biaek briar | the meeting opened in a cloud of coal jamoke, Pil wiped the soot from his jeyes and remarked, “Watched by | Wid Animale” is the title of the |took I read this week. stories this ‘nature guide’ haa pob lashed in various magazines. This one treata of seikdomecen anitmus of the Northwest mountains, mary of s urprise Party for Oldest Odd Fellow Marking the 60th anniversary as te tee an ee | an Odd Feflow of Henry Averbetmmr, skunk the | tts oldest member, Germania Lodge | No, 103, 1. 0. O. FP, gave « surprise party Thoreday night. Auerheimers |two sone—Henry, Jr, and Auguat— joined the ledge at the same time. A cake was provided by Jim Boidt for the occasion. Auerheimer joined the Od4 Fei Hows in Janesville, Pa, tn 1873. “That's nothing new,” mid Bob, “anyone could tell you that.” “The favorite entdoor writer of modern America,” began Hank, ex haling a cloud of ciguret smoke that formed a ring around the office cat's neck, “le Ernest Thomp- son Seton, naturalist for the Prov lince of Manitoba. | “Seton's works are beyond com- | pare, according to my viewpoint, jand thousands of American boys |will back me up. Among ht» fic. tion favorites are ‘Roif in the Woods,’ BPP, Nostrlie—-1t Opene which have broken records.” t Ale Passages Instantly. | “Well, that's true,” said Bam, with a serious look, “When I waa 16 pens and catarrh yield like magic |1_mpent my Inet 60 cents for a to ling, healing, antiseptic cream | , noted autnority says that @ few|copy of “Two Little Savages,’ and » that penetrates through every air drops of “Outgro” upon the skin sur-|50 cents was real money in those and» retieves swollen, i0-| rounding the ingrowing nail reduces | days famed membranes of nose and! inflammation and pain and so tough | HANK EXPERTS Miroat. Your clogged nostrils open ens the tender, sensitive skin under |QN THE COUGAR right up and you can breathe freely. neath the toe nail, that it can not ‘This Pure Cream | Stops Head Colds INGROWN TOE NAIL TURNS OUT ITSELF . Hawking and snutfiing stop. Don't! penetrate the flesh, and the naii| “Speaking of the outdoors,” mid P stay stuffed up and miserabie. turns naturally outward almost over |#ank, “Billy Everett, an Indian Get a small bottie of Bly’s Cream | night. jeuide of the Olympic, fe the from your druggist. Apply «| “Outgro” ts a harmless champion cougar hunter of the| in the nostrils and get instant | manufactured for chiropodista, How-| world, He's got about £0 hides i | Billy Tverett says the bellef that ae cougars climb trees and spring dows on thetr prey ts all wrong. Cougars | |never attack men, never scream, and never spring in any direction but upward.” | | Chal had read no book, | George was then called upon. | “I've read, “Who te a Tree, |eald the redoubtable George, puff- jing slowly on his briar pipe. | “This book, written by William F. | McBparran, is a pastoral poem, em- phasizing the epiritual significance | | of the planting of « tree and the wab | | sequent growth of the plant, It would | make pleasant fireside reading or be quite effective as an Arbor day rect tation. “The Flight of Guenevere, and Other Poems,’ by George V. A. Mo- | Closkey, is a book of rhyme taking | for its qubject matter thourhta sug | gested by Tennyson's ‘Idytle of the | King’ It gives the general impres. | sion of ‘painting the lily,’ and on the whole presents no iden which Tenny #on has not already used effectively.” | “The spiritual aignificance of plant. | ing apple trees is expecially appreoi ated in cider time,” remarked Chal, | |aa George conchuded his review. | BOB WAXES | | REMINISCENT? | “That reminds me.” Bob sighed, | “of the days down on the old farm, | when the cider barret froze, all ex |cept the middie, where the alcohol |eathered. Gosh, what a wonderful effect you could get thru a straw!” Bob then announced that he had read "The Ways of Laughter,” by | Harold Beghee. “This,” sald Bob, “la an entertain- ing little novel, if one happens to jeare for the modern mode of abun | doning plot for character delineation. | There in no action, no muspense, to speak of, but the characters are |brought out with realistic strokes |and, as a pen picture, pure and #im |e it im an entirely creditable ylece ot work, | “There is onty one thing to which relief. Millions endorse thiy remedy ever, anyone can buy from the drug known for more then fifty years. — store a tiny bottle containing direc Advertisement. tions.— Advertisement. ———) ines | Are you building up your savings as you planned in January? Strength comes with “money in the bank.” —THE— UNION NATIONAL BANK of Seattle wh BRANCH Pan a BRANCH T wish to object. ‘The advertisement ary a . —at— on the cover refern to the book am ‘a Ballard Georgetown light-tearted novel, which han « kind of gaiety that only a deep and norious |mind could achieve’ ‘The man re | «ponstble for that ad should be prose cuted under the pure food act, “The story has to do with a young woman of the extremely represued type, who has regched an early mid- | “Coal-—Government Owner: Adam, M. A., LL. D., Authors’ & Publishers’ Corporation, Who Plants a Tree,” by W: ing literary style of my predecenors | At any rate, being a police report: | neither can I imitate the learning | * OBSERV b iz Me 1427 Fifth Avenue — ar MT MAL Between Pike and Union Streets | Shoes iiss Sete Sine A. 2, ts another collection of the wild life) and ‘Two Little er th THE t of a Meeting of Serious Thinkers Comprising The Star Book Club THE LOG “Watched by Wild Animals, Page & Co., New York, $2.50 net. ” by Enos A, Mills, Doubleday, by Herold Begbie, G. P. Put- D. J. Mo- |nam’s Sons, New York and London, $2. ship or Control,” by n and America,” by Prof. Yone Noguchi, Orientalia, Lillian Bennett-Thompson and 5 New York, $1.75. This Isle of Vanishing Men," by W. F. Alder, Century Co., iliam F, MeSparran, Authors’ tion, New York, $1, nd Other Poems,” by George V Publishers’ Corporation, New! | dle age without feeling a emaie ho- man emotion, Then she ts aroused at the eleventh hour and ‘ruined’ by & shellshocked army officer, who, she finds out too late, is a married man and a thorogoing scoundrel of | youth, my teachers are to blame for the most depraved Hollywood type, | aon from & geological, soonomic, pa | “Just as everything locke the “pomegranate” and “pemmi- | biackest, along comes a cheerful oid | COSL he nays, samnes the poopie can.” I think I did read what pome-|idict, evidently suffering from senile 6nd hipped re > it Were once upon & time, but | debility, who marries her and lives | @*Pend the comfort, even the life, of [with ber happily ever afterward. “Cheerful aa hell, ian't it? Bob's | Yolee trailed off gloomily, Homer came to life long enough to demand @ cigaret and remark: “Well, I may be old-fashioned, but I've always believed that « woman's place is in the harem.” George and Hank engaged In a de bate whether or not the modern-day publishers were “guilty of violating the pure food act in advertixing,” as alleged by Bob. Phil decided the con- test by declaring the majority of publishers guilty of false advertising. Sam then uncoiled his feet trom hin chalr legs and recited: “I man aged to read ‘Without Compromina,’ & novel written by Idilian Bennett Thompeon and George Hubbard, ab tho I didn’t stay up nights to do so, | A FAIR TYPE or MODERN NOVEL “The book in a fatr type of the modern novel, and hag enough action and plot to be interesting. It is a story of the South, of @ lad who had | been rained by a Southern judes, eda cated well aod who finally became « power in his town, He fell in love with the daughter of the man whom be was trying to beat in the race for congreas, which is, of course, oh a mm Oe story that ts i at the wame time impressionistic and real istic, strange as that may ecem. It is | tense In places, full of humor and re | Manes, The book is well balanced Personalty, I don't care for political novela.” | At this potnt the Bom came tn. Henry retired from the sanctum be [hind the editorial dewk, after picking wane and SEATTLE STAR |Preacher to Fight Chicago Vice Ring! CHICAGO, March 10--Fev. John 1, Williarson, known as the “tight | ing English parson,” has resigned chureh to take up ao appoint t aa a epecint law enforcem comminstoner to lead a tleht amu! the crime wave sweeping Chicago, Immediately after Mayor William TL ‘Thopeon made pablic the Asive tion of Williamson, the new official announced his to: “Reapect for the law te of more! value than respect for the violator,” Mayor Thompron has instructed him to #ee to it that “every hell hole in the city where moonshine in noid and vies existe” a forever obliterated from the reheme of things. “Those who seck to compromise, hinder or thwart my purpose will have their attention directed to my jmotto,” added the parton, “That | will constitute the end of the argu ment.” jompecially interesting as giving an | |Orental’s eriticlam of us on much points as our ignorance of geography. our provinelaliem, our optimiem, our ‘lytical mood, our complacency, our ‘grand manner’ of humor, our ‘wom an-worship,’ our ‘more divores cases land many more unmarried men and women than any other country,’ and our uncultured men. “I think with the present keen tn terest being manifested in all that concerns Japan and the Orient that | the: Noguchi book ls one well worth reading.~ Henry then returned from the and of dreams and sald he bad read « |beok about onal, “By way of courteey, TT ony y) read it, anyway. It's name ts ‘Coal, |Government Ownership or Control,’ iby D. J. MeA@am. COAL PRESENTED FROM EVERY ANGLE “The author presents the coal afte. ltrtotle and industrial standpoint the whole people, and the commereial supremacy and indastrial life of the nation,” Hank recited, “The author urges government re striction of the prodigaiity in the mining of the navy coal field He! declares that the recklesmenss of this | | nent, | waste will, within one or two cen | | turies, doom our navy to a low posi-| tion among the floating fortresses of the world powers, He believeg that exhaustion of the supply in imm unites by Kovernment owner rhip of navy cowl land, the output to roatricted to government and navy “Labor and wears in the mining world, cooperative coal mining, the settioment of strikes, railroad eon trol of fields, eyndicnlian and the cane of the public are the subjects discussed in other chapters” “Rut he's way off on that.* enld George. “Modern battleships don't burn ooal, and none of recent manu facture use anything bot electricity. Coal will be a dead inmue soon.” “They're making synthetic coal in Germany,” said Phil. SYNTHETIC WHISKY SKATTLE’S OFFERING “And synthetic whisky in Seattle,” finished Homer. “t one, but I feo! thirety, I'd faint itt would do any good.” “Coal imn't necesmry,” Chal an nounced, “when our state has the mont water power, undeveloped, in the Union, In & few yoars we'll have electricity for everyone, taken with out cost from the air, It's not only ponnibie; it's probable,* “I read ‘The Isle of Vanishing Men,’ by W. F. Alder,” anid Homer. “Thie lp & book of experiences and adventures in that outofthe way & land, New Guinea. ‘The habits and cuntoma of the cannibals are related with considerable gusto, ADVOCATES KITK FROM LEFT SHOULDER “One of the most charming ef the characters in the book is the dusky young epleurean who tells the au- thor that nothing ts #0 good to eat as | he left shoulder-bone of @ young sirt “The book tx ome of the vast num. ber that have in the wake of Frederick O'lirien's Hetions of the South Seas.” “Ie that book Mustrated?™ gasped young Fob, making a dive acram the table where llomer wea standing | Deb waned at the picture im dingust aod handed it back, “I never saw ber at the Butler Re vue,” he aud, An Hal and Farnte were absent on business, the meeting then broke up, after Homer had given the invoos ton by Bt. Patrick. TO RAISE FUNDS for «@ poor famity, the Good Cheer society will give a benefit whist party a Wing's cafeteria, 1409 First ave. Friday at $:20 p. m. | MOTHER! CLEAN CHILD'S BOWELS WITH “CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP” | Even Cross, Feverish, Sick Children Love its Frulty| Taste and It cannot Injure Little Stomachs. , | Hurry mothert A teaepoonful of /Iaxative” ts often all that te neces. | fio |4P the stray claret butts, and went “California Fig Syrup” today may S4ry. to sleep watching a fire truck race part the window “T've been reading a Mttle book that Interested me for three ree m008,” reported the Bone. “In the firwt piaon, because ft ts ¢ first publication effort of a for mer Tacoma and Seattle wornan; sec. ond, because of « novely tn ite bind ing; third, for ite contenta, | “The book is ‘Japan and Amertoa,’ | by Yone Noguch!, profemor of Png. Ush in Kelo university. It ts put out by Orientalia, 22 BH. ¢oth at. New| York city, a firm #pecialixing in Ort ental books, of which Mise Helen Pinkerton, ‘12, Universtty of Waa: Ington, is a member. PAPER PRINTED ON ONE SIDE ONLY “The litte volume ts beund with sheeta doubled, so that the paper bears print on but one ride “Seven eseayn make up the eon. tents, They present the Japanese viewpoint with color and charm and with a certain understanding ala of the American temperament, for the writer lived for some years in this country, “There are numerous referencan to our Pacific const problem, moat of them indirect but unmistakable, For instance, thi, in the chapter entitled ‘Open Letter to the Californians’ “ut time has changed in Call fornia, The glorious story of the @iant bullders in olden days has pamed away. In California, this Promised Land of 50 years ago, be coming like any other country where idealism turns to senselesm sod? Are you, dear Californians, faithful to your original ¢tvilixation which you created with your honest human hands? Oh, where is your sympathy with honest labor? Amain, where is your old belief in freedom and equal ity? Where is your fair play? “A chapter, ‘To the Americans,’ is wl prevent a sick child tomorrow | your bid ToHelpPut on! Flesh and Round Out _ Your Face and Figure 1.00 i duranee, provided your blood euicient qu veo of foi tr age ganic tron to le your body to similate your food properly, ‘Without organie tron both food and tamines are ockatay, upeles apet change lifeless one FREE or- o~- child is constipated, bilious, has directions for babies and chil feverinh, fretful, has cold, coli, or/dren printed on if stomach is eour, tongue coated, | “Californ: | breath bad, remember a good “physio Genuine “California Fig p the bettie Bay or you may get an im Tup —Advertinement. Package as and the Results Into living cetls and tteeue unless ee organic tren is your | and en- contains | something with Fo) mislead by imitations which drugs. E CREAM BARS French Cream Centers Somethin ) New, Nothi Made 0 r oO? LAST 2 in Our new*200,000 plant the largest and most sanrta inthe city Velvet lee C Ca ng like it! 10 m:Go, lye. ve yy { FRIDAY, MARCTI 10, 1922. THRIFTY BUYERS Patronize Our Shop They realize the savings afforded by our— Cash Buying at the factory for our immense Chain of Stores; Cash and Carry Plan at each branch. II Here’s just one example of our remarkable values given: | | 300 pair shipment just received @eneewn-e weuwwetse T: ps . t ees and revolted against the govern 15 Mexican Rebels | ment sccorting to travelers return. EL PASO, Tex, March 16.—Fed-\ing from the Tampico district of oral troops shot 15 oll camp guards' Mexieo today. Complete Entertainment w= this “Basyto- Play*) Gulbransen Piayer Plano and an as sortment of inexpensive player rolls, all kinds of entertainment ere at your service—muaie for dane ing—acoompaniment for einging popular songs, church musio—everything & piano can give you and playing ability besides, Crosmed Gat dh sR) GULBRANSEN layer-Piano Costs onty $495. Piano or phonograph taken as part payment—balance tn easy monuthiy payments See and hear the Gulbransen. Northern Pacific Railway CHANGE in SCHEDULE Effective March 12, the following changes will be ma@e ‘Train No. 407, formerly leaving Seatfle for Portland ot 8:20 A. M, will leave at $25 A.M ‘Train No. 401, formerty leaving Seattle for Portland at 1159 P. M, will leave at 1145 P. M. Tratn No, 421, formerty leaving Seattle for Grays Harbor at 840 A. M, will Jeave-at $50 A. ML North Coast Limited 200 1, C Smith Building Phone—Ellioté 5580 E. L. CAREY, General Agent, Passenger Department

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