The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 3, 1922, Page 4

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SS IE en ae ne Ant FER Ey OE ESN ee: THE SEATTLE STAR IN oah’s : r in Levee MISS VICTOR IS | ieee, 1000 Caused by Break in Levees rr mooie , e e 7 | waters far and wide ever the Asian | possible completion is to confess| their people ns ne ' x ation Is phim, where an industrious rave|that we are loam wise than the| “Civilisation need never have an-| Scores Heavily in Whimsical | a toffled happily amid ideal surr ancients, Old elv ations pertahed! other great cab ty, if the nation | canals “ané| will learn to irrign thotr tillable Little Offering because thelr ¢ | | e ld as Hills Then came the rains, hes weee destroyed in war t ands and if wars may be pre j . 9 | And the Euphrates overflowed Its/ enemies, whose armies at the same! vented. Appearing In a frothy little mkt | er armen camer, tee. wake, eee |which is a million miles or fo above ‘gu of the supply canal, desce the ordinary vaudeville standard, | |Mins Josephine Vietor and her com: | e > efit se aims mighty yellow flood i j whose wondare we ot rear t consplevounty in this | : ° |pany at ae whose wonders we of modern times int 1a re week's offering at the Moore theater * . do not yet know Mim Victor's vehicle is “Jullet a a Basin Project|xNoau muse a =) sne0,” a. While somint ge Mgr ae gah playlet, which provides her with am: | Compared to | Koad had built the ark. Perhaps] | »le opportunity to display her really | Achievement |Noar was an engineer, and knew| Girls Ask Why Men, or Many of Them, Prefer Im-|ramiravio dramatic and comte prow that when the waters became high sind ‘ y J »y@ lena. She is ably supported by George andy mee Swans tie crate caneer tai; “poeweue Girl of Loud Dress and Vulgar Manners san. she tn aby ee eae vale April &—Another dol }the jates would preak. Anyway.) to More Refined T'ype. and John Contelle, Noah was ready and not else waa. | James Silver, Helen Duval and @herished beltef of the | OF al! that nation, only N BY CYNTHIA GREY George Kirby carried off second hon- | ——+ AoeDougll /outhwick “The Store of Lternal Newness” Shopping Hours 9:00 to 5:30 1 in al fertile “Everybody Is Wearing Tweed” Smart New Suits $25.00 Snowflake Tweed Je from his f he ; are : ct, a ee oe bree ety yt ytoenantens historians! More than one nice girl has complained that she is over- lye is oy: yore peo : i : It Noah. handed down the stories of the tlood looked by the average man for “the impossible girl” of loud)... wopearance which the most chart. | —This snappy new fabric in the variegated he bullt the ark. that covered all the wortd, from| dress and vulgar manners. “Why do they do it?” ask# Oné |tanie would doncribe an eocentric, has) knotty weave—which is the “latest ism’t the daddy of the pag bape bayporbergeoy + dy Se | girl, while another inquires “Does the average man like good|a rich voles of operatic posse) Sissel the beasts, ot| There ceag harp Gain Stace on ee |health ina girl more than refinement or intelligence?” a Big og he eomeacy' 3 & World-enveloping in-| FOF 19 all lands where irrigation was “The impossible, vulgar girl” almost invariably has 4)" yosy Lynn and William Smythe | fl i | practiced in prehistoric times, accord:| euperabundance of good health, She bubbles over with) are genuinely tunny tn “A Racy Con-| may to Darvin Cases, there are The! sipane i shat she calls |\versation,” the latter introducing « G14 was save his family | OOF. ocends of the worktencompasn | Vivacity ang chatter, laughter and action. To wha on (new ballad in addition. a Peete Whes lng food. Peru has them, and mod.| her “pep” she owes her big success with men, even if sh Hert Howard, eccentric pianist ys and nights and) oo, engineers have even found the| never expends her energy in the way of her grooming. ldo all sorte of pleasant things to thing”’—is fashioned in the smart model illustrated. (Note both back and front.) The saddle-bag pockets are very sporty! The colorings are brown, gray and tan mixtures. The coats are unlined—a good weight for sports wear. fame over the top of the ||. a pot where they are certain the in.) ¢ heaté sim, vitality, | the ivarten ital Dreak occurred in a mammoth |,¢Gros,nealge means wimy witellt¥) “SOL” Grey will recetve callers ||" tne aerobatic acts which open and Johnny Walker Tweeds irrigation aqueduct. . ” in her office Monday, Wednesday ~ | ‘ " rig uc Once upon a time tt was the fash- a clome the bill are of unusual quality. | —are firm, serviceable and very good- Zoologists have long demonstrated ion for women to faint. The early|| 404 Friday from 1 to 2 p.m. and || ,iee Patty doen things while stand: | [that all the animals living today aF@|pnoiish povelists produced their|| 08 Tuesday and Thursday from |/ine on his head that most of w not descendants of those enumer sraviest effects by placing the limp|| 1! & m. to 12 m. each week. Please idn’t achieve standing right sid ated as among the inhabitants of th®| youre of the heroine in the arma of || 40 not come at other times as it 1] un, and Marie Meeker, billed an the! looking. ‘They are in tan, gray, blue, orchid and rose mixtures. Voguish styles with plaits and belts. The coats are well- Babylonian ark, the handy hero, Then, surely, a|| Seriously interferes with her }) venus of the air, adda « pleasing | aewe tan], Anthropologists have been certain | popular man must have been edu-|| Writing | voles, @ puichritudinous figure and lined—silk throughout. butting wal that all the races of man could not | cated im first aid. & peppy personality to a rracetut | 5 MME @Balciene ef 6] doacend from the three sons of Noah| Teday fae men would Reve ths! win retoin thelr natural colore end |acrial offering, Tweed Suits for Ham, Shem and Japheth In least idea how to bring a@ girt out Of | sivery hues better than im the light “A Modern Cocktall.” a negro act, America, Europe and Asia traces of |a faint, Today the nervous girl, the when adout to use the belt, soak in| Which proved to be within the Vol extensive civilizations have been ‘tired girl, the drooping girl ta not im fresh water to remove the formalin, |ktead law, war roundly approved. found that both antedate and follow demand anywhere, She makes ®°) 4 sow drops of oi! of rhodium may! The urunt orchestral and motion | the probable date of the deluge that gogo to the average man. Dt) chon be placed on the minnow to dis ture features rounded out a bill! Noah rode out in the ark. helplessnces he likes, That's @iffer-| gwine the pung: eder ef formals hich, but for one or two exceptions, | f] IRRIGATION ent. Hgiplessness indicates a lack Of that may remain on the fish after| was remarkably well balanced. | UNIVERSAL eaperience. Dependence makes d0-| waking, The oll of rhodium ta said | -———————— | Young Women and Their Seniors Floor “The answer,” says Chase, in Teens peee, Be suaoriey powers, oF fo be attractive to fh; dul be hell ss vases hosmien| SSS ————— = hat irrigution was a universal cu* | 00, 4 esalted ae | te forenbiin to enatey te boc, them on) wut ite toll in Ue mouth, stiffen ita | 1547, said to have hed one of tha| EVA TANGUAY | dances, and Harvard and Bruce, skill tom; that the things we moderns |" Atowt 75 per cent of all persons| ae body end roll elong like @ hoop, alm-|most beautiful personalities of her) AT PALACE HIP | tat gymnasts, are discovering were things the an |tho ask for medical attention are ing to let go (ta sting-tipped tall and |age. The sonnets of Michael Apgele| rn. 9 color, variety and| Bert Lytell is the star of the fea cients knew, and that without irc en Ouenta They nocd not be, Te there such @ thing as & Boop idart it into the first person it meets.|are enduring monuments to the) 6 10 Loe show that/ ture photopla tery Gate figation any civilimtion will Im time og tyes would mot be, if they were “make? |#imilar stories @re told of a closcly friendship which extsted detween| Piauancy , | photoplay, a crook pray oe 2 he ee of | only willing to be properly inatructed|,1M¢ hoop make Ue @ small emake \reinted apecies, the wampum snake, | them. jopened at Loew's Palace Hip Satur-/new angle, entitled “Alias Ladyfine il day tut wtih Brine ee oe ae the laws of health. of the Bouth Atlantic states, fo0lshly | common in acampy ground in the + 2m day, all these desirable qualities, to-| gers. : Deel toad we betantee| tice nr, ce cad But that is not the point here, meet south. Im fact, both spectes are per-| What are the meanings of the fol-| gether with others, being generously | —— tions of these United States. except as indscating that @ good deai| Of Interest to Women |fectiy armies: ond spend most of lowing names? | supplied by Eva Tanguay, the “man-| ia dass Bk ie Se Wants the ancients! “Mriation does an re oe son lof the sickness ef women i¢ imagt- With Goitre their time beneath the ground, bur-| George—landholder. o'-war" ot vaudeviie The crowded | 4, ern imgin cen a ne a = of trrigation.| Whe" It Is properly ese MEGNOSE nedical authorition ainte |"TmeN? 40? late the sell, The Rep Jeatie—wesih, comeaiin stir Uae eg Boe thar |yOu can dance anywhere, Prof. Wile the valley of the Po In Italy there!) ghe point to Be made now ts that make (s diue-Black above and) David—bdeloved. pe liam A. Jackson, of New York avs ® growing! ® of irrigation Fagen BOM) are fields that have been under ir! mest men consiger goed health @ te prevalent every pont, Gnd that | morked ecith three ved lines, end| Alexander—o helper of men. Public admiration for and curiosity | teaches all of the latest steps it ie — and pe any eg Paw rigation for 2,600 years—irrigation necessary item of feminine lovelim » 20 per | fiesh-colored below, with flesh-col-| Millard—-miii keeper about the star is yet far from satis Sage 204 ballteorn densing a great systems constructed before egies while those who have studied euge WMA" | ored spots, The wampum snake is) Armstrong—strong arm fied. phone Elliott 2187.—Advertisement ne: }of the Roman empire still send their | icy and genetica make good health an | of th. uniform bluish black aboue and band-| Mirtam—a«ter of the era In & word, Piva Taneusy ts a sen. pe Bact: noun me of irrigation inscrutable waters over the lands of this Valley, essential qualitoation for marriage t taking [ed with red on the abdomen. | Buntee—goed victory leation to be experienced by all play- Ulchanced the ¢eD-| and the fielis are as fertile now as nn © oe, we poration, eee | Cyrus—the awn goers who appreciate originality and NEUMO | they ever were. Randage ts w Has there ever been « well known | Damaris—« little wife lartintry of an unusual type. Call « physician. Then | low can 1 A , “tn the most productive parte ot] Bly arnt prvgece | negro poet in the United States | Judith —prateed. Otter vaudeville acts on the bill| “emergency” ‘China there are tracts that have been | vy plante? | Yea, Poul Lawrence Denber. Vashi deauiiful women include @ novel musical skit, “Fiddle | under irrigation for untold centuries. | | way for over thirty ppiecihy eae Up.” presented by Tom Kerr and) i “Seine Gay they wil start to Fe cg Ne gb I ay yg = For full particulars, te Whe was the Vittoria Colonna of| What was the total vote for Debs | txtith Enslgne: Driscoll, Long and rignte our own Eastern states For ing action has stopped, off the edy Co. 143 Ban F "whom Longfellow wrote? tn the 1920 election? Hughes, & trio of young men; Man-| VArPORYU = Angeles, Cal—Adv An Italian poet who Mved 14692-| 919.799. [ning and Hall in song, talk and! Over 17 Million fim Used Yearly investigation has convinced me that|cicar water and use to soak the soil the abandoned farms of New Ene | Thy will RU the worms and bring land and the withering oreharts of | them te the surface the Appalachians can be saved only eee thru the artificial application of water to the soll PROJECT NOT LARGE “Our Cotumbia Basin project, to volving the watering of 1.752.000 acres of fertile land—the largest aingie irrigation project In the world | today—ts not large at all when we) compare it with the accomplish | |ments of ancient peoples who had/ | not our tseln, our economic system jor our actenca. Not to push this! heasty “A Local Institution’’ ‘What ts the method of preserving minnows for bait? Take one part of formalin te 2? parts of water, place the minnows in |) this solution in @ tightly closed jar) or bottle and keep in the dark until they are to be used In this way they Many readers of this column ask to have their horoscopes printed. It is impomible to do thie for reasons of space, but any other reader may obtain a copy of hie or her horoscope by wi iting to The Seattle Star Washington bu- reau, 1332 New York ave, Wash. ington, D. C., giving date of birth and tnclosing twoornt stamped envelope for reply. The bureau will merely furnish the usual tn formation given by socalled as trologers, and does not pretend that it t# anything more than a form of amusement. It lays no claim to being a fortune-telling organization. 7 Much Gas— aimee Couldn't Work2z22=z| And Darned Proud of It! jave, and University. Deginners’ plumage valued at more than $75,-| 000 found when detectives raid apartments of Mrs. Mary Chua, 20.) “Queen of Chinatown.” The “Queen” | ——~ and her husband, Chom Chue, ar rested. BE system cleanser. This nm, known as Adlerika, acts 8 | indict having their |elanses start each Monday eventing | i at A ro gmapata Elvote 3187. e fad to Quit Many Jobe Account Pain in Side ACS For more than thirty-three years the Cheasty Store has been a Be a eS ae eee SA oc? Mz] part of Seattle. Since 1888 the History of Cheasty’s has been — Beef ihiis 8 EE neg ah as Sel St at sient | Interwoven with that of this wonderful Puget Sound country of Stein Acie, Srnan sear ata” “San” Sawa awiees | OURS, and during that time has gone through all the trials and gies AS aE om oe yosnieaher"tie ve | © SUCCESSES Of this Western community. gia ott acre ed —HAS paid more than $50,000 in taxes to build up our schools, De eet saree Beto ate ie Myth eee |e ye aca build good roads, etc. et Siianl ti As VOL ¢. Maths, wre Rapture Kills —HAS given more than $20,000 to the benevolent societies of Pts Matta fosttnv ware ih @ieu'ty| 7,000 Annually | Seattle. ett Cnc’ "Bie eit aces | —HAS contributed more than $1,000,000 to the payroll of Seattle. ° aie! || Just one year ago expended more than $62,000 with local | Wash malas concerns in fitting up our beautiful new store. —HAS given Seattle and the Pacific Northwest one of the best | stores of its kind in the United States, and has attained the | etd unique reputation of being “Famous from Coast to Coast for pte Quality Clothes. There is one thing nice about a “LOCAL INSTITUTION” and that THE NEW hd ° ° s 4 Canpind acartve is that its earnings are spent or REINVESTED in the City of Seattle. , It seems to us that Westerners have a habit of sir a 25 30 patronize a “LOCAL INSTITUTION.” oe ee (THE GREATEST ACTERS In THE woRLe W KEEP THE LIVER AND BOWELS ORDERLY AT ALL GOOD DKRUGGISTS he RNa FRI FT,

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