The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 4, 1922, Page 7

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= = Smiles Uiknown in Europ Says Tourist Author Fanny Hust Seeking Happines; in Gray War tuins ! | | | | Fann Hurst ) BY MILTON BRONNER LONDON, Jub 4 Hurst, | world’s highest paid woman short story writer, sometimes called “the| female O. Henry” ts traveling about Europe—looking for something Not for rure ad laces, tvories or miniatures wadmpoverished fam Mies are willing to sell at bargain Prices. She's huntin{ instead. tn poor streets of Buppean cities for gmiles, a sense df fun, some of the) golden stuff of Ife money can't buy. | Fanny And she has’t found it | “In m stows about the mean! streets of New York or St. Loul he says, “I hye always veen able to bring abou a céntrast between the pathos of he situation in which my characte@ found themselves, @nd the fun they still managed to get out of lie. | “Now I he been vagrbonding @bout Europ and as yet I ha’ @een none € that real fun thet fean slums. ; “Life her seems fundamentally gad. I am not talking about the gilded palace. I am talking about the gray sreets. In them people! seem to haw forgotten how to play,| how to lau. The wolf is too ever-| it. | “But I semed to see leas real) poverty anf suffering im. beaten! Germany thin {n victorious France. | “Here in London I found amazing Poverty and andness. As for Vienna, fit is a buge Tragedy. The once-gre: | wroud, shintg city, a world’s won Ber, second mly to Paris, is down in GURNEY Northla:d Refrigerator $14.90 $17.50 -Ib. ice apa GO-1b. ice apactty EDERICK & NELSON | newspapers which printed a Galvanauskas and Nar } re | what I have seen. | ent | tomorrow.” Charges Grow Out of Death) a... vnitoa From Moonshine Held tn the elty jail in conneetto with the death of A A. Bastar foreman of the West Seattle laundry, | ge Miller m Denno faced and the polsoning of G an employe under him. and Alex HBrousalis charges Tuesday THREE INVOLVED! IN JOINTIST SUIT Jointiat |in America | BY WALTER A, DYER Author of of Liberty” es of America has n an Independent nation for ao i that It t# difficult to think of urselves as once a part, and « loyal part, of the British empire. It was one hundred and forty-six «| years ago that the British colontes| decided that the only , | Mine they could do to protect them Similar charges stand against selves against unfair government Charlie Lapesis, who has not yet been | was to secede. arrested, | And #0 the Declaration of Inde: Brousalls ts proprietor of the Moon noe was solemnly signed ‘ons the street from the This action was not taken because in whone office the | the Mnglishman in America hated the were found Friday morning. | Englishman tn Great Britain, Many Suting Attorney Malcolm | of them had friends,and relatives in as said he could not find suffl-/the mother country, and they had ctent ¢ to warrant @ charge Of/ grown up to own allegiance a manslaughte: r W Jorson reported | any ov king was it, at first, Co! helming dentr that caused in-| @ separates rule on this continent directly from me © which he| The revolt not #o had been drinking Nquor ts sai to have been furnished by the men |p. held. Editor Couldn’t 1} much against England aa against a itteal party in England, the Old | Whigs, who, under the leadership of | Lord North and others, largely con | trolled the actions of George III {and sought to establish a corrupt Tell Difference | eqver moment for their own profit LONDON, July 4A pictur of Messrs ousheviteh, Lithuanian delegates t the Genoa conference, identifie them as Russians. They demande: and got @ retraction. Two Bandits Hold Up 50 Motor TRINIDAD, Colo, July 4 than fifty tourists campi the Santa Fe east of Trink Mor highwaymen, Family of 6 Lives London g | advised king and ed in one night by two mounted were men in Mngland, Itke William Pitt, who also fought against *\ this tyranny, but they were kept down by military and political power and by the prestige of royalty The Englishmen over here had a 1 better chance to rebel because they wer far away and so were more dif ontrol little the American colon | ints made thelr protests felt, and the the party tn wer undertook to silence these pro by acta of punishmen, They American Englishmen of ° ancient rights, and the colonists re plied with n Vigorous protests and with evasions of unjust lawe | And so, gradually, they came to }the parting of the ways It must be remembered, also, that in Old Tool Shed | peopie in those days, all over the 8ST. LOUIS, July 4--Mr Mrs.. Charles Whybrow were four living with four children in a on room tool shed on hte outskirts of St. Louls. Engine Runs Away; No Damage Is Done LONDON, July 4 A runawa engl with neither fireman nor engineer, ran eight miles on the London 4 Southwestern railroad without using any damage Drops Dead as Daughter Wed. DETROIT, July 4. As Henr Ericson was giving bis from heart disease. Cupid Is Falling Down on His NEW YORK, July 4.—Weddin [rings are getting smaller each year. | » is getting larger The divorce list each year. the ruined by war and its aftermath an daughter grems to exit in our poorest Amer-/ away in marriage he dropped dead | ing and oper Job 1| World, took a leas Hberal view of the ' m and rights of dependencies than they do today Colonints were very erally as mmercial enterprises, and the of | ficers of the central organization felt that, since they had invested money in the venture, they had a perfect o. y 3. BY PAUL F. GODLEY America’s Foremost Radio Authority ¥ | All the thrills which go with own & regenerative re ceiver may be expertenced at very lit | tle expense. The diagram shows a method of connecting a conventional type of double-stide tuning coll with a gi vacuum tube and ite batteries tn h a way an to give accoess to a rly broad band of waves while pro- viding an extremely simple means ~|of securing regenerative amplifica depths—dusty, dirty, shabby, | tion With this arrangement the vacuum “I suppose eventually I shall come) tube may be put thru its paces tn across the things I am looking fo’ T shall see «miles. 1 shall see pe ple buliding their happiness thelr fun out of little things. as poor kiddies tn the happy with sticks and stones an their Imaginations, as are the ric kids with expensive toys. Maybe then I will Maybe not. Ju: now my mood is one of depressic at what I have been seeing “and coupled with tt thankfulness can—that my th land of hope and promise and pe formance. country is still HE COULD WAIT Uncle Josh had been having som work done upon his plow the job was completed and the plo turned over to him. blacksmith “4 eit.” Wher pointed te in the ned away and began sc and after a momen’ lence replied “Ww suh, you just keep T’sa be back after Judge. of July at F The Sale quotes greatly reduced prices on Odd Suites and Pieces; and Special Purchases from some of the best tories are offered at extremely low prices. REDERICK & NE ON’S ci (FOURTH FLOOR) and} Just parks an! write about) is is a ferv T am an Amer When he asked the r.\the sume way as tho an expensive nd ch | st on nn ie | Hook-up of simple regener- , ative receiver. - In the apectally de signed receivers of this type more complete control 1s provided, but the actions and effects set were used. w ‘e. | COUFRO, a. are identical in either case. Bix-tenths of the way from one ‘end of the tuning coll take off a tap from one of the wires at a where the connections will not 1 fere with the ation of the sliders Connect the g coil as shown, in ctreuit | Set slider “BY on the wire from FREDERICK & NELSON'S | 47th Semi-Annual ~ FURNITURE SALE N event which enables one to furnish an entire home at a saving, or to pick up an add piece or so with unusual advantage. NOTE: It is necessary to require that delivery of Furniture bought dur- ing the Sale shall be accepted by our patrons within the month | ‘onvenience, ot THE { Walter A, Dyer right to dictate how the branch of. flees should be run There was, indeed, right and wrong on both «ides, but underlying it all | | was a great error on the part of the! | Britian statem f that day, They |thought that they could enforce res: | |trictive and unreasonable laws upon Engliohmen as freeborn as them-| jselves. They thought that tn re | for rebillion was more repression, | | They forygot that the Ughter you) clamp a lid on a@ bolling kettle the |more likely it is to explode. | Our American forefathers, in final ly asserting their independence, proved to all the world that civiliza. tion had outgrown despotiam. Men of courage and vision, they stood out for justice trenched privilege, and they won ‘They taught England bh a len jron that helped the friends of tree dom in the to mother country at length n their fight ‘That is what we celebrate on tb | Fourth of July no | over brave brothers, ne of a war a © winning England, but triumph of the of justice and |equare dealing which te the right [ful heritage of all people of BE blood the world over. Godley, Radio Wizard, Advises Star Readers which the tap was taken. Tune for tncoming vartation of slider “A.” sienals When signal is tuned tn, advance alider “Rt” toward the free end of the coil, Amplification will commence and reach an apparent Still greater strength of signals is to be had, however, by « final simul taneous adjuitment of both “A” and boars This clreutt may be improved upon by the addition of a variable con denser in the wire which leads to the | antenna When ward too far the system will begin to act as « generator of oscillations. When fn this condition, distant radio stations may be located by “whistles.” Beetles Seek High Summits Prof. M. J. Elrod, of the de partment of bielogy in the Uni versity of Montana, has written for The Star 4 series of articles telling unusual facts about the animals of America, The first | | | j | article follows.—Editor. By Professor M. J. Elrod Chair of Biology, University of Montana On nearly ever Id summit of the « the main Rocky | ave a strange habit of spending the winter on the summits of mountains from the main range to the coast The young are soft bodied, Itving on plant lice and other «mall insects. The adults are small red be black spots on the wings. During the summer they are widely distrib uted over the mountain slopes and in the valleys. In early fall the beetles collect by |the hundreds of thousands on the oded, brushy, or smooth give opportunity f Me wl under and hide, He h to make quarts or found, both living and dead, tion of birdy is common, and migration of butterfiles is not rare. | But migration of these beetles from to higher altitudes is very |strange. Animal migration suppos: edly leads to better places for living. ‘This seems to be for worse conditions | lower The be undoubtedly assemble from adjacent slopes and valleys for |considerable dist s. They have been found up to 8,500 feet, where the season of warmth fs short, Snow may le for seven to eight months of the year. Much of this time the in, sects must be frozen solid The sun ia the god of insects | Warm spring days start the beetles moving, when they rise and scatter to different parts, The dead bodies on the summit represent those that | could not survive the long winter, | . made reign of lead pencil v the | ‘The first in England during Queen Klizaboun, SEATTLE STAR THE REVOLUTION Againet en-| by aximum, | slider “TR te carried for. | FREDERICK & NELSON’S uly Garment Clearance Begins Tomorrow Morning COATS SUITS Girls’ Wear CLEARANCE and $17.50. 18 WAISTS, $1.00. reduced to $1.65. reduced to $12.50. Blouses || CLEARANCE out-sizes (46 to 52). reduced to $3.95. reduced to $5.7: 188 Women’s and Misses’ At Clearance Prices 195 Women’s and Misses’ At Clearance Prices 168 Cloth and Silk DRESSES At Clearance Prices | DD lots of Spring ap- parel in the 6- to 14- in the duced to $11.95, $15.00 reduced to 24 SWEATERS, reduced to $3.95, $5.95 and $7.95. 40 GINGHAM DRESSES, 16 ORGANDIE DRESSES, ond Floor 84 LINGERIE AND SILK 48 TAILORED SHIRTS AND LINGERIE WAISTS, reduced to | $2.95. 25 BLOUSES, of Crepe, Organdie and Georgette, 150 BLOUSES, of Organ- die, Crepe and Georgette, Second Floor The Season-end Disposal of Broken Lines of Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Ready-to-wear Garments Remaining From Spring Displays, at Greatly Reduced Prices | $18.75, $26.75, $33.75, $48.00 $58.00, $67.00, $95.00 $14.75, $1 8.75, $26.75 $33-75, $38.75, $58.75 $16-75, $23.75, $33.75 $43.75 $5375 Clearance Offerings in MILLINERY $9.50 $14.50 $18.00 Women’s Sweaters CLEARANCE —Second Floor year sizes figure duced to $7.50 each. ; clearance, as follows: VERY Trimmed Summer Hat remaining from 81 WOOL SWEATERS, re- | 25 COATS, reduced to early purchases will now be found in one or duced to $10.00 each. $6.95, $8.95, $11.95 and another of these clearance groups—Dress Hats, 15 WOOL SWEATERS, re- § . Semi-dress and Sports Hats—affording decided duced to $15.00 each. 4 15 SUITS, reduced to savings at these prices—$9.50, $14.50 and ey ee Se 69 WOMEN’S PETTI- peta CHILDREN'S HATS also figure in the clearance COATS, of ‘good-quality 24 ‘SILK 'DRESSE re- at sharp reductions. silk jersey, redu $5.75 each, ——DOWNSTAIRS STORE. Women’s and Misses’ Wear Infants’ Wear CLEARANCE | $1 WHITE JEAN in the Clearance 4 HAND: MADE ae 98 JERSEY AND TWEED SUITS, reduced ODEs ateell to $6.35 each. 41 TWEED SUITS, reduced to $13.65 each. 40 KNICKERBOCKER SUITS, reduced to $13.65 each. 17 KNICKERBOCKER SUITS, reduced to $17.65 each. 128 WOOL SPORTS SKIRTS, reduced to $4.65 each. 18 ODD SKIRTS, reduced to $1.00 each. 43 WRAPPY COATS AND CAPES, reduced to $17.35 each. $1.00 and $1.95. to $1.00 and $1.95. duced to $1.95. $1.95 and $2.95, 7 GIRLS’ COATS, sizes 62 CAPES, reduced to $5.65 each. 34 CAPES, reduced to $5.00 each. 33 ee COATS, reduced to $9.65 each. 86 SILK DRESSES, reduced to $7.65 each. 115 SILK DRESSES, reduced to $13.65 each. 65 SILK DRESSES, reduced to $19.65 each. 9 CAPE DRESSES, reduced to $3.65 each. 29 CAPE DRESSES, reduced to $7.65 each. 9 CAPE DRESSES, reduced to $9.65 each. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE $4.95 and $5.95, reduced to 85ce, Chairs, Bassinettes, Cos- tumers, Layette Boxes and Hampers, at clearance prices. Suppose a rich EDITOWS NOTE: wife le left you 81,250, 350, and to each , to have something ch property BE KS, What do you want We're going to toil What $1,350? Why, the $1,350 the U, roment has in trust for your fam- ily has twiee entrusted with the federal government, If you have three children, you and yours have quite a stake—let's seo, five times $1,350 is $6,750, Nice little nest egg, isn't it? No, this isn’t a bonus congress may vote, but it’s already yours. re in this govern irees, “the na- Secretary of In- terior Fall calls it. Mr. Fall, who Is reputed to be a shrewd business man, estimates the total value of this national estate, held in trust for the pub- lic, at $150,000,000,000! loane-to-private-interests scheme it would net the government more than $12,000,000,000 in royalties, or more enough needed to wipe out the a mal debt. It's really worth a lot more than that in actual value to the public and if developed in s to pay the return the x ple, would mean an enormous come for perpetuity. He thinks that if exploited on the | a way as} | Yes, You Got It, But -How’ll You Spend It? deposits, 50 billion barrels, enough to last a century. 6. Waterpower, potentially 20 million horsepower—enough to light practically every electric light in the country. Resides that, vast deposits of pot- ash, phosphate, gold, copper, and George M. Hyland, personal erans' bureau will address all men in training in Seattle, att, family’s $6,750 1s invested | thor minerals, and 150,000,000 acres day, at 9 p. m. tn the Saban @ this: 2) of national parks, dedicated as pub-| rooms, Arcade buil ' 1, Forest Iands, 175,000,000 [1:0 piaygrounds, with more than an| aj) trainees beer peer aores. acre for each man, woman and child training at 2 p. m. in order to Arid and swamp lands, 5 Hyland's message. rich when reclaimed, 150,000,000 acres—one for each of us, and in the land to gambol upon, July Fourth Chedr more. 8. Grazing lands, 90,000,000 arrested George Pomeroy and reti nore, Taken by Deputies | 20 bottics of beer trom circulation: 4. Coal, estimated at 120 bil- lion tons, enough for genera- tions. 5. Petroleum and shale oll Anybody notice that the Fourth lacked hilarity? Deputy Two women are members of 5,000Used Tires | All high grade selected casings, thoroughly inspected and guaranteed Fpbrio A “DAN PATCH” COASTER WAGON Without a Cent of Cost to be Given by The Cord $0x3 .... $3.00 Up ws sex3is ~~ * Seattle Star to any Boy or Girl Sixt ss 4.50“ REAL DISC WHEELS is oe Equipped With Ball Bearings and sae . Rubber Tires tae “ Look in tomorrow’s Star for full particulars 7.00 8,00 “ 8.00 “ Fad 3 All Other Sizes in Proportion MAIL ORDERS Careful attention paid to Mail Orders. No deposit required, PikeStreet Tire Shop W. 0. STANDRING, Propr. 1026 Pike St, Cor, Boren Phone Biliott 0446 21 WOOL SWEATERS, re- Second Floor 15 SILK BONNETS, re- 12 RIBBON NOVELTIES, 15 BOYS’ TUB SUITS, sizes 2 to 6, reduced to to 6, reduced to $ : DRESSES, sizes 2 to 6, reduced to $2.95, $3.95, | 22 GIRLS’ GINGHAM DRESSES, sizes 2 to 6, Small lots of Nursery Furniture, including: High —Second Floor Address to Be Made Vets Under Training Premises at 915 Thomas st., Monday, sheriffs who raided the Kansas ‘City board of aldermen. i. 10 GERTRUDES, reduced tf geil eee aa 48 CAPES, reduced to $12.35 each. and $3.95, picogpe ig » ore 15_ GIRLS’ ORGANDIE sentative of the director in the habilitation division of the U. 8, it the

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