The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 21, 1922, Page 4

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| | BLD MAN AS |Who odhneay Big Show to Arrive Tuesday es and Shot Victim mysteriously at 2448 Westlake late Sunday night, C. J, Wil of Port Blakely, waa in the hospital Monday, while his al: Teeed assailant, giving the name of D, J. Hedrick, 82, engineer, was held on an open charge. ope! Circus Is Coming * ta was assaulted by a man, who suddenly leaped upon from the bushes near the ad- on West ave, as Williams ng. u're the man who chased mo at night,” he man ts said to faa he pulled a revolver a shooting. The first bullet fi] Wiliams’ cheek, Four other ‘went wild. policemen searched the dis- and arrested Hedrick. “« _ Avoid Politics ly do women go Into politics? fre. Phebe M. McCileverty, candi. late for county auditor in the repub- jes, says it is because friends talk them into it. tics is not my line,” she de | “I never committed politics ” 3 ; * | in my Iife. I know nothing fy ~ Eat ¥ P >: | | | it, but I don't seo why I won't |® good auditor for all that.” retty and a successful lawyer, McCleverty’s idea of campaign- Be is to mean what she says, and t to say anything unless she nt Sig a bit hard to be tn polities,” } emi! “If you let politics alone. ‘widow of a war veteran who at the city hospital Mon. i / t | Investigated the case. is satd to have been despond. stages. The center poles, eight in all, |] are 60 feet high. It te sald that the menagerie tent) is as big as the main tent of five! years ago when the Ringling Bros. | cirous last exhibited in Seattle. On | | Tuesday and Wednesday it will The doors to the menagerie will open |] shelter more than 1,000 wild antmals, at land 7 p. mp. | ‘The giant ofreus carries 1,600 per. |i fons on tour. Of these 300 are per- formers who will be seen here Tues. |i] day and Wednesday. More than 200 performing horses, 150 trained wild |i animals and 100 clowns appear on |i] the one program. | | Republican The bigness of the show and the |i be 700 feet tn length | time required to get ft to the show will have & capacity | grounds and tn place has put an ena | 15,000 parsons and wil! house three | to street parades, none having been (ff ee, a trio of steel arenas and eight | given anywhere since | CONVICTS Slayer of Sweetheart Remorseful. Harry New Feels Sorry for Mothers. Imprisonment Benefits Him. Takes Up Christian Science in Cell. Bisa oe inet Sten pe cris im oars | otaft Rational attention. Jungmeyer tells they are doing, what they are think- Dusishment and-restraint. Each story ts ‘vivid with pane poe eae lg ery Jp: and = entire secies shows tlum- peeve Me ome ms “TT i practically every peniten- BY JACK JUNGMEYER BAN QUENTIN, Cal., Aug. 21.—1 have talked to many killer convicts in this and other penttentlaries. For New the terrible edge of the Harry 8. Now is the only one who |!ong term convict has worn off, I ever spoke voluntarily of his re-|Watched him stride, confident and morse. erect, bi the tawny reservation hills exime of passion, Dur-| Past the turreted guards, as a man ge ‘avon quarrel, while riding |£0*# to work ho likes. He has passed thru Topango canyon in Loa Ange- |‘ critical points of the {elon’s | there that he's got to consider most.” | | his brain. It’s what happens in | | } les, New shot and killed his sweet-|Where he must decide the rond he is heart, Freda Lesser, He drove her |'® fllow—tho one to corroding rebel- | body to the palice station and, con-|#0n and prison penalties, the other feased. A flare of insanity, said his |’? Compliance and, at the appointed mother, He got ten years to life,|‘#me, parole. and is In his third year. almost killed me my first months here,” acknowledged New, 34, slight, sensitive, . singled KEEP WELL | Bright’s Disease BY DR. R. H. BISHOP | - RIGHT’S @ineane| i “Remorse, and the suffering is one of those) ot my mother and sister, It ts that they who are doing the give few definite time of my sentence. If a man warnings until it could bear all the punishment | fs so far ad. alone, it wouldn't be so bad. vanced as to be “But the penitentiary is filled with practically incur. | the hovering spirits of sorrowing able. It js al mothers, no less celled than we who great argument wear the gurb of crime, for periodic med. “I think many prisoners are truly foal examina ‘Ipenitent and suffer silent anguish, tions, for only but few admit or show it. Self-re- proach is after all not a thing to be paraded. It’s a thing a man himself must wrestle with in his dell and on the job, so achieving mental poise and a moral foot hold for sanity.” Harry New has been finding himself. I'd say prison has done something positive and beneficial thus can the gen- eral condition of the body and its organs be checked up and incipient! Bright's disease discovered, ‘The average cane of tho disense— sometimes called nephritis — laste ‘about 15 years, A person will go on| constantly complaining of “dyspep- sia,” “nervousness,” “liver trouble," “The Store of Eternal Newness” THE SEATTLE STA Let Mrs. Mack guide you in your fall dressmaking. —Mra, Mack is our Expert Pattern Tustructor, A Three-Day Sale MONDAY, TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY New Fall Silks Thousands of Yards of the Very. Materials Most Wanted for New Fall Dresses, Blouses, Breakfast Coats and Underwear At Most Unusual Price Crepe-back Satin $2. 95 —40 inches wide. —black, navy blue and brown. —a fashionable fabric, particu- larly adapted to the long, drapy gowns now in vogue. Plenty of These Silks Satin Canton $ 3:45 —40 inches wide. —black, navy, brown, carmel. —an excellent fabric, both as to appearance and wearability, Charmeuse We Will $7.95 Have a Very shades. —40 inches wide. Busy Day ‘ —black, navy, marine and brown. Tomorrow —a soft - draping fabric, with dressy, lustrous finish. Canton Crepe $ 2: 95 —40 Inches wide. —black, navy, brown, canna, jade, rust, flame, phosphorous and magenta, gray and old rose. 36-Inch "Chiffon Taffeta $7.25 —24 rich, high col- 7 ors and street , Changeable and Plain Taffeta #145 86 inches wide, ; oathwick Your Advantage MONDAY, AUGUST 21, 1922. ’ HES Let Betty Lee help you select your new outfit. —Personal Shopping Service, Fourth Floor. Main 6720 Extra Cascade Crepe 4 Sales $ 3 45 People —88 inches wide. —a heavy reversible silk and wool fabric with dull satin face. —in black, navy blue, brown, ma- rine blue, beige and gray. N Heavy Crepe Panama $3.45 88 inches wide. —a silk and wool reversible mate- rial for suits and dresses. -—in biege, gray, henna, Royal Pekin blue, brown and black. Se TTT TTT TTT TUTTO Early ay yap Drop-stitch and Plain Vesting 95° 86 inches wide. ——= tubing vesting, in ivory, , pink, orchid and maize. es pera tubing, in ivory, » pink, orchid and maize. Crepe Fiber Vesting oT TI TATE —a most popular silk. All-Silk Velvet Changeable Chiffon Taffeta, in 24 charming color blendings. —Plain Chiffon Taffeta, in 21 popular shades, for inti- mate apparel, street wear and evening costumes. $7.15 86 inches wide. if ivory, flesh, pink, orchid, maize. ff $5.75 —86 inches wide. —f rich all-silk black velvet. —the favorite of Winter fabrids, Velvet, will be as popular this season as for many years past. Black Silk Velvet $ 4.95 —42 inches wide. —silk velvet, with erect pile. —an excellent fabric which prom- ises service as well as assuring smart costumes, Select From These Smart Patterns —25 stunning Gestgna for your most successful shades, high col- 7 Space thiaiann aid cds tal » N. O'S; Street shades Y, old he © . y a 9c Ben: MacDougall’s \. and delicate Pictorial Review Patterns ints, ai | ES Is Famous . Ladies’ Home Journal Patterns. McCall Patterns (they're printed) —Basement Floor, Silks Ask Mrs. Mack any of your perplexing problems in dressmaking. With her helpful guidance you should be able to make a new If you are unfamillar as to the use of Pat- Savings in New Silks for Quality Crepe de Chine $ 1° terna, ask Mra.-Machk to help you. She is ttern Instructor and Dress- pm ge = 5 dress a day! MacDougall-Southwick Silks Have Been Famous Nearly Half a Century for him. He came here, he told me, utterly bewildered and un- able to perform his assigned | headac rr “biliousness,” not realizing that per- haps there is something far worse at tasks. A few months in the jute | the source of things. mill, where he “played the piano” Usually, bad habits cause Bright's con jargon for the looms—put | disease—bad habits in eating and him in the hospit drinking, mostly. Now he's runner with the quarry gang, @ sort of strawbors and mes- senger boy, permitted to come and | so thru the gates to the outer reser- A one-day fast is considered quite helpful in acute Bright's disease, an it gives the kidneys a chance to catch up in their work. PLAN TO OPEN. At a conference to be held Wed. nesday in Seattle, wand officials of the United Mine ‘Workers of America will attempt to reach some understanding that will SILKS ON SALE STREET FLOOR All-Silk Duvetyn $ 2:95 | | | —89 inches wide. . | ~brown, black, navy blue. —a lovely, soft fabric which drapes beautifully. | | | Black Satin $ 1-45 86 inches wide. --Black Satin is very modish this season—its shiny surface is in vogue and its soft-draping qual- ities lend themselves to the new styles. The Latest Fad Matalasse Cc. O. D. Purchases If Requested A satin fabric In allover quilted pat- tern. Colors, black, navy, and brown. 36 inches wide. Priced $7.50, Mrs. Mack will show you how to place the pattern on the material, how to cut it to the best, advantage, even what materials to ‘use, Leaves Girl Money, Fails to Name Her PARIS, Aug. 21.—After M. Henrt Peletier had committed suicide by shooting, the police found in his room a signed will reading as follows: “This ts my last wish—as when alive STATE MINES mine operators vation, at the keeper's signal to the gun towers. It is the first step in making @ prisoner trusty. “I'm engrossed,” said he, “In Christian science, as are many of the inmates. It has helped me to gain self-control and courage to face tho barren, monottonous years, “Explation 1s ® spiritual pro cess. Routine here soon becomes much Itke the routine of work on the outside—and a man gets what he gives. A man's real prison cell is the bony wall of Many authorities recommend one day a week on a bread and milk diet, It 1s necessary, too, to become virtually a vegetarian if-you have Bright's disease. The excosa of pro- teins in meat places a heavy strain on the kidneys. A vegetable diet sup- plies better energy and endurance than any kind of meat. The victim of the disease should drink lots of water, hot or cold, as} preferred. Drink it between or with meals or any time you prefer, but drink two or three quarts a des, Devote yourself to the out-of-doors permit the opening of at least half ja dozen of the closed coal mines in Western Washington, Arrangements for the conference | were made upon request of the mine workers thru their president, Ben Farrimond, It is expected that in event of successful negotiations the Cle Elum and Roslyn mines, largest |in the state, will be the first to re- sume operations. life, but nothing strenuous. Walk- ing, motoring for short distances only, golf and fishing are sports that will prove of benefit. I met her, I leave everything to her." The authorities have absolutely no clew to the identiy of “her,” but have found thet Peletier's estate was worth approximately $15,000, Sever. ®) claimants have come forward, but have been unable to prove they are the girl Pelletier loved. PORTLAND, Mich, — William Hughes commits suicide after shoot. ing to death his brother, David Hughes, and his baby If you value your watch, let Haynes repair it, Next Liberty theater.—Adv. Poets Excited by Skirt Controversy LONDON, Aug. 21.—The question as to whether skirts shall be long or short has excited even the poets, One produces the following: “Which is right and which ts wrong? Should my lady's skirt be long, With a train that sweeps the ground, Where the germs in scores abound? Or, should it be short and sweet, Showing something more than feet?” AURORA, Ill.—Judged oldest man actually engaged in farming, George Elkins, 97, #€ Buncombe, Hl, wins prize. MARTINEZ, Cal.—Auto plunges into bay from ferry boat, drowning Mrs. C. D. Whiting, wife of chief deputy sheriff of Jackson county, Mo, Stop Asthma Instantly! ASTHMADOL Asthma, Bronchitis, Hay Fever, $1.00 7 Gobs Blossom Out in Editorial Garb Filled with breezy Grticles and pro: | at all drug stores, or direct, D. p., by fusely illustrated, a new magazine,|Joyner Drug Co., Spokane—Adver | captioned the “Grizzly Bear,” has} tisement, q made its appearance aboard the bat: tleship California, Literary talent on D M the big warship now has an outlet r. acy for its urge, and the rest of the gobs Specialist Ket as much enjoyment from the publication as do those who make it, The initial iseue contains 65 pages, Dyed Hair Wrong Color, Pays $300 LONDON, Aug. 21.—Walter B. Smith dyed the hair of Mrs, Mar. | guerite Macrorie correctly for two years, Then hem ade a mistake that | 1504 Srd Ave. turned her blonde tresses brown, Sho | sued him and was awarded $300. Cor. Pike St,

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