The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 23, 1922, Page 2

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EMBER AMERICAN HOMES BURBAL $129 PAIR —MARQUISETTE HEMSTITCHED curtains, White only, 2% yards in length $0 pairs in the lot. Special prise ave cease eee ee eat cs Never more than 30 miles per be== Rupture Kills " 1 te ma: 7 7? Be- @ = unfortunat ted selves oF | te ‘Sct as more than a m m I support. The binding pres. | wednesday morning cireul the weakened muscles o' cerned,” said Mra. ever known. Mo PAD when adhering | D*TIes- : G bt ny te the nods ctane: ‘therefore |quainting the housewife with the | Soft as velvetifact that cranberries make just as ly—comparatively In| desirable a dish in every month of chafe or pinch. ‘o be used whilst you ttached. ene lo close herntal as poets. intemtes oo, ture CAN'T come down. en: name today to PLAPAO CO.,| poetic feet? Bidg.. St. Louis, Mo. for trial Plapao and instructive tion.—(e) P. L.--Advertia whilst you sleep. No|the year as in November.” rt Boston Transcript. leytren Then you have GOOD COFFEE, Fla- vor determines qual- ity; strength deter- ‘mines what coffee costs you percup. By these standards judge roR BET SPECIAL CURTAIN VALUES! <HEMSTITCHED SCRIM —new, attractive curtains. —RUFFLED MARQUT: Guriaine, ite” raire | fe The season's latest cre- syrre curtainn, | ttede. this let Neat Ince edge. ; Brenan: - 2% yarde tong. White or tions, And very, special 94 yards long. A very Heck of a Time Is Hers ecru color, Special priced for the week. special value. —an exceptional value, this full-size SECOND FLOOR ~|STAR AT EXHIBI 8,000 Annually Fruit Show Will Be Held} tre repubiscan ticket on the fave] ing, November 11 to 19 "So clan tor A feature of the second annual] precineta in the state gave Carey a Pacific Northwest fruit exposition. to| lead of 470 over his opponent, John be held in the Bell Street terminal |W. Hay, Rock Springs banker and Nov. 11 to 19, will be cranberry di* | cattle man. plays from Pacific and Grays — bor counties-in this state. and Clat- doy GURY, Ore. Mra: Winnle Bra, | 67° TUMARF neck den, manager of the show, announced “These displays will be arranged | 4 ratio ‘a AeEich they need most—-nourish-| with the idea of selling to the public| grmerraie, Romuaems | teapect wy lhe party two Important considerations as far as the cranberry industry ts con Braden. @./the public can be made to realize what an infinite amount of labor ts required to produce @ quart of cran:|, 00,0" sWau'y tone weet ee meat | eat = “The next consideration ts ac-| Friend—I often hear of feet in|ffirmative, the father gave a brave connection with poetry. What are Poet—Something one doesn't have to provide shoes for, thank heavent~ C’n You Beat It? Wanda Is a Clown! HOMES" in Funmaking Garb at Show $149 PAIR —FRENCH BOR.O.NEG CUR TAINS, 2% yds long, White or ecru colors. Crocheted edges. Special $249 PAIR REDUCED TO 42" regular price $60-— wardrobe trunk. Has bulge top, plush lined, 8-ply hardwood veneer, covered with vulcanized fiber. Fitted with a hardwood clothes hanger and shoe box. Nickel-plat- ed drawer lock. Regular price $60—. Special for the week, $42.75. WITH OUR FREE leither if we hadn't seen the | photographer when he “shot” ithis picture. It’s our own | Wanda as she appeared at the \cireus Tuesday. ¥ ‘TACOMA: By Wanda von Kettler I wept about it at flest and Se = iS IORANBERRIES TO!CAREY LEADS | ESL ALESS horse or a camel.” CHEYENNE, Wyo, Aus. . “But,” said the Ringling Gov. Robert D. Carey of Wyoming] + ere only a wry Magy ttn come inte our of 8 Probably has been renominated on] Dud conve lute | ws re Thought you wanted to see the show from « different angie, Now, from beneath the kalsomine of a clown—" Ob, dear! What to do! Nothing to do but tell the Ring ling Brow.-Barnum Bafley man that I desired to be a clown! of returns received up until early today. Returns from one-third of the 657 W. B. Ross and Geo: BH, Kinder ant het for the - . poe torial nomination.|L#itzel's tent this afternoon our gh poten nd John gw |clown Hartzell shall apply the Kendrick are the republican ana|P*int nominets, respectively; So at 115 yeaterday afternoon began. The Ringling Bros-Baroum Bailey man led me shaper “behind scenes” of the circus to the Nttle Arabian tent of Lillian Leitsel, WHEN MAURY DIED Star asrial gymnast, who cerns “167 M. W. Maury (the great marine aw | stant belf flanger” in midair with were unopposed. . “First, loved and honored men in the atate/ lev vergenten Mise Leltzel wan seated In front of her tent, . It fs recomded that, near the end.|cnitten eo & Piece of yellow he asked his son: “Am I draggi “ my anchors?" m 1 GS6IOE | pretty, ton't itt xaid 1, sitting ‘And when the latter replied in the | 40%" beside her; “what's it for?” Oh,” Mise Leitzel explained, “it's ite ania one of my ruffie skirts for the act. I “Alva well,” he eaié—American|™*ke all my own costumes, you PB ves itt ra know. Yes, ‘tla pretty—but. ob doen't you want to see what 60. ing to wear?’ And it was beantiful! A panta loon thing, made of white ma- terial with big red spots and three yards of reffle around the neck! With a red hat like a cor- nucopla to go with it! J climbed Inte it, AND WHITEN SKIN |) ae tne thar presented tacit Hartzell, who for 40 years has | been a clown.” He was ready for Squeeze the juice of two lemons| the first act, and wore upon his into « bottle containing three ounces, *now-white head a gold crown, of Orchard White, which any drug| and about his shoulders a ruby store will supply for a few cents,| velvet robe. He isn't exactly shake well, and you have a quarter) clownish in the first act. |pint of the best freckle and tan/ But he made a clown of me! | bleach, and complexion whitener. | First came the application of a Mansage thin sweetly fragrant lem-|sticky whiteness all over my. face I looked Into the GIRLS! LEMONS BLEACH FRECKLES jon lotion into the face, neck, arma!I didn’t like It. | and hands each day and see how |looking glass on Miss Loitzel's dress: | freckles and blemishes bleach out and|ing table, and said, “What ts that! how clear, soft and rosywhite the | stuft?’ skin becomes.— Advertisement. “Zine oxide,” the king explained. | Freee ae “It always comes first in the clown Youngsters makeup.” “ “Doesn't taste good,” said 1. pro- Playtimes Come truding the tongue and licking off a/ nice gob to the left of the lip. to an End )™",". generally eaten,” the king explained further, “It's supposed to stay on the outside.” Whereupon he lapped on some more, which I didn’t eat. “Have your children come home yet from their vacation on your brother's farm?” “Oh, no. They are up there hay.| ‘Then came the powder, and the ing the time of their young lives. Tlrea, and Matpain evens sire, think we will let them stay until the /1 aja tike those eyebrows, reaching last minute. They are getting 0 | clear from the real row, point- plump and healthy that I want them |oaiy to the skull, : to have as much of the outof-door} Under the cornucopia hat—and I life an they can get. They are drink: | supposed I wan finished—ready now | ing lots of milk and getting lots of |to wit before Mina Leltsel’s tent and good, healthful exercise,” observe the circus people trom be- “Yes, it ts @ good idea to let them | neath their own paint. have as much of a holiday as poss! A bugle blew, ble before achool opens again.” “C'mon,” a) “Yeu. It 's wonderful not to bo! goll, “let's wie _— worrying about the children’s school “Oh,” said I, “I'M NOT GOING clothes this year, Always before [| TO BE IN IT.” went Into a frenzy of sewing, saving “Oh,” said he, “BUT YOU money and skimping. This year ev-| ARE! We can't have any clowns lerything ts lovely.” sitting around and not working. "Goodness, what has happened to| C'mon, we got a place for you— make this year to different?” in the third row of the clown “Oh, I learned about Cherry’s. line—up in the ‘spec. ” Molly fs in high achool now, and Oh dear! deart Cherry's have’ very aatistectory| dortecin On wate clothes for misves, and their boys'| Not department fits out James, Molly arya d fonts eee ele. can get what she needs at their Semi: |phants began to walk, the spangled Annual Clearance Sale, and the bert {indies on horses, on camels, on hip- of it is one can have six months to| nos, entered the big tent, and. 40 ot pay at Cherry's, They are at 1015|uu clowns followed behind | Second Ave., between Madison and! ‘rhe Ringling Bros.-Rarnum Batley | Spring, fn the Rialto buflding, over |man told me afterward that the tent | the Plg'n Whistle.”-—Advertisement.|was just about six blocks around, = | But he made come mistake. We OPPORTUNITY went at least 80 times aix blocks. And tie show was packed with a lot WAN TADS STAR No, we wouldn't believe it) "4. smeared them of rude people who ‘stared—and #00 per son a a week's time la tay avtantes, . SEATTLE STAR BONUS BILL UP f— FOR AN AIRING Dusty Dooument Brought Before Senate WASHINGTON, Aug. 2%..—The soldier bonus bill, after reposing in & senate pigeon hole for nearly # year, was out on the floor today with every Indication that It would be panned and nt to conference with the house within a wee Whether President Harding wil! veto or sign the measure remained uncertain when debate was sche: uled to open with a strong defenn of a bonus for the soldiers by Sen MeCumber, chairman of the financ committer, and a vitriolic attack o it by Ben. Borah. Borah, “Wanchor man” of th: opposition, is confident that If th: president vetoes the measure he nenator will be sustained. The claima’ that at it 87 wena five more than ts necessary vent overriding a veto, will vote against the measure. Bellingham Man Is Victim of Alcohol NEW YORK, Aug. 24.--Pdward | Dauherty, $2 years old, of Belling ham, Wash, whose body was four early today in hia room at the Hote Navarre, died of acute alesholisn polsoning, according to T, A. Gansle ansintant medical ¢ ine stared—and stared. They shoute even, at all un 40 clown. We'd gone about one-fourth of the way when one of the brothers | front, who wiggled a judy stick turned around and said to me, “Ye ha! How do you like the art #o far I don't remember anything thet happened after that—except that w watked—and walked—and — walke and finally got out of the tent Then came the awful discov ery. It was the worst Blow of all, I'd ruined my eyebrows Those lovely black eyebrows, that went pointedly clear from the real eyebrows to the skull. all over, and part of them, even, were now on the chin, Ob dear! What to do! George Hartree) came along with » brush and put them on again. . Haid Mies Leitzel to me when T re turned to her tent, “Want to see the dressing roome—the real dress jing reoma?’ | And she didn’t know what she was * maid 1, “*would Mie to. Bo Anna, Mian Lattzel’s maid, took me to the dressing tent where 160 girls prepare for the show. We stood in the doorway and looked within, Que hundred and fifty trunks in about 10 rows; 180 girls, seated on little stools before the trunks, jabbing In hairpins, smoothing in rouge, and pulling up silken, shimmery stockings. One hundred and fifty Uttle looking glasses hung tn the tops of the trunks reflecting it all. One girl not so far from the door. way was seting peculiarly, ‘neemed SYory well.” enid he, “in MIS6li. me. She placed ber heels, enclosed fn gray silken stockings, at the back of her neck, She lowered them, then placed them there again. “Goodness,” sald I, “what's she doing?" “She's a contortionist,” Anna ex plained, “The giris all practice in the dressing rooms." About that time somebody turned about and looked toward the doorway. “VOW!” yelled that somebody, “THERE'S A CLOWN IN HERE. A MAN Over went the stools, down went hairpins, up went kimonos! OPEN THE DOOR OF THE GREAT UNKNOWN? Kee, L write tor 1 t ow and Why t Constipation, Rhew- G Neuritis, tiot ono You Radio-Active Solar | t, recelving the inuously into tehne lation. throwing off impurities an: Ihe the Lisvuen and nerves to @ Bor mai condition—end the next thing! you know ig: re «et wet ‘ ‘Bold_on & test pro on. are thoroughly satiefied (tis heipe| fag you. before the appliance le ure Nothing to do but wear it + on trouble of apenas, and t mou wonderful about the apy te that jt js Rold wo ro that) it is within the reach of all, both/| rich and beey! No mat or how lon leased, to Pe hor full information write to- | day-—not. tomorrow, standing, we wiil be ave you try it at our Radium —Ap- |piiance Co. 279 Bradbury Widg., t ny “Stabbed by — Neuritis ! usually a sharp, stabbing pain, which may “come and go" or hurt con- stantiy. You may feel it in the shoulder, neck, forearm, small of the back or down the thigh and Jog to the heel. It is sometimes mistaken for aciattea, rheumatism or neural- gia, which often end in neuritis, No matter where you have had nerve pains or what caused them, you can get quick relief without using narcotics or poison, Just ape ply Tysmol over the part that hurts, 4nd in a few minutes the pain will be _ gone. Tysmol ts absorbed t ores of the skin, ealing effect upon nerves, gradually helping to re: them to healthy condition. Don't suffer any longer, Price $1 at Bartell's and the Owl or any re- Hable druggist Tyamol Co, Mfm. ita, 400 Sutior at, San Francisco—Advertise- ment Eyes Weak your eyes are weak work. exe your jon blurred, 1 you find it dificult to read and must wear lasses, Ra your Srugs'e and get a hotel -Opte tablets. one in a fourth of a glans of water and bathe the eyes two to four times a day. Stroni eyes, sen ii'yor rkaadeshuak hectetee y wing to prese the pink ruffles. “It's | table Compound. ¢ oll right, But I like this other work ance for a change.” got the paint off finally. nd no one seemed to recog: er how had your ailment. | —— Ham Prices Slam, bang! Oh, what a riot. “WHERE'S THE ROBE MISTRESS?” piped up & voles, “WHERE'S—" “"Sall righ thém; * ‘tivn't a REAL clown.” Whereupon the girls looked closer, appeared more happy and went on jwith the hairpins and rouge. "Seemed to me, after that, it was time to “wash up.” “No,” said I to Mr. Hartaell, who appeared outside the dressing tent, | editor.) “I don't think I'll put on an act, I SAE Aah a haan went around the ring at's encur® | WOMAN'S COMPLEX LIFE If you are sick and want to Get| Besides, I needs must get dressed and 0 see the animals.” Tt was while T was dressing and | son for many a nervous breakdown. to Oo many | Anna, the numerous ruffles of ® pink fluffy skirt that I asked her eer ape) ever done anything in the clr | wing of activity until headaches de- “Mo?” she sald, “Oh, yes; you see, | oftentimes more serious fils which my husband's « clown. And we've |are peculiar to her sex alone, Such healthy cir-|traveled with the citcus quite &/women should not despair, but be while. I used to be ta the ballet—and | guided by the letters so often pub- do the tango- DINT said I. Don't you} who have been in just such condl- like it any more?” + r Rte e Down Ham—Boiled, Baked (Hot or Cold), / Broiled or Fried—is one of the most appe- tizing and savory foods that the markct offers. The wholesale price of ham is fifteen to twenty per cent lower than it was six weeks ago. The U. S. Dept. of Agriculture in an announcement dated June 19, 1922,in refer- ring to vitamins found in meat said, “Var- ious cuts of meat were tried, and in every instance pork was found to be relatively rich in vitamins. Pork tenderloin, fresh h&m, smoked ham, and pressed boiled ham were tested and the results were much the same with all of them.” Swift’s Premium Hams are always of auniform high standard of quality, regard- less of price. A special cure of sugar and salt, and smoking over hardwood fires impart a flavor that has made “Premium” Ham the world’s standard. Summer time is ham time. Insist on having “Swift's Premium”—see the blue identification tag. nize me when I looked again | Nottinghum is the WARD- into the performing tent—no bedy grinned. They didn’t know I was one of the clowng. So I just went on thru te the animal tent to see the liom and it,” Anna yelled to Painless Extraction of Teeth Free From 9 to 11 oons and the hippos and the giraffes with the loveliest necks— (Curtain again, rung down by the ‘Woman's coraplex life with its mul- Utudinous calle is given as the rea- Leitzel’s maid, WSS! Home work, soctal obligations, dress- | making and the care of children keep jthe 20th century woman tn a whirl. Special for 36 Days— Set of Tecth....... velop, backache, nervousness and lished fn this paper from women tions, but who have been restored to she told me, contin-| health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vege- sidered the best; $2 per teeth. This is a root and herb medicine that contains no drugs and can be taken In safety by any woman.— Advertisement. 1420% Second Avenue Haye you shined your shoes today with Zin Shoe Polish It improves your per- sonal appearance and saves leather. For Black, White, Tan, Brown and Ox-blood Shoes F. F. Dalley Company of New York, Inc. Buffalo, N. ¥. largest manufacturing center in the world. Rel Radiographs — the only reliable method of knowing the exact condi- tion of your teeth. One X-ray free Our treatment of pyorrhea ts com In One Location for 21 Years BOSTON DENTAL CLINIC

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