The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 29, 1922, Page 9

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—~ 5 —— — a Has taken particular notice of the drastic changes Fashion has decreed, as distinctly evidenced in our now very extensive showing of the NEW FALL DRESSES, SUITS, COATS AND WRAPS Everything about them breathe the at- mosphere of Paris— so unique that one }immediately knows that Paris alone could have been re- y sponsible. Though they reflect the new fashion notes of studied and minutely thought-out beauty, we are able to present thousands of them at skins, Deautifully silk $75 +r $250 ¢ Every woman will want # an early glimpse at = these ingenious after- noon and evening frocks that gayfully greet the season of mirth and dance—the gift of mak- ers who set the style for all the world. NEW FALL MODELS In Crepe # Dremnon All Sizes A vast amount of inter- j est centers about the new Fall Wraps unusually styled # in the advanced fashions # and of a character that # promises much in future # service. § Coats and # “Sweet Sixteen’ Garments at $16 Now assume a new importance.~ Thousands of them are ready for your choos- ing; and to meet the requirements of women who demand the same “Sweet Six- teen” fascination in the higher grades, there is a vast collection of the most elegant at unusual savings, being priced the “Sweet Sixteen” way at from $25 to $375. D “on the carpet” Monday. AVENUE TO BE OPENED west side of First will be ate traffic again before the end|%¥e? carloads of brick a day, but the week, according to Mayor | °°Uld only get two carloads,” Brown < declared. “Arrangements have been who called paving contractors | made to plank over the brick as it is TREATMENT }! Men and women—no matter it your ailment. grasp this op- / a Vistt our Sanipractic mayor's office against th the paving work on First ave. “I found the contractor could lay MEN! Can You Tell Em? Married Flappers nity. laid, which should allow the west! Protests had been pouring Into the| side of the street to be used for traf lowness of | fic within a few days.” Alleged Fake Cop Will Face Charges Prosecuting Attorney Malcolm Douglas has filed charges of grand larceny in superior court against | Frank Wallace, confessed burglar, | whose activities consiated of tmper- sonating police officers as a means of approaching his victims. Wallace ts said to have confessed to 16 burglaries and robberies. LUM wT THREE BIG POINTS ABOUT ‘SMITH’S 1PLEASE DON'T FORGET 1, Service—We have an expert saleslady and two sales- men on the floor who understand interior decorating, who will be glad to give you their time and suggestions. Every pattern we have for your approval has been hung in panel form, so that you may see for yourself the results. 2. Prices—Our paper and paint are priced lower than any store in Seattle, when you compare the same grades. We depend entirely on quantity production. Smith handles only high grade materials direct from mill. 3. Location—Smith has two large stores, our other be- ing 108-110 Second St., Portland. The Seattle store is be- tween Pine and Stewart, on Fourth Ave. There is a small wallpaper and paint shop in the same block. Look for our big electric sign and the name Smith. Smith’s Wall Paper House LOOK FOR OUR BIC ELECTRIC SICN lo21 FOURTH AVE. SEATTLE . THE SEATTLE STAR MAN GIVES WAY AGA | Women have taken to polo, soccer and other sports which have heretofore been considered for men exclusively. Man has also considered chess a game too deep for the feminine intellect, but here you see a tournament held in London for women only. Mrs. M. Stollas in the foreground, (left) and Mra. R. Stevenson DOG FARM IS ~ LOSER AT LAW | Judge Says One Dog Enough | for Man’s Home BOSTON, Aug. 2%.-James HH. Hurley and Margaret and Ellen Wiseman may only keep one lat thetr home. dog} The court has not only Imited! them to one dog but directed four large dogs and three pups be re | moved to some more sultable place, | In the suit to enjoin the keeping lof the dogn it was alleged that the! hMogs were vicious and savage and [had bitten at least @ dozen persons jand that the women of the locality went armed with clubs | down Green st. In Wednenday’s mid- jto Mo! Almost Postpones Buying Radio Set “Hello, you radio fan, how's the set working this evening?” “Fine. 1 heard all the local sta- |ttons and tuned to Bellingham. It came in fine and I didn’t have a bit You jof trouble with Interference. | know my set is so delicate that I jean tune out most anything that I |don't want in the receivers. Bay, | Tom, when are you going to get your set? I know you have been | figuring on getting one for a long time but I haven't heard of it yet.” "I don't know when I will get my . I put off getting one at ‘he start because I wanted to get particular make which is scarce, The manufacturers can't make nough to supply the demand, But when there sets began to come on he market my purse had shrunk 80 amall that I couldn't touch them. Now I am debating whether to buy suit of clothes or invest in a |radio outfit. I don't have enough |to buy both, and as I need clothes |so bad, I suppose I'd better have the new togs first.” “Listen, Tom. It fs not neces leary for you to do without the set. |Get both. I know a place, and in fact I buy all my Suits and Over |coats there, where one can buy on credit. You have enough coin to pay the firs’ installment on a nice sult and you are allowed as much las six months to pay the balance. |This place is Cherry's, at 1015 See. jond Ave, in the Rialto Bldg, over he Pig’n Whistle.—-Advertisement. I know that I could scrape my teeth clean with « soap- lesa, gritty tooth paste, but { know that washing ts eafer than scouring. 1 know that Coroata's ts made from non-gritty chalk and pure soap, which will loosen and wash away injur- fous substances in my mouth, I know COLGATE’S cleans my teeth thoroughly and that no dentifrice does more. BLANKET GETS MIKE “IN BAD” Didn't Steal It, Meant to Hock It for Hooch ROSTON, Aug. 29-—The plece do resistance was furnished here by a wellknown gentleman named Rati wan. Mike has been tn 40 times, but never for dishonesty A patrolman found him galloping day sun with a buge woolen blanket tied around bis waist with a rope under concealment of his smother- ing blanket. Mr. Ratigan was frank. Merely he was on the road for “Jakey.” Having pawned one blanket pre- viousty for $1, it had been drunk up and now ft was this blanket’s turn, Where id he get ‘em? Why, up ‘n house. 80 Judge Bennett joined tasue in| rt and “Molly” wns there, ex-| remely cautious in the circum:| stances. Mike must have rustled! them out of her house—she had two just such biankets, “Your honor,” proclaimed the! highly disturbed culprit, “twas she ent me for the “jakey me the blankets to hock, ‘n helped) me drink the ‘Jakey* n everything.”| “He will fall for alcohol in any Alive, Yet She Is Said to Be Dead, Mentally Doctors Are Puzzled by Phenomena of Accident CORRY, Pa., Aug. 29.—A dual ex- Istence is being led by Mra, Evelyn Sample, 78, Mrs. Sample tx physically alive, tho mentully dead! She has been so since August, 1920, when she was hit by a street car and knocked unconscious, Since that time she has been in a coma In @ small white bed at the home Mrs. Evelyn Sample | of a relative here, she exists from day to day, Her ability to continue to live under these circumstances baffles physiclans and specialists who have examined her. They are surprised at the strange, almost un- canny endurance possessed by the aging woman, For months Mrs. Sample was fed thru the nose. Lately she has been able to swallow, ‘This ts the only outward sign of life she has shown since she was injured. An X-ray fatled to digclose any condition which would warrant her long state of unconsciousness, Specialists at first believed a blood clot might have formed on the brain. Further X-rays were taken but none ef these supported the theorie White Building Addition Soon Completed Six Stories of New Offices and Exclusive Shops Will Be Ready in Thirty Days Y October 1 tenants will be moved into the splendid new White Addition at Fifth Avenue and Union Street. Street floors and Upstairs Shops and four stories of handsomely appointed offices con- stitute the plan of the new White Addition. Seek location for your business in this com- ing commercial center, Reservations for Space Should Be Made Now. Rental Office at 1301 Fourth Avenue METROPOLITAN BUILDING COMPANY Seattle form,” advined Probation Officer Maloney, “but not for actual crime.” Whereupon Mike was probated #0 he could be advised from week to week on the matter of bed blankets, hootch and duties to so- ciety. MONKEYS TO DEVOTE TALENTS TO SCIENCE Twenty-five chattering mon- keys who are on their way to Harvard arrived here Monday aboard the steamship President Grant, The monks left their home in the Philippine tslands to take up laboratory courses at Cambridge. They will devote their entire talents to medical re- search, some of them, no doubt, offering up Mfe for the cause of medical ecience. DRIVER FREED IN AUTO, DEATH Complete exoneration for August, J. Baer, of Iasequah, whore auto struck and fatally Injured June King, 6, daughter of H. B, King, Issaquah, Saturday evening, followed an tn- queft by a coroner's jury Monday. Fourteen witnesses were calied and testified that Baer's machine was pro- ceeding at a slow rate of «peed when the little girl, In crossing the street on an errand, failed to 2e0 the ap- proaching car, as her view was ob- structed by an auto parked at the curb. ‘The girl was usually very careful about crossing the street, according to her father, who said he himself held Baer blameless. bate court places value of estate of John F. Dodge, automobile manufac. turer, at $36,892,588.41. Biuhiil Pimento Cheese & OB OSCR ON OROLonRORCHORE: Canpinp LAXATIVA FOR CHILOREN OR AOULTRS GQPEATEST ACTERS IN THE WOOL CEP THE LIVER AND BOWES CRORE “al ALL G00D DADGUUTA Love Blighted, She Tries to End Life After an alleged visit to the man she loved and the subsequent discov- ery that he was married, Miss Ger- aldine Durgin, 18, of Everett, swal- lowed potson Monday night. The girl remained at the city hospital Tues- day, in a critical condition. She had been staying with Mrs. Betty Meade, pase Broadway, Seattle. -How my feet burn “OW! and callouses pain!” Meier Will Form Law Partnership Walter F. Meter, who will resign as corporation counsel on Dec. 31, will form a law partnership with Charles H. Farrell, it was announced Tuesday. The new firm will have, offices at 753 Styart building. Far rell wag formerly with the firm of Farrell, Kane & Stratton, which has dissolved. Don’t Spoil Your Child’s Hair by Washing It When you wash your child's hair, — be careful what you use, Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall, which is very injurious, as it dries the scalp and makes the hair britue, The best thing to use is Mulsified cocoanut of] shampoo, for this fs pure and entirely greaseless. It's very cheap and beats anything else all to pieces. Two or three teaspoonfuls of Mul- sified in a cup of glass with a little ‘warm water is all that is required. Simply moisten the hair with wae ter, and rub it in, It makes an abun-) dance of rich, creamy lather, cleans. es thoroughly, and rinses out easily. y:| The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to handle, Be- sides, !t loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and dandruff. fl You can get Mulsified at any drug Switt Drug Co. and Ow! Drug Co. store, and a few ounces will last ey- eryone in the family for sure your druggist giv fied.—Advertisement. SHOPMEN WANTED BY THE Oregon Short Line RAILROAD COMPANY Boilermakers, Machinists, Blacksmiths, Car Repairers and Car Inspectors. For Employment at NAMPA, Idaho POCATELLO, Idaho GLENN’S FERRY, Idaho MONTPELIER, Idaho SALT LAKE CITY, Utah At wages and under conditions established by the United States Railroad Labor Board. A strike now exists at these points. Free transportation and expenses paid to place of employment, also steady employment guaranteed and seniority rights protected for qualified men regardless any strike settlement. APPLY TO W. H. OLIN Oregon-Washington Station Seattle, Wash. WILLIAM CARRUTHERS 106 South 10th St., Tacoma oR W. L. MILLER 736 Central Building Or J, W. FOSTER 609 Tacoma Bidg., Tacoma

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