The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 30, 1922, Page 4

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75 See DAYS WITHOUT RAIN! When it came—were you prepared? PREPARE NOW FOR THE RAINY SEASON LOOK! LOOK! A GENUINE WOOL "Il CRAVENETTE PROOFED GABARDINE The Logical All-Year-’Round Coat for Seattle and the Northwest were never sold below $25.00 SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY 1G? EH. W. JOSEPHSON, RAINCOAT CO. YEA 904 2nd From Marion ‘COMPLEXIONS a] IRLS, do you buy you @ little beauty secret— Advertise Prices ‘The dentist who tells you of any magnitude whatever could possibly be carried on successfully if there were not mecurate methods of arriving at the costs and using this as @ basis for prices, But many Gentists are prac Ucing dentistry so Inefficient- ly—speaking from @ business standpoint—that they dare mat let you know the enor. fous murgin of profit they must have to cover their wasteful ‘methods. Others, whose business organization is better perfected, rebel against set prices because it Iinter- feres with the time-honored custom of charging “all the traffic will bear.” Remember, though, when you pay more for dental work than the prices I quote, you are not paying for better dentistry, but for lense effi- Over * Bartelt’s Drug Store Elliott 1823 To maintain « clear, healthy com. Dlexion tt ts necessary to eliminate all body wastes promptly. Wastes are not eliminated prompt- ly because the right food ts not Etimination cannot go thoroly unless the Intestines are kept no residue oR ge villa ap ager phen Walked 4,000 | Miles to Find Steady Job And He's Now in Seattle Hoping the Quest Will End ‘There must t be ® permanent Job In or around Seattle for a 69 years old who ts will. ing to do anything around « ranch, hotel or restaurant. Mike Murphy things #0. .And after a journey of over 4,000 miles—three-quarters of it cov- ered by walking—Mike is here looking for the job, Like many another man, Murphy | Was thrown out of hie long held Job In Philadelphia in the string. ency of late 1920. Me sought all over that district for # job, but everybody was laying off men, and & man past 65 didn't stand much show of getting on. “There's a steady job for me somewhere,” Mike declared, “And belleve mea I'm going to find tt.” From his slender savings, he rigged up @ little express wogan, tn which he carried his tent, bed ding, clothes, cooking utenall»— everything he had. Pulling this, he | started weet, in February, 192) | stopping and working wherever pow | sible, but ever on the alert for the | permanent sob. Hight pairs of shoes were worn in the westward trudge, Odd) jobs in auto camps. hatels, ete, re plenished his wardrobe and fed him. Even the sands and dangers the Mojave desert holds o: traveler did Te took pl and water, and started thru, Part way scross the stretch of waste, Mike found four men, thrown from railroad trains, and in need of food and water. A bargain was struck, Mike fed the four, and in return, they helped him pull his little wagon. All waa lovely tn California until) Mike started thru Tioga pass, Then) one of the wheels on his wagon broke. Mike had to hike back four miles to the nearest town to got fixed. When he came back, his entire outfit had been stolen, Working in an auto park in Call- fornia, he talked to some Washing: ton state tourtsta, “Washington te the place for you,” they told him. “The country Deeds and appreciates men ike you who are willing to do anything In order to get steady work.” Mu took their advion He worked for hie passage aboard « steamer coming up from Los Angeles, Since he's been here, he has done @ little work at Provi THE SEATTLE STAR Mrs. Melissa Wooden, 94, Broken Love Started BY JACK JUNGMEYER SAN QUENTIN PRISON, Calif, living with nothing to do.” Thus the problem of the woman convict was summed up for me by Kathryn Wixon, matron’s trusty of the female ward at San Quentin. &he tittle to live for, for acting ae siren tn a robbery end ing in murder tn Sacramento. Quiet, thoughtful, gracious, $2, she! came emiling to the Interview, hatr bobbed and trim tn prison biye. Klimt. nating her superior intelligence and Personality, Mra. Wixon ts the corm @ence hospital But ae yet, he's not found the steady job. “I can't read or write, but I know how to work,” he says. And if willingness counts for anything, Mike ought to lm « valuable man on a ranch or in other work, Injunction in Theater Fight As an outcome of the Sght start 4 against the John Danz motion Picture theaters by the musicians’ union, Superior Judge J. T. Ronald issued an injunction Tuesday after. noon prohibiting Frank Turco and Frank Clark from selling news papers in front of the houses. The trouble started, accorting to Dans’ complaint, when he refused to put on @ fivepiece orchestra in one of his theaters upon domag! of [the musicians’ union, Evidence at the hearing was to the effect that Clark and Turco, under the guise of selling news. papers, created such disturbances tn front of the Florence and Star the that patronage wi turned ;| away. soluble or digestible and consequent- ly are not absorbed, Effective Treat- ment Seen in New Gland Discovery Belentists of International promi- | nence declare that the vital glands of young animals have remarkable power for renewing vitality, toning up the entire system and building up nerve force, By a new discovery these glands are now acientifically prepared in tablet form for internal use. This preparation is known as Glandogen. People who have taken Giandogen only a few days have written letters telling of results that seem astonish. ing, Glandogen can be procured at the Bartell Drug Stores, Seattle—Ad- ster and sarong - Al eA TOMOR = hs short ronte ts Mood Be. ° 500 «ae Extra day and Susdey 1030 p.m. Guide per mitted fy Navy Yord ot 1&3 peu Passenger fare 80¢ round trig. NAVY YARD ROUTE Main 3993 aaa This, Judge Ronald held, was in violation of the state anti-picketing law, 2 Fight on Tracks; Train Kills Both! CHICAGO, Aug. 20--While Mi. chael Burk policeman, and James Wallace, & negro, whom he was at- tempting to arrest, struggied violent. ly on the railroad track, both were ground to death beneath the wheels of « fast New York passenger train. The fighting men did not notice the crack flyer as it thundered down up- on ther, Cracksmen Rob Bank of $80,000 in B. C. CALGARY, Alta, Aug. 30.—Woear- ing greased gloves and protected shoes, expert cracksmen looted the Union bank branch of Foremost you terday and escaped with $10,854 in cash and $70,000 tn bonds. Polloe admitted that the robbers had com pletely covered their trail, 2,000 Participate in Fete at Prosser PROSSER, Aug. 30--More than 2,000 visitors participated in tho tes: | tivities attendant on the State day | celebration here yesterday, Street dancing, & picnic lunch, speeches, acrobatic and vaudeville entertain. ments were featured on the program, Dizzy Spells Are Usually Dua ta Constipation When you const! pated, Inbresting guid % “4 dueed in the bowel to food waste soft and moving. ae. vaoente it acts like natural lubricant thus replaces ‘it. posite person and volce of the called niaterhood hare. e And thts te what ehe ant4. actuated only by the feeling that her observa tons about what incarceration means, What I could do for the other firia, jshube to women might prove beneficial; “This place is Greadful because the yetem keeps us idle. Gave for a few chores, there is nothing to do, no Work. The girls just sit and think. Borne only sit. “We make diversiona, yea, but we eed occupational employment. "The feeling that I am non-produo tive is hardest to bear. “Most of the 49 women tnmatesare hoping that the proposal to transfer us to the state farm for delinquent girls will come to pass. “The majority of Itfetimers hare at some time lived on a farm—esome of them homesteading as I aid. Ther engernens to encape the perverting tn- fluence of idleness ts pathetia They want to dig. plant, produce, a pansion akin to maternal instinct In many.” In Mra. Wixon the hanker for the sotl was sharpened when ahe helped | the man, who is no longer husband, | break sod on @ ranch near Spokane. Her epirit leaped the walla as #he told me of riding mustangs after range onttle under wife skies, Of Kathryn Wixon, Robber Siren. Women Convicts’ Life Is Hard. | They Plead for Lots of Work. Aug. 30--"To remain interested tn) with | has served seven years of a life term | | ae who is in a serious condition from hardships resulting from a tie-up of the Santa Fe lines. | Her train was stalled in the de sert at Seligman, Ariz. CONVICTS | | | | Career, “I was overwhelmed with remorne | for my @rime, but, having made a/ sort of peace with myself, I had to put that aride to retain my sanity 1 had seen another inmate go in- #ane in remorseful brooding. | “I interested myself in beautify jing the barren prison court, plant-| jing climbing roses and ivy. 1 stud-| ied languages. The seasons passed, | jand eradualiy I came out of my | melancholy bewilderment to caim. news and readjustment. | | ‘But always there wae some-| thing profoundly nagcing, a conse: | ican “unrest. Finally I identified ft. | it was my concentration on myself. | | “Not until 1 ehitted my center| | of gravity outeite mywelf did I find }even such satiefaction as may be | had in prison. I began thinking seeking to serve wherever I could. | You see I came painfully tut tn-/ ovitably to that nub of all religions and soun® philosophies here in my on of California who profess an terest In ua, who come te read Fon sing and talk to um don’t concern themacives with getting us some thing constructive to do—work,| which would be a balm tndeed and! & regenerative influence, “What do we mins most? 1, most of all, the murmur of the sea 1) love and the solemn stillness of the woods, If we didn't have them, 1 jshould have hungered cost ag } books, “Most girlie here perhaps mise dancing and shows, “Mothers, their chiléren, of prairie flowers. Piping quail, steam course. Some «imply can't seem | Ing Graft horses, the household bustie and « far coyote’s yip. She had come a bride from an Eng Ush countryside. The marriage didn't last, and ahe developed a hatred for all men, rifting to cities, to Sacra. mento, to fan Quentin. “The nights seemed eternal at first,” she resumed. “I used to watch one wretched woman with terrible faactnation. She sat with lowered eyen speaking to no one, a dead soul | in a live body. And I eald to myself I must not become like her, “The em vey) a, refill: an the Correct’ gradi for “isiiihy™ MODERN CRANKCASE CLEANING SERVICE walk” is done by the fellow who walks out with one of Roldt’s fine CAKES steps along in great spirits, knowing how the folks at home will enjoy the treat, | BOLDTS | | to ween themacives from their kid-| @iea, and for them prison ts fright: ful beyond words, “Many girls coming in here now adays are used to amoking. They aro not permitted to have cigarets ike men convicta, They miss that. And the sweets to which most wom- en are peculiarity addicted. “I try to keep my body fit. 1 walk an average of two hours a j|day, around and around the court. play volley ball tn the evening and! go thru regular gymnastics, You seo I don't waht to become fat,” with « smile, “The sex impulse te one of the Paramount things to contend with/| here, Most of the privileges lost by Inmates are for attempts to | | Ban Quentin. MeDouga ‘ado SECOND AVENUE AT PIKE Main 6720 — “The Store of Eternal Newness” New Corduroy Robes In Several Styles and Pretty Colors Four attractive styles, some straight lines, others skirt and doat effect, with setin and kimono sleeves. They are well-made, of wide wale corduroy tn cherry, wis teria and Copenhagen. Unlined Robes $3.50 sketched, comes tn cherry, (Another model, unlined, fy pockets, in the same pretty “Shopping "Hours, . to G 5:90 The straightline coat, wisteria and Copennagen In skirtooat style, with 2 colors, priced $4.60) Lined Robes $6.95 Straight lines, seco silk linings, 2 pockets, and @ the belt distinguish this attractive model. (Another coat, weco silk lined with tle belt and set-in sleeves, priced $9.95.) THIRD FLOOR with the men across | the dividing This would be} greatly minimized if the women’s quarters were entirely removed from the men's penitentiary.” The wun dipped beyond Tamalpats, | i mountain sentinel above the walls, and it was another day off lifesen-| tence for Kathryn Whxon, houre- | / wife, prairie pioneer, man-hater |p. jand “trusty” who found herself by | Herge losing herself behind the stone of | Laur communicate a? in Wenatchee Thursday. .. Legal : wall. oe 3 Resolutions affecting the Columbia 19| basin project and other tmportant is 24) sues will be adopted Friday, accord 20) ing to the announced program, State “ie officers also will be elected the samp n, Herbert A hers, Arminta L., jLenn, Merman, Beattie ... Johnson, Mabel B., Héattle n, Arthur, Be Poarl, Beattie . . Neil Henry, Portland va Marie, Auburn ¢ Jr, Seattle . Vital Statistics | BIRTHS Tirthe tn thelr households are re- | orted by the following Beattie men PyGonnor, James 2, fag Ww. Lake | Mall, Mart, 1121 18th ave. N. | Richard: Piorenee B., Jennings, William C tle. Lega’ | Whitungton. Berths fh. Seattle Lega DEATHS 66 yeare. * Lena, 61 years, ears. years, ‘an. John J. WIISONS| RN BUSINESS COLL SeaTt neato, George, sis Set kot, Kam ft MeConmell, Robert, se ot bor. | Dickinaon. Yriend st. clatr 12°/ Open on Thursday oa 1810 Lane st.| More than 2,000 delegates are ex- | pected to attend the American Le ston state convention, which opens Legion Sean to 4209 3 sitet la R WwW. 7223 yo ave. Hayre v4 B."G. 800 Lake ave. an, C. J, 1838% Branston ave. boy. | | Office of the President CHICAGO, Aug. 28, 1923, Notice to Striking Employes of ‘The Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Ry.: Efforts of the Chiefs of the five train service Brother hoods to settle the shopmen's strike by negotistions in New York have failed, altho every possible concession was made on the part of the group of railroads which participated. I have explained personally the entire detatls of the negotiations, including proposed terms for settlement, to the general chairmen of the organizations involved om the Chicago, Milwaukee @ St. Paul Ry. Owing to the heavy business In sight there ts plenty of work for all of the employes now in service in addition to those now on strike. We believe that an adjustment of the only unsettled question In connection with the strike, the seniority question, could be reached satisfactorily if It were possible for our employes now on strike to make an indi- vidual eettiement with the officers of our company, but 80 far this has been impossible because the leaders of the strike are unwilling to permit settlement on individual railroads. It seems to us that to have the strike continue on this @ccount ie most unjust to both the striking employes and the railway company. We do not believe the strike should be continued on this railroad because you are unable to settle your differences on the other railroads, and I suggest to those of you who would like to go to work and who may not understand what is preventing it, that you make your wishes known to the local or general chairman of your or ganizations on this railroad for the purpose of being freed from the restrictions that we believe are now preventing & settlement of the strike on the Chicago, Milwaukee & Bt Paul Ry. |Shost Mann Beatie jMeCana, Richard J lande x | Perkins, The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain instantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in a colorless clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in extra thin plas- ters. The action is the same. Pain Stops pAnatantly, Berets seatbn od Opto as safe home remedy in the treatment. of eye troubles and to streugthen eyesight. ie eader money refund guarantee by all Advertisement H. E. BYRAM, 18917 MEN WANTED For Shops and Roundhouse Alwith Von der Reichsburg they call him. He arrived from Germany recently and R. M. Jennings, of Pittsburg, Pa., paid $8,000 “for him. That's said to be the highest price yet paid for a police dog. 200 to 70%e per hour Mechanics and helpers are allowed time and onehalf for time worked in excess of cight nemeany St APPLY ROOM 3028 ARCADE BUILDING SEATTLE

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