The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 31, 1922, Page 4

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Special Furniture Values In Our Big Consolidation Sale Our Second Avenue store has been merged with the Union Furniture Company, which began business last June with a large, brand-new stock. Now both stocks must be reduced to the size of one in order to find room in this new location. We have, accordingly, reduced the price of THURSDAY, AUGUST 31, 1922. MecDougall-/outhwick SECOND AVENUE AT PIKF = THE SEATTLE STAR TEACHERS HEAR (KING ALPHONSO TAKES REST MANY SPEAKERS County Session Continues at Broadway High Lectures by A. 8, Burrows, ax sistant county #uperintendent of schools, and by Dr. D. B. Waldo,! president of the Bellingham State Normal achool, were accorded lead ing places on Thursday's program ot the 44th annual King county teachers’ inatitute, meeting in Broadway high school. Other speakers were Mrs, Minnie Main 6720 — Store Houra 9:00 to &; ksi — Smart Hats For All the Girls everything and are offering splendid bargains. Here are a few of them: D. Dean, president of the Washing ton Educational assocation, and 1. J. McNamara, president of the King county unit of the association. Frank B, Cooper, former superin tendent of Beattie schools, and Dr Waldo were speakers Wednesday tape SPEEDERS MAY “LOSE MACHINES ‘Mayor's Committee Favors Such Action Speed maniacs and drunken drtv ora will lose the use of their ma ‘chines if a recommendation made by Mayor Brown's special | Wednesday evening ta adop The committes recommended that i*in flagrant cases of speeding, reck Bedroom Suites, high grade. Waxed Oak Dining Room Suite, con- Dresser is dust-proof and has very sisting of 45-inch extension table, tour ff)! driving and ‘he driving of vehk large mirror; dressing table has three genuine leather seat chairs and poh Gane papeatogdle streams mirrors, cast brass handles; bed is of 45-inch buffet. $69 50 lopernted be placed in evidence and bow-foot design. There are matched sale price ........55. e held by the court until final adjudi- cation of the cane.” It was also suggested that auto mobiles which are left parked beyond the time limit be also Impounded. No changes in the present traffte laws were proposed The committee, consisting of George A. Meagher of the corpora- in American walnut finish, suit- $225.00 A wonderful comfort Chair, covered $3.00 Down and $1.50 a Week Elegant Davenport of very fine tap- estry, hand stitched; has spring edge, oil tempered springs, mahogany finish legs. Made by one of the best facto- io squad; Douglas Shelor and W. C. win of the Automobile Club of Western Washington; L. W. Harkins. representing the automotive trades, $5.00 Down and $2.00 a Week Period Rocker, Queen Anne design, in dull brown mahogany finish, with cane seat and back. A beau- $27.50 tiful rocker. Sale price $1.00 Down and $1.00 a Week $1.00 Down and $1.00 a Week enport Table; graceful Queen A at in combination maheg- size. sim. $24.50 $1.00 Down and a Week association, met for two hours in the mayor's office Tho committes found that six a4 direct traffic at downtown cor recommended the to ners, Brace Bed with two-inch ——— suet | $17.50 Steet Bed tn Vernis Martin or ivory finish. Has two fach continuous post con- three heavy plate mirrgrs, Sant terran 99.75 meet, $22.50 National Furniture Company Now at 418-424 Pike Street, Corner Fifth New Phone Number Main 2665 Aluminum Tea Kettles Prices Slashed For Our Two-Day Sale Friday and Saturday Every kitchen must have a Tea Kettle, and, if it’s aluminum it won’t burn, it won’t be affected by acids, it won’t absorb grease, it can be quickly and thor- 9 oughly cleaned, and it’s a whole lot lighter. Look at ine Tennessee red cedar; Batural Moleh; trimmed m copper; dustproof Ud con- struction; handles to match. oe $14.75 Ivory Dressing Table with Boy Saves Little Girl in Mad Rush HANFORD, Cal, Aug. 91.—Ele- phants from « circus showing here early today stampeded at the South ern Pactfic station, raided the busi nens and later the realdence section of the ety and for two hours carried on a reign of terror. ‘The stampede started when two large bull elephants engaged tn a taht. An the herd stampeded ct one seattered, secking safety in ~ BUTLER DRUG CO.’S SPECIALS FOR FRIDAY and SATURDAY 1 dozen Gillette 65c | the prices we have marked these fine quality Tea Kettles; then come in early and get just the size best suited to your needs, No one was Injured. ‘The elephants finally were recap During the stampede'a lad named jLenlie Davis, following the otreus year-old Winnie Yates. | When the break occurred the ~ |for & lumber pile where the child was KEEP WELI————, | playing. A mother elephant saw ADENOIDS _ [tiie Soe ‘ana made a tuan tor. te |Yates babe. Young Davia ran for- over the lumber pile, then dodged F paronts alljnway just as the enraged elephant mense handicap | - children who tonsils or ade-| roids are labor-| tors all over the} country would) operations lone} that for awhile| little time for anything else. Adenoids and large tonsils hold | food. These germs often are car-| | red by the bioed to the heart and tured by trainers. probably saved the life of Iittle « MN scared herd of young animals ma what she throught was danger to her BY DR. RH. BISHOP ward, seized the child and threw it realized the tm-|renched the xpot have . Infected ing under do be so busy with) they would have | Polsonous germs, from decayed| | cause heart disease, Sometimes they | 1 qt. 69¢ es RAZOR BLADES. | are carried in quantities to tho|— 250 size Spirits FY Joints and cause rheumatiam. campuor -....... LBC gay | Adenoids are a small, soft, reQ-'M $1.60 Djer-Kiss dish growth which comes in the! PERFUME.... $1 15 back of the throat, where the nose 35¢ Palmolive q as | and throat join. A child having ade-| SHAVING CREAM 25c | nolds breathes with open mouth, has M300 ROMO 3 ft. colds and may have con-| BELTZER 2lc p “on or become deaf. Ade-\M os. LYSOL noids often dull the expression of 19c 4 qt. $1 29 |the eye, destroy the resonance of , ‘ ke ba | the voice and distort the facial ex- nw $ | Pression so as to produce « blank, i eee 1.63 |idiotio stare. They hinder mental . ” 27c q ot oa Wd | development by interfering with pr ek pA proper physical development. 2 ae WERTTO 29 The best time to remove adenoids bey ~- stomp ehh c |{4 when they are first recugnizabie gp 2°° to @ physician, Enlarged tonsils obstruct the pas. } sage of air thru the mouth. This |is such @ great impediment to | breathing that it causes diminished | lung expansion and underdevelop. ment of the chest with a consequent weakening of the vital organs. Town Abandoned oa It Sinks in River | SINGAPORE, Aug. $1.—Practically jthe entire town of Bhamo, Upper Burmah, has been abandoned by its inhabitants because it ts slowly sink ing into the Irrawaddy river, The |southern half of the town atood on ground where the river now flows and the northern section probably will have disappeared within a few weeks. Th river current has changed since the town way estab- lshed, Crown Lavende: be Th a 57c BUTLER DRUG Co. J. P. CHASE Chemist Food Choppers Another lot go on 59c /ESTERN WESTIE co. Corner Second Ave. and dames St. Central Public Market Between Pike and Union Streets and P. L. Bingay of the Motor Truck |#P08k to or ditional traffic policemen are needed | poignant fac impound. | ment of automobdiies, and suggested iof Father Patrick I. Heslin of San King Alfonso of Spain just amittes| ville, France, where he went to take a re made a few remarks about the ugliness of American women's arms while there. Wonder w iis holding for his majesty. hats, Whether one wears her hair fluffed a bit or in the new straight bob, these hats are gure to be becoming, These Hats, sketched, are “nueto-like.” in popu- lar shates—brown, red and pheasant. On the upturned brim are designs embroidered in bright contrasting stik. after a game of polo at Deau- t. Incidentally Je The Velour Hat sketched above has its crown tucked in a bit on the side and held with strips of ribbon in @ corresponding shade. The effect ts hat's in the glass the attendant Hightower, Slayer of } Flirts With Phantom BY JACK JUNGMEVER | SAN QUENTIN PRISON, Cal, Aug. 31 oe Um remainder of your days you shall not look at, in any wise commune with women, #0 help you God!’ That doom to celitmcy, tho not pro- nounced by any judge, ts the mont In any life-tinger’s com. mitiment to prison. Thus life sentence for the murder for Hightower no woman calla, As substitute he flirts with the phantom women of history, conjur- ing them from the print of prison It. brary books — Cleopatra, Zenobia, Sappho, Katherine of Rusia, Joan of Are. A studious research, he saya, to portray them accurstely in stories he is writing for cell diver anton. “Women are the mont interesting wabjecta in the world, of course,” vaid Hightower. man likes them better than I, in a proper way and without being silly Their friendship has been the exsence of life to me, and were it not that I mins feminine association so de cidedly, fan Quentin would be no prison for me. “I am reading everything I can find about historie women, It ts « wry sort of consolation. And I'm re- constructing my opinion about many of them. stead of being the super-vamp she's generally considered, was a splendid d mother. There is no record ever spoke to any other men than Caesar and Anthony. Sappho an intellectual, was the first expon- ent of higher education for women. You're never too old to learn about women—and I'm learning from these.” From the sex he veered to an tn- dividual—Doris Shirley—upon whom he had relied to support the at |tempted alibi that he was riding with | [killed. She had denied bis claim and jmarried Lee Putnam during the ltrial. He attempted no rebuttal. | “E come of stock that takes tte chivalry seriously,” he resumed, “I'd any harm come to Doris, “Anyway, life is short and ro- mance is shorter, You see I have a bald pate, which never makes much of a hit with Cupid. And what ts 15 |Short Skirts Is Not the Question “What's all this fuss about long |#kirte coming back in? I wonder if | they really are to be the fashion again,” Ih, I hope not. They would be terribly uncomfortable, after wear. ing short ones, I was reading an article, though, that says that Paris |insists on long skirts, but that up- to-date American women wouldn't wear them, This article also says that short ones continue to be in style.” “Well, I, for one, am going to be | the last person to give up short ones for street wear. But I do think aft. ernoon and evening dresses look bet ter If they are longer.” | “Maybe so, I haven't thought much about the distinction, By the way, I must think about getting « new evening gown before this time next week. Leta is going to give @ dance at their new home at Kirkland, and it ts going to be a really beaut! ful affair.” “Yes, so it ts, | we don't know that I can afford it. It will be a fiat failure, as far as my fun goes, if I can't have something new,” | “Come on with me, and I'll tell you how I am managing tt. I am buy: ing perfectly lovely evening gown at Cherry's. I am paying down a small sum, and I have made arrange. ments for monthly payments for the rest.” 1015 Second ave., between Madison and Spring, over the Pig'n Whistle. Advertisement. CONVICTS Doomed to Life of Celibate. Bald-Headed Romanticist at 41. “1 don't believe any |b oe¢ Chropatra, for Instance, In- | her at the time Father Heslin was jrather have taken the scaffold than T would like to have | something new for that myself, but | very new and dashing. In colors of brown and mand, —MacDougall-Southwick, Second Floor SHORT BREADS BY BERTHA E. SHAPLEIGH Cooking Authority for Seattle Star and Columbia University Priest, | Women % cup butter % cup brown sugar 1% cups four id Work butter and brown sugar together until creamy, Then work in flour gradually unt) all ts used. jor 20 years behind bars compared to}] “oon « slightly floured board end work until emooth and easy to eternity. rol! out. Roll to one-half-inch thickness and cut with a small cutter “I had nothing to do with killing! and place a nut meat in the center of each round. | Father Healin, but I'm not bitter be-|| Bake in a very moderate oven until slightly colored. ‘This will take a I haven't been hurt. I have] Sbout one-half bour, Or this mixture may be rolled out to a quarter |trore elwace than fever had out.{{ moh in thickness, cut in rounds and put together in pairs with Jam more lelsure than I ever out-|] hetween. fide, I don't work a» hard here, and Bake as before in ® moderate oven for 85 minutes. If a hole be cut |l have more enjoyment than do/]in the top piece the jam will show thru and make a prettier cake. many free men.” | Hightower te a master baker. In (Cat this out and paste it in your cook book) Now he bokes again, attending a battery of ovens In the prison kitch- on, proud of his browning bread, whose odor chases the ceil taint along dusky corridors as the pent- tentiary awakes for breakfast, / Bakes—and works on bine prints of « machine gun, designed for army |use. He ts conceded to have inven jtive genius. Ho is also working out plans for a “rapid fire” bake oven, “needed,” he says, “on every ship at ora, utilizing 85 per cent of the that & committees of 15 business men | Prancisco has translated itself for | Murder accusation he was ple r ne SPECIAL be Appointed to make @ thero sur |Wiliam A. Hightower, Indies’ man | tured a» creating tuscious confections 33 Inches of Rain Farmer Trains Pigs vey of the manner in which traffic ts !and beld-beaded romanticiat of 41. by day, tinkering with infernal ma- 5 FEATURES handled by the police department Convicts may speak wt intervals to |cines and plotting ransom at night. Total of 18 Days to Dance to Music | OF THIS SALE | PGE IGE RE relatives or friende in the reception |Xidnaping the priest by sacramental] MOMBASA, Hest Africa, Aug. Sl——| LAMONI In, Aug. $i-—Henry Ws. | me women tole for w ‘or | aul. holding him prisoner emong|in eighteen days 33 inches of rain Thurston, a Ringgord county farmer, t pre @aamn tae 1h dc -geo Bn melancholy sand dunes, killing him|fell bere, breaking all previous reo | has trained two pigs so they dance, Senior teaenton aden by wife or |i? 8 fom-ehrouded night when ransom |ords. to music, q ; bran i onggend ong fear. | failed. then guiding @ posse to the i ; fully curious feminine face at the | *easide crypt, with @ flapjack sign : u windows of the visitors’ balcony. But be Dont. aR . SE | will demonstrate why "SALADA \ 7 =A. ‘ HAS NO EQUAL Largest sale in America. R. & H.C. COOK, East 3383, Elliott 0350, Distributera “As long an men relish my bread, T have the sustaining sense of being useful,” voicing his pride of craft and placating the ego that flare in his bold blue eye and the rear of his head. “I like put « around the kitchen in the solitude of night, from 3 in the morning to 9. | “Watching your fellows relish jsomething you've made with your hands ts a real satisfaction. for the association of women—. Well, they gave mo the |whole book here, and I'm tenring out one page at a time,” said the jladies’ man in a little world without ‘ladies. | Airplane Used to Save Woman’s Life TUNIS, Aug. 31—Mme. Lenoire | Crossette, wife of a French army of: |ficer, was brought here seriousty tl jin an airplane from Ben Gardane, } 260 miles away, just in Ume to save jher Ute | “Exoept [Boat Schedules } man Dock || == SAVE Money- || Travel by sfeamer 1 TACOMA ORT DAILY 7,9, 11 A. Mu 1, 3, 8, 7, 9 PM. 45e FOR SINGLE TRIP S¢ FOR ROUND TRIP UA, B.C Vict PORT ANGELES - STRAIT POINTS The amount of pleasure to be obtained from this $125 Vidtrola is out of all proportion to its low cost. A small down pay- ment, and the balance SAN JUAN ISLAND POINTS BELLINGHAM- ANACORTES PORT TOWNSEND RAIL CONNECTION: | AND Mitt PORTS f Hoop CANAL POINTS over a series of months— qUn maakt Gale ne and the genuine Victrola is yours. Du HPUGET SOUND NAVIGATION Cc Sherman |@lay & Co. Third Avenue at Pine SBATTLB joneneaEOE nenenene stunning hill heese o8¢ onnecenede

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