The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 2, 1922, Page 7

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» SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 2. 1922. DIVORCE LAWS HIT BY PASTOR Engaged to Widow, He Seeks to Remove Barrier NEW YORK Dr the Sept The Rev Stickney Grant, reetor of Church of the As cension an Fifth ave. today ts plan ning a vigorous fight at the Port Perey fashionable land, Ore, general conference of the Episcopal church this month, to sweep away the canon against re marriage of divorced persons, Dr, Grant today retired to the se clusion of a summer residence at Redford Hills, N. ¥., where he watt ed to nee the effect of the first shell | fired In his campaign. | This took the form of a lengthy statement, distributed te all newspa pers, in which Dr, Grant made a strong assault on the antidivorce law. Attention was recently focused on Dr. Grant when he announced his engagement to Mra, Rita Lydig, #0 clety leader, who has had two hus bands, both divorced. Under the church law he cannot marry her However, he declared in his state ment there was no personal interest in his campaign for a change in the ivorce laws of the church Lost, He Walks in Circle About Home | GUNNISON, Colo. Sept. 2.—Los. ing his way, Arthur Maley walked in a circle around days before searchers found him. HER ALMENTS ALL GONE NO Mrs. Sherman Helped by Hijtostay off oy i doctored “with he could not ea u Hl tee rt The Great After-Flu Tonic HEAMOTONE Makes red blood, builds up the herves and restores strength quickly. $1.00 and $2.00 qt all drug stores, or sent, p. pD.. by JoPmer Drug Co., Spo- kane.—Advertisement. If you have eczema, ringworm or sim- flar itching, burning, sleep-destroying skin-eruption, try Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and see how quickly the Itching stops and the trouble ppears. | Resinet Somp end Resinel Ciatment are sold by cea Far caggtonstoen, srs to Deve. 55, e makes sick skins well Boat Schedules —SAVE MONEY- Travel by sfeamer TACOMA. DAILY 7,9, 21 A. Ma 1, 3 & 7,9 P.M FOR SINGLE TRIP foc Fon ROUND TRIP VICTORIA. B PORT ANGELES -S INTS SAN JUAN ISLAND POINTS BELLINGHAM - ANACORTES PORT TOWNSEND RAIL CONNECTIONS AND MILL PORTS HOOD CANAL POINTS TESDAY, FRIDAY, 4:00 A.M. NeaH Bay & WAY PoRTS PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION CC OLMAN Doc as FOOT MARION ST his home for four | ( i | tumbus, O. pageant. Are You Going to Come on In and Get Money? | Anybody Has a Chance to | Grab Off-a Bit of Good Cash Are you going to grab one of the leneh prizes offered in the Star-Bur- lngton Route’s $100 photograph con. test? Everybody has an equal chance. The Burlington route is askifig for & set of 10 pictures. These they will use in a big advertining cam paign planned to promote interest | im Seattle in particular and the Pa j cific Northwest in general, Three judges will be sulected by the Chamber of Commercy. First winner will receive $50, sec- ond $30 and third Pictures must be as follows: 1. Best general view of Seattle, showing the city, Puget sound and Olympic mountains, Or a view from Puget sound with the Cascade mountains in the background. 2. Best view of Seattle's water- front. 3. Best view of Seattle's down town district, 4. Best view of a fine residen- tial street. 5. Best view of an industrial plant, such as a lumber mill, hydro- electric plant, ete. 6 Best scene to |phrase, “Where Rail Smith Cove terminal, Mustrate the for example. 7. Best view of Seattle's lakes, Parks or boulevards. & Best view of a point of his- torie interest or landmarks. The totem pole, for instance % Best and most artistic photo- graph of Seattle's environs. For exampie, a bunset on Puget sound.) A striking picture of the Bremerton navy yard, a fishing fleet, the San Juan islands, ete. 10. Best view of some pic. turesgue phase of human life or ac- tivity characteristic of Seattle. There are many such views on the waterfront and elsewhere. The contest is open to all. First prize, $50. Second prize $20. Third prize, $20. Get out the camera and win a prize. Outlaws Routed by Fleet of Airplanes CALCUTTA, Sept. 2—Wazir out- laws who besieged the town of Wana, were bombarded and routed by « fleet of six airplanes. Telegraph Wire Is Guillotine to Man MINNEAPOLIS, Minn., Sept. 2-— While he was motoring a few miles from this city, a telegraph wire which hung low across the road cut off James Lawson's head. It’s Neuritis Not Rheumatism rp, stabbing pain tn the upper arm, the shoulder blade, In t nape of the neck, along the fori down the thigh and leg, ts often > with a feeling that something ts twiteh- ing or pulling at the eyebalie—a dull, aching pain in the beck, accompanied by an occasional shooting pain in the side or tingling in the fingers or of pain here and th re that your troubli in a few minutes torture. Tysmol ts guaranteed harmiens. It helpes to soothe and heal the weak, IME NEW. CANDIED LAXATIVE ‘FOR CHILOREN OR AOUL' (WO KEEP THE UVED AND COLE CPOE, 42 414 Goon vEUGGIsTS and Water| aed Miss Mary Katherine Campbell, 16, high school girl, re- cently won a beauty contest against 170 competitors at Co-| ». She will be “Miss Columbus” at the Atlantic City _ t CORSETS ARE COMING BACK So All Fashion Guessers Declare The corset hax come into its own again, not only a popular necessary one if the women want to wear the and ts considered once more censory, but « new fall styles in dress which call for a smaller waistline, daintier and narrower hips and ao straight front line, #o say the lead ing corsetieres, including both the men and women This edict, they affirm, will not only affect the girl who was in the habit of checking her corset before dancing or engaging in any active form of sport, but all the flappers as} well, the lithe and not so lithe, who have been floating around ungirdied for the last couple of years ‘The corsets that are for fall wear are by no means like the old-fash: toned armor the women once wore, | but are light In weight, made of bro cade and elastic, and fit the figures in an easy manner, at the same time affording support But best of all, the to cause their escorts and the vari ous hotel managements all the con fusion they created in the past two | years when they Instated on check ing thelr corsets. Everybody will wear them ond keep them on: that }in if they wish to look well groomed lin the new fall styles, fashion fore casters declare \Fake “Bride” Gets $15,000 in Jewels SHEFFIELD, Eng., Sept. 2.—While | @ Jewelers clerk was displaying rings jto a man who wished a gift for his [bride, the “bride” fled with $15,000 | worth of gems. Her accomplice also | eacaped Cures Piles of Coste Nothing Any reader who suffers from Pilea no matter how long standing—can be quickly cured without risking a remarkable di io. Don't send . Darling nd he will send you regular 10- day Treatment absolutely free. If it cures, send $2.00. Otherwise you owe nothing. —Advertisement. } BoatExcursion Only One of this Season to Seente HOOD CANAL Sunday, Sept. 3 Steamer Indianapolis leaves Colman Dock 6:30 a. m. re- turning arrives about } 1 i tgation Co. Colman Dock IN PIMPLES itching Intense. Could Not Sleep. Cuticura Heals, “Besema broke out on body in emall pimples with white heads. - At first there were just a Gyn) few email spote but it ic J quickly spread, causing S intense itching and dis- comfort. My clothing seemed to aggravate the Qe breaking out, and I could not sleep well at night. “ A friend gave me a sample of Cutleura Soap and Ointment and after using them I got relief eo pur- chased more, and after using one cake of Soap and one box of Oint- ment I wae healed.” (Signed) Miss Maybelle Brett, Pullman, Wash. Give Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum the care of your skin. ‘utioura Seap shaves without mu. Sa 5 fo rin will cease | on | THE SEATTL Cynthia Grey: More Comment on Mother-in-Law Problem—Readers Continue to Argue TAR Dear Miss Grey: I would like to write a few lines in re- | gard to “Analysis’” letter, I have read both her letters, and must say they are very foolish. People should have experience of their own before they write so surely. There are good and bad mothers-in-law and to say that it is always the fault of the daughter-in-law is very foolish. | | have seen some very good mothers-in-law and some that were not so good. I was married three years to a very good man who never | gave up his love for his mother, and was just as good to her !and showed her as much affection after he was married as |he had done before. This made me happy and proud of | him, I was good to her and did every thing to try and please but nothing would sult her. Bhe was) Jealous and thought he had no right | to show any affection for me and} she lied about me, and even did and} {raid things to hurt her son, she was | 80 jealous. Bhe tried | though I had no right whatever | that I Mins Grey will receive callers in her office Monday, Wednesday and Friday from 1 to 2 p. m., and on Tuesday and Thursday trom her, 11 a.m. to 12 m. each week. Please do not come at other times an it seriously interferes with ber writing. to run my home, as | Defoe is supposed to have been sug oeated by the experience of Alezan der Belkirk, vw was shipwrecked and lived for years on a desert island MEASURE HEAT OF BIG STARS New, Delicate Tests Reveal 10,000 Degrees WASHINGTON, Sept. 2.—The heat of three Aldebaran, and Betelgeuse—has been measured by institution, aid | though I can truly say ease her, it was no leverything to juse, She had another daughter-in llaw, @ Very sweet girl, and she! |treated her the same way | 1 am married again, and have lived | with this second husband 16 years, jand have the sweetest mother-inJaw ;}We have never exchanged cross words at any time. She says that jshe is very proud to have me for a daughter and to know that her * someone to take care of him, 1 she Is proud and happy to know | t he is so good to me. So you can see that there are and bad even among ON son ! stars Capella Dear Miss two officials of the Smithsonian Analysis” in m why I did mother-in-law | married | I did not know her jaeen her until I had been married almost a year, though we corres |ponded a little. |} And, “Analysis,” which is most im portant to my children, grand. mother’s love, and dad and mother fighting and quarreling, or a happy peaceful family, with no arguments before the children and dad and [mother still sweethearts? | When my boys grow up they can jchoose their own wives and if I dis: |rainbow-colored spectrum. Delicate jlike them I will leave the town be-| devices taken to Mt for I will show ft, a» I will always|two observers then In answer to Grey tonight's Star, She not wait for my love me before I who have been making observations at the Carnegie solar ob. nervatory on the summit of Mt. Wil won, California | R. G. Abbott, asnistant secretary of the institution, and L. B. Aldrich, at tached to the institution reported recently that they had succeeded In doing what had heretofore never been | done. The heat of the three stars, the | scientists reported, first was gathered nd brought to focus by the giant 100-tnch telescope at the observatory to had not even ‘The heat and light then was passed thru @ prism and spread out into a measured the jhave my own experience to remem: | light In each color as weil as the in ber A DAUGHTER-IN-LAW, | visible heat : meee As the hotter a body ts, the whiter | High School and bluer is its light, the intennition | Query of the Heat in the various colors al | lowed an estimate of the tempera of the stars, which wan fixed o proximately 10,000 degrees Dear Miss Grey: I am a freshman jthis year and I live in the Queen jAnne district, but I would like to go conti. Begins Tuesday Morning FREDERICK f° NELSON RETURNS HOME NEW mer, more |Students Get Cash Selling Magazines HAVEN, Conn., Sept. 2 stead of going into offices this sum than 100 Yale men have In. Wilson by the} | MUCH PIQUED |mecured work getting magazine sub riptions. Brazilian Couldn't Find| Opportunities SPRINGFIELD, Sept © 2.—Declar. | on the trees, while here in the Unit- | grade. ed States they are running loose |t@ the Broadway high school. May 1 everywhere, Anglo Clanafione, the | j, |do no? FRESHMAN Brazilian’ “millionaire,” It te supposed to be only the priv . : |ueoe of seniors who expect to prai-|nights of Pythias Will Honor Leader The Knights of Pythias of Seatth will hold a reception in their temple at 11 & m. Sunday in honor of their supreme chancellor, George c Cabell, of Norfolk, Va. wate to go to a high school out of |the district, but I believe that a great deal depends upon the number of students in cach of the schools, and although Broadway ts usually full to capacity, it will do no harm to speak to the principal of your own school adout the matter. . Smugglers, Women, Use Vanity Cases BREM . Sept. 2-—Ameriean and British custome officials have been notified that women smugglers are taking cocaine out of Germany in vanity cases Telegraphy School Dear Miss Grey: Will you please tell me If there ts a school for teleg- raphy in Seattle, or if the nearest one ix In Spokane? ae There is no telegraphy school in Beattie, the one operated by the Western Union Telegraph company having been discontinued tn 1918. There are, however, two such schools in Portland, thoygh I have been unable to obtain the names of same. However, f you telll write the Portland News, Portland, Ore, I believe they may advise you as to ad-| dresses of these hoola. | cee Was Robinson Crusoe \a Real Character | |Brunette Arrested as Hotel “Raffles” BRIGHTON, Eng., Sept. 2.—Miss Marjorie Macdonald, a beautiful bru nette of 30, has been held for trial for stealing more than $20,000 worth of jewels from hotels. AN OVERDOSE ‘The foreign press is saturated with Vv. T. [badly bitten. A characteristic Coue Dear Miss Grey: Was there really [references to Emile Coue and hin| such @ man as “Robinson Crusoe” | wonderful system, but so far our} |who was stranded on an island? [native papers have not been very | and taken his family of 13 back to} in this country a few months ago with a big sack full of money, caused & sensation even in skeptical New York He settled down upon the home of his cousin, Petro Cianafione, of Wil cox st., this city, untl he could choose | from the many fortune-making ven. | tures which he had been told existed | jin this land of plenty. The weeks b: | q ing that in Brozit the nuts grow only under the restrictions of prohi- pition | Petro, that he had been hoaxed by the Americans who came into his be- has shaken | iy thru ¢ the dust of Springfield from his feet | ¢y1 pometh went by and nothing showed up that ven approached the profit-making ualities of his plantation in Brazil. In addition he grew exceedingly un- he told bis Finally cousin, »ved Brazil and talked long and loud. sir hats about the wonder- lities of the United States. Some of his flock of 13 children South America. Clanafione's arrival |tixed the United States and wanted to stay here, but he stoutly refused to permit any of them to do so and is now returning with them to the little town tn Brazil where he was a king. Clanafione, reputed to be a mil- Honaire, is said by his relatives to be wealthy but not so rich as report- ed. It cost him just $4000 to bring his mily to America and take them ack again. MAIN 0222 | ORPHEUM CIRCUIT VAUDEVILLE Season Opens Tomorrow This tale of adventure by Daniel! story from the London Morning Post | 9.39 OVERTURE 8:15 |is as follows: Siar renters who would tne), A certain man euttered acutety Rae ef | fro ow legs. le wi vised by ° cee ieeeeetya ne’ palietic'on | |& friend to repeat the Coue formula | 235 | Aesop's Fables—Topics of the Day this subject by writing to the Pidcone, yo pd ype, Peedist SENSEI BSS RARE fs SOR ADE Bente ee New Yak Ave, | [straighter and straighter.” Unfor-|[ 245 HANAKO TRIO i Washington, D. C., and encios- { ae guar fog ees eae the ae 5 PA o i“ z “J | Inga conte’ in stampa for post. | |ber and repeated the magic words 60 —— eee eee | ee Ae Wer teni darn 3:16 ERNEST MARJORIE starting fae | ANDERSON & BURT we offer this In « New Angle on Domestic Relativity Entitled sterling actor } “THE DIZZY HEIGHT! in one of his | } By PAUL GERARD SMITH most notable | Sa Pia CLA RBEAA, Bas ba 9 ys, and in aajeoates 2 | SWARTZ & CLIFFORD | = with the | 5 gui 348 D'AMORE DOUGLAS 9:33 ‘HES’ 6 { International ES News, Comedy | FRANKLYN. & CHARL and other Assisted by Ethel Truesdale in features, our ; “A VAUDEVILLE SURPRISE” patrons are assured of 100% - — a tr —4 entertainment. 4:06 951 Last times today ALICE CALHOUN in “The Girl in His Hoom.” eypieene il “The Blue Streak of Vaudeville” Any Time 4:26 10:11 DUSTIN |} j MELLETTE SISTERS FARNUM Cc Amlsted by Dave Dreyer tn rf All the Time “A LITTLE SOMETHING NEW” STRANGE 42 THE PATHE NEWS 10:37 ID OLS EARLY |B NEM 15c, 25c, 50c, 75c, $1 Paunt® 15c, 25c, 50c (Except Sundays an ———-—— |Husband Dead, She Seeks His Estate EDINBURGH, Sept. 2.—Mrs. Bye lyn McGregor, who married during war ‘8 a British colonel s quently killed, has hunted for years for witnesses to the marrage | s0 she can get her husband's estate Last Times Saturday MISS DUPONT in A RFUL WIFE BIG AMATEUR COMING “ Sunday, Monday, Return Special "actrnction PRISCILLA DEAN Supported by LON CHANEY, ta Ted Browning's St: Melodrama ‘Continueus 1 P. M. te 11 FP, Waseem io & COL ANIA lau L Tease Characterizes our methods in ° transaction. and our cus- tomers are accorded every cou! tesy consistent with sound busi- ness judgment. s nts Subject to Check Cordially Invited Peoples Savi SECOND AVE. AND PIKE ST,

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