The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 10, 1922, Page 5

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Member American Homes Bureau RUNBAUM BROS FURNITURE CO. INC, SIXTH AVE. Scéween PIKE ond @INE Mahogany Rocker There is both elegance and com- fort in these cane, wing- backed Rock- ers, with frames of brown mahogany- finish. Strong and substantially made; appropriate for any room. First Floor Saturday evening, October 14, will be open house at GRUMBAUM BROS, FURNITURE CO. You are earnestly urged to come. Nothing will be sold. Of a social nature primarily, the evening, we hope, will be an inspiration to@the way of at- taining a BETTER HOME. Open Saturday Evening, October 14 8 to 10 o’Clock iberal Credit Extended |Lovejoy Succeeds | | Hughes at U. of W. Albert Lovejoy, of Gardner, Mass who has had considerable expert jence In the Little Theater movement, | jis taking the piace of Glen Hughes this year in the dramatic department | at the University of Washington, Hughes has been granted « x's leave of absence from the unt He recently left for Los An goles, where he plans to investigate possibilities of motion picture di. i Saturday and Sunday evenings at De Honey's New Academy, E. Pike at 13th] ) (America’s Finest) Bee the beautiful effects, and Mr. | veratty dane ins jen \F .G Reginnere’ ciaseas start Tureday end Thursday evenings at wh is not h hy to diet or ite removal alone is worth double the = price. Learn the new ‘Tret. Rocker Waits, Glide, Schottische and Pirewette Fi: { { {| their very own the baby girl they at/ { {| first refused, clatming thetrs should iLose Your Fat, Keep Your Health wet nm and the world over at « for them Marmota Detroit, rice direct to th Woodward A nd procure a ca SEATTLE STAR i} DEMOCRATS T0 | ATTACK TARIFF Will Seek to Repeal It If | Successful j 5 ) } | |. WASIIINGTON, Oct, 10—1mme- | diate repeal of the Fordney-MeCum: | bar “profiteers’ adjustable compensa | Mon tariff act” will be the chief “re \ || form” of the democratic party, if It } }]wins the November elections, Sena } }|tor Harrison, Minsissipp!, member of /|the senatorial campaign committes, {| declared in a statement today }] Other policies of the party |won sald, will include |] 1. To enact legislation to pecure (| Justioe for the Amertean soldier 5 2. To provide @ system of agricul. | }| tural credits fitted to the peculiar | needs of the American farmers and stockmen 3. To maintain our merchant ma. | {| rine at @ high «tandard without sub } | sidy Or special privileges to the ship. }| ping trusts. 4. To bring about » better under } standing between capital and labor, | and to see that the laboring man | shall receive a fair deal, a living wage and reasonable working hours WANTED BOY _| REFUSED GIRL | Wilson, te auto spin. ; JERSEY CITY, N. J., Oct. 10 \| Mayor Hague today played Solomon | O47 \|in his efficiency, and Mr. and hrs. | | { | Marti He Ls COAL BARONS ~ LOSE AGAIN | WASHINGTON, Oct. 10—The #u- ,|Dreme court yesterday denied the baby was born. petition of the Coronado Coal com. < 9 pany for a reopening of the famous Thereafter the Riches refused to | Dan brought by that company accept their child, believing the how | against the United Mine Workers of pital authorities had made a mistake | {To jand given them the wrong child. |". g moment ‘aesiuien ! last After a fo: mt of court disputes, |. pring the high court knocked out « the case reached Mayor Hague to-| udgment of $600,000 obtatned by the day, and he convinced the Riches | 20 ye hl pemgfrmmmmee die Al od and their attorney that the Infant | ines in its Miasourl and ATKAneAS in question undoubtedly was theirs. | strikes of 1914, but held that the and they left the courtroom with thé | tnited Mine Workers and other naw babe in it» mother’s arma. Uional labor organizations are sub ; ‘i fect to strike dai © suits where it Displeases Family | jured as the result of conspiracy by national union officers to disrupt in AUGUSTA, Ga. Oct, 10.—A court | termtate commerce. battle today appearea tmminent over| It is expected now that the Coro the will of the late Senator Thomas |7#40 company will bring sult against EF. Watson, according to relatives |the loce!l unions involved in the and friends of the Watson family. |*trike at the company’s mines, ‘The will of the late senator has been | ‘. ; | tiled for probate and wil! be probated | Banker Is Given Penitentiary Term "lon November 12 |who was associated with Watson In| BOISE, Idaho, Oct, 10.—The Sep the publication of his paper, was left tember’ term of federal district court a large farm and $30 per week while | just closed, shows a record hardly liven. equaled in itn history here for the lone trienda of Mre. Watson say | number of criminals brought to Jus she will protest the will, because she |tice, The longent sentence imposed wan given Henry Workman, who Edward Rich finally accepted an| be a boy, The mixup continued at the Bergen sanitarium, wher nurse wrote “male” instead male” on the chart after Mrs. | Under tts terms, Mrs. Alice Lyttle SPECIAL! Choice of a dozen pat- and 30-inch terns of 18- WALL PAPER CONTINUES The big sale will continue thru this week. Hundreds of. pleased customtrs from every part of the state who have bought during the past few days are telling their friends about the splendid |]) values to be had right now at SMITH’S. If you are going to need Paper or Paint this Fall, don’t miss this sale. 7¢ PER ROLL 36. aq. ft. Less than a cent a yard | patterns at these popular prices. Formerly priced up to 26¢ a roll. for these pretty wall pa- pers. Moire Ceiling. . Seratch pattern ...10¢ Cracked Ice.......15¢ Heavy Embossed ..25¢ -.%¢ Heavy Tapestry Paper— worth up to $1.25 a roll. 25C Rou FREE! for holding up ® mail stage near Oakley His accomplice, Earl Posey, was sentenced to three years. Walter F Thode, former ansistant cashier of the defunct Overland Nationa! bank of- Bolas, must serve two years at | Leavenworth for “embezrlement of the bank's funds MOTHER! Open Child’s Bowels with “California Fig Syrup” and PAINTS Fiven a sick child loves the “fruity” |taste of “Cadifornia Fig Syrup.” If | the little tongue is coated, or if your eniid ta bet of cold, or han colic, give a teaspoon ful to cleanse the liver and bowels. In a few hours you can see for your how thoroughly tt works all the poison, sour bile and waste out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again Millions of mothers keep “Callfor- nia Fig Syrup” handy They know a teaspoonful today saves a sick child tomorrow.: Ask your drugwist for gepuine “California Fig Syrup” which has directions for babies and children of al) ages printed on bottle. Mother! You must say “Caltfornia” or you may get an tig syrup This pretty, wide blend, in 6 colors; some charge 90c. Anniversary Sale Price, 50¢ bolt. 10¢, 124¢, 15¢ attractive imitation | Battery Prepared Paste, ready to use, pound. .... .14¢ |Confidence Wall Felt for house lining, 50 yards: Wear-Well Paints, all colors; gallon. . goes a long way to doing away with Automobile worry, And if your Johnson’s Floor Wax... tery is inspected once in a while by the Battery ex- . ...10% OFF During this Anniversary Sale we give a useful package to every customer who brings this ad and eummmes buys Wall Paper to the amount of $2.00 or over. ques perta at one of these 4 stations you can have all the confidence in the world ita performance under circumstances. Our splendid reputation for re- ability has been estab- shed by making Batte facts clear to the behind the wheel, FREE! re isthe latest photograph of Ex-President Woodrow Wilson, taken while the former executive was enjoying an The picture was snapped from another traveling at 30 miles an hour. |muat herve 26 years at Leavenworth | wm, cross, feverish, full | stated the report, “but in a majority | 7 ‘Willard. SPREE man | IGERMAN SPY IS GIVEN FREEDOM |Capt, Robert Fay Is Secret- ly Released WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.—Capt | Robert Fay, the notorious German |*Py, who was caught red-handed try jing to dynamite munition ships in New York harbor in Aprtl, 1916, has boon eet free by President Harding and has gone back to Germany. Clroumstances surrounding Fay’s re-ense from the federal prison at At lanta, where ho was serving an eight year sentence, came as a surprise one result of which ts the friends of some 75 political prisoners, up for violating the espionage law, to re Gouble thelr efforta to induce the president to grant them clemency, | also, The pressure on the White House has become fo strong that it ix unof. fictally announced that the president proposes shortly to order the relrane of some 12 of the prizoners. A ntatement issued by the joint amnesty committee, which has been working in behalf of the political prisoners, expresses “the utmost as tonishment that the German spy could go free at @ time when both the White House and the department of Justice were telling inquirers that, in view of the Industrial troubles, there was no time to take up political canes.” ‘The Gepartment of justice states the chief reason for the release of Capt. Fay from the Atlanta peniten- tary was that he was reported by the prison physicians to be suffering from “prison paychosts.” He was released on August 31, without any public announcement to that effect. He satled for Germany September 22. ‘The joint amnesty committee de. clares that “powerful tnfluences worked for clemency for him.” some of these influences, it in known, came from political friends in New Jer. ney, Chalked up against Capt. Fay's prison record at Atlanta waa the fact that he escaped in August, 1916, and was at large nearly a year before be- ing recaptured. INDUSTRIES — PRODUCTIVE WASHINGTON, Oct. 10.—Wide *pread increase {n production of American industries during August, the critical month of rail and coal strikes, wan reported in a statement tanued by the department of com meres today. “In glmost every industry there production for the previous month,” | of cases the August production waa the highest in many months, and) often the best record since the de-| pression at the end of 1920. More-| over, this record Was accomplished in| | the most critical month of the coal| jand railroad strikes.” Forest F ire Death Toll Mounts to 44 COBALT, Ont, Oct. 10,—With} the finding yesterday of two un-/ identified bodies, the death toll ‘of forest fires that consumed six |towns in this locality last week mounted to 44 Property loss is estimated at $8,000,000, while re-| ports are that 1,000 homes were |destroyed, rendering 8,000 persons | homeiens Bat: | THIS WEEK Moor uncou DVO rae TRE © Circuit | MURR ES TWKE DAILY Overture of the Day AND THE RH National Better Homes Week, GO. oot ree ODES October 9 to 14 Attractions Fundamental in Your Plans FOR BETTER HOMES Blanket Specials Upper Main Floor Blankets at $7.00 pairs of Oregon Woot inches in size, and in corn and blue plaids Bpecial, $7.00. Blankets at $4.95 150 paire of Wool and Cotton-mixed Blankets in plaid patterns, and wize 66x80 Inches. Formerly $5.60. Special, a pair, $4.95. Blankets at $3.75 f Wool -fin and lavender, Special 83.75. Comforts at $3.25 Comforts made ot pure cotton, with likoline covering and satin borders. A od assortment of colors in double-bed wize. Formeriy $4.00. Special at, each, $3.25. Blankets at $2.95 25 pairs of plain gray and tan Cotton Blankets of a heavy weight, and tn size 66x80 inches. Formerly $5.95. Special at $2.95 » pair Blankets—Special $2.15 100 plain Cotton Sheet Blankets in col ore of plain gray and tan, and size 64x80 inches. Formerly $2.50 « pair. Special at $2.15 « pair Blankets, colors of Formerly 15 hed Blankets, size plaids of yellow Formerly $450 « pairs 66x80 pink patr Our Display of Silks and Woolens in connection with McCall's Ad- vance Fashion Week which is now taking place in this store, has been the cause for much favor- able comment. Come in this week and inspect the new materials and styles in vogue for Fall and Make Your Home Cheery Through the Windows Upper Main Floor Curtains—Special $2.95 17 pairs of heavy Marquisette Curtains in cream and ecru colors, with lace edges and hemstitched. These sold formerly for $3.75 and $4.50 a pair. Special for Wednes- day selling at $2.95 a pair. Curtains—Special $1.85 27 pairs of White Mercerized Marquisette Curtains—they are hemstitched and have lace edges. They have been selling regu- larly at 5 and $2.50 a pair. Choice for Wednesday at $1.85 a pair. Curtains—Special $1.48 Hemstitched Marquisette Curtains with lace edges and in cream, white and ecru— 37 pairs in all, that sold formerly for $1.95 and $2.25 a pair. Special Wednesday, a pair, $1.48. Curtain Materials, consisting of 800 yards of fancy colored Scrims bordered and in all- over designs in a good assortment of colors. Formerly 15c a yard. Special at 121g¢. Marquisettes— 100 yards, hemstitched and edged with Barmen lace. These are in ecru only. Formerly 65c. Special, a yard, 35¢. Marquisettes—500 yards, 36 inches wide, and of a splendid quality, in white and ecru. Formerly 15c. Special, a yard, 121¢¢. Cretonnes—600 yards, 34 and 36 inches wide and in the new percale patterns; very suitable for comfort coverings. Also, others in floral and conventional designs in colors. Formerly 25c. Special, a yard, 17¢. Scotch Madras— 800 yards, 36 inches wide and of cream ground with colored fig- ures. Fine for dainty bedroom curtains. Formerly 65c. Special, a yard, 39¢. Winter. Oil Cloth—50 pieces: of plain white Oil Cloth of a quality selling formerly for 35¢ a yard. Special while it lasts at, yard, 25¢. SAN FRANCISCO, Oct. Miquel Siquera, said to have been posing here for a considerable time ag commerteal representative of the government of Nictragua, was taken | inte custody by federal operatives yesterday and questioned as to charges that he was attempting to/ raise funds fer a revolution in Nica ragua, Church Asks Mayor to Let Workers Off Resolutions of protest against Mayor Brown's denying a half hol day on Saturdays to city workers were adopted Sunday evening by the members and congregation at Raven na Methodist Protestant ehurch. The resolutions, sent to the mayor | Monday, were signed by the church clerk. . aE | Chemist, Is Dead) NEW YORK, Oct. 10.—Frank 8. | Waxhburn, who, as head of the air pitrate corporation, took a contract) during the war for the design, con struction and operation of the gov-| ernment nitrate plant at Muscle Shoals, Alabama, died yesterday at | his home here. Until recently, he} waa not only an increase over the| W"" president of the American Cyan-|and does not rub wit." -~Aaveeant ide Co, ‘ W. W. Philbrick’s _| Will Is Probated | His eon, a daughter, his sister and two nieces will receive the $125,000 | estate of Warren W. Philbrick, pres-; ident of the Philbrick Cutter Head | company, 636 First ave, 8., according |to Philbrick’s will, which was ad-) roitted to probate Monday by Su- j Dertor Judge King Dykeman. | HOW TO DARKEN, GRAY HAIR A Cincinnati Barber Tells How to Make a Remedy for Gray Hair A well known resident of Cincin- | nati, Ohio, who has been a barber for more than forty years, recently made the following statement: “Anyone can prepare a simple mixture at home, at very little cost, that will darken gray hair, and make it soft and glossy. To a half-; pint of water add 1 ounce bay rum, a small ¥ox of Barbo Compound and \% ounce glycerine. These in- aredients can be bought at any drug store at very little cost. Apply to the hair twice a week until the de wired shade is obtained. This will make a gray-haired person look /f twenty years younger. It is easy to use, does not color the most dell- cate scalp, is not sticky or greasy ment. VY YARD ROUTE & LET Ea EY EY ET tore Hours—8:30 A. M. to 6 P. M ») nO @!4 BETTER HOMES WEEK Standard Carpet Sweeper Regularly sells at $4.25 Special for Wednesday at $2.98 Made of wood, wheels and strong fiber hogany finish. treme low price. Sweeper Co. OLD ENGLISH WAX 1-PINT SIZE— with rubber tired A bargain at this ex- Made by the Bissell 32-PIECE WHITE SEMI-PORCELAIN brush—ma- consists of 6 Tinch PLATES 6 4inch PLATES 64inch FRUITS left at $9.98. Special at 59c DINNER SET SPECIAL AT $3.49 Excellent for the small family. Set 6 TEAS and SAUCERS 1 VEGETABLE DISH 1 PLATTER We have a few 86-piece Dinner Sets Electric Table Lamps vo". $3.29 soo Se regular 85c emeac Fine for floors, auto- mobiles, furniture and woodwork. OLD ENGLISH BRIGHTENER— 1-quart size—Special at Regularly sells at $1.40 JENKINS Marion Morgan | Dancers BELLE MONTROSE SMITHS WALL PAPER HOUSE The Store always in the lead in price reductions 1621 FOURTH AVE.—NEAR OLIVE 1s $5.00 Has clamp on bottom ao that it may be taken anywhere in the house Can be clamped on to bed, chair, desk, dressing table, sewing machine or shaving mirror—12% inches high; made of brass. ‘Harper. note . nearest, | ylation . 67 | 617 EAST PIKE 3"0 ano BLANCHARD 3222 EASTLAKE ADMIRAL WAY AT CALIF. svat |

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