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~ ip FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1922, PAGE 10 CLOTH MADE OF | CHINESE QUEUES Beloved Braids, Taboo, Use- ful After All HOUSTON, Tex., Oct, 13.—When You step thru the door and see he About you a mass of human hair You are very apt to wonder if you| Dave stumbled into Bluedeard’s tor rey dead after rescue crews od Jays to reach them eR RR RR HERE RE ee eee > oe Tze chamber, but don’t call the po. [= : : | had Keot It is human hair, bales of) F \T would have been 48 new made Ht, but it is all legitimate business. | | graves, and, if This hair is made into cloth and} way about it, B he had had her ‘ly Brown would) the manufactu of this human hair! have rested in one alongside of her | Pabric makes the Oriental Textile man, Charley Fitegerald, But the Gompany one of Houston Heights’! cruel fates which shattered her ro foremost industries. manes did not relent when they When the Chinese government ts. \atruck down the man the idolized. Bued its edict five years ago requir | |'They were equally unkind to her ing all pe citizens to Rati word when they frustrated her effort to queues, lions of pounds of hair end it all with poison, Went to absolute waste until Ameri. | Charley Fitsgerald had worked in! @an industry and ingenuity evolved) the Argonaut mine for many years. he scheme of using the strands .n During mont of thone yeara he lived ys oy manufacture of cloth han with his wife and two children were | camels’ hair was the commodity born to them, one a bey, now 9 nage was used almost exclusively years old, and the other @ girl, now this purpose. 7 years old. Then of day Mra. Practically all of the hair comes) Fitzgerald went awny, She didn't from the north and south of China, come back, and, after a time, Emily And from the isles surrounding Brown fell in love with Charley and Japan. These people of the Orient the two children. | THE SEATTLE STAR eee Charm Hunting in Seattle |'OVETMGEDY, | E NO. 16.—“THE COLUMNS”—These pillars, now standing in IN MINE FIR a place of honor on the University of Washington campus, were | Women Contest Children of in days past the entrance to the territorial university, near Fifth || Dead Miner | ave. and University st. Photograph by Henry Clay. Poem by Leo H. Lassen, JACKSON, Cal, Oct, 18.-There are 47 new made graves which a) ways will serve as a reminder of the grim disaster in the Argonaut mine, when fire cut off 47 men who d They Do a Hundred Calories | in about 9 AT a box of little raisins when you feel hungry, lazy, tired or Teovlve only a few tacls in ex- “ 7 @hange for their beloved queues. In gg ow eateries emt Teper lltpey Baar grange: She shut her eyes to the conven- fa valued at 30 cents @ pound in the > 0 live ice Watia itade tata aioth, tt tions of society and went to 4 }with Charley and be a mother to eee wee ST conte. the little boy and girl, She was a| ‘The hair is gathered into ship- Ments at Kobe, China, where it is Sterilized and packed into bales of $00 pounds. So securely are the shipments packed that not a hair Becomes loosened in transit from ‘Tien-Tsin to Houston, At the Houston plant the bales ‘are run thru live steam for half an hour, after which it goes thru a is wound on bob. pinning rooms and Made into cloth of widths varying | from 11 to 36 inches. The cloth ts Made into two kinds of weaves, ‘twill or diagonal weave and straight ‘Weave. 3 As @ finished product, the cloth ‘We used by all seed crushing mills . expelling of] such as cotton seed, soya bean, peanut, and Tt also ts employed in crushing “@tearine and in manufacturing choc- g00d wife and mother and the neigh |bors iked her and called her Mra. Fitzgerald, and everything was all |right until that August day when | nome mine was on fire, One of the first to reach the mouth of the mine was Emily. Day after day she waited and hoped that her Charley might come back from the dead, The story of the mine accident course, and one day Mra. Fitager had gone away from Charley and mine. REAL WIFE SHOWS UP Her coming made a difference tn Emily's position, The pay check that was to have gone to Emily @id not go to her, It was held up. o rushed in and said the went all over the country, of ald—the real Mrs, Fitegerald who the two children, appeared at the) . faint. In about 934 seconds a hundred calories or more of energizing nutri- ment will put you on your toes again, For Little Sun-Maids are 75% fruit sugar in practically predigested form—-levulose, the scientists call it. And levulose is real body fuel. Needing practically no digestion, it gets to work and revives you quick. Full of energy and iron—both good and good for you. Just try a box. If thero in no litigation, it will go to the widow. The money to be awarded by the state industrial com mission will not co to Emily, Mra. | Fitegeraid made it clear that she! wanted the money, not for herself, | but for her children, Incidentatly, she took the children away from/ Little Sun-Maids ‘* Between-Meal’’ Raisins In some vague manner Emily be gan to be treated as an outcast and) ff \ 5c Everywhere she shut herself up, Only Mra . Murphy, next door, saw anything of her in the last few weeks of the search for the bodies, Mra. Murphy and Emily were out at the mine the night the news came in. Mra Murphy's husband, coming up from/ the sepulchre, broke it gently. EMILY TRIES POISON ROUTE Emily went home without a word, without a tear, She had hoped that Charley would come back from the dead. But with Charley gone from her, forever, And Charley's children’ German Industry Blast of Powder In 20 Years Has 2 nm Charley's name taken from , ‘ her, she felt the end had come. She joyi: i i i ALS, anid fair hae Whey thle dieht Yn, mae. she, Be Enjoying Revival; | Heard 100 Miles| _Sets of Triplets Thei rbl hit eep ki the hri Mra. Murphy had surpected that BERLIN, Oct. 13.—The number of| GENOA, Oct. 13—When the ce | QUIMPER, France, Oct. 13.—Al ir marble whiteness marking them a shrine. Emily would try, suicide op ‘ene|unemployed in Germany ts decreas. |4*r magazine of Sant’ Elmo fortrens | most 20 years to the hour from whet | had waited « little while and then|ing weekly. Industrial establish. bee. fn wees Me pont JB se sgh revi “ ba —* oe # O pillared pride of Athens’ hilled Acropolis had gone tnto Emily's home. She|ments are turning out more goods vilape at Setuecet Gs bast asl wanoene the psc So ye ott set— Holds more cherished memories than this. feask tee Oe ome i. gen yomelbwrmsutiatsfic uni ached bo seaman. — . physician and save the girl's life K IKE sentinels they stand along Youth’s ways Emily wit! recover, Guarding the golden thoughts of yesterdays. But what then? Slate and soap stock. HANDICAPPED “So Bill married that plump little ‘Birl who used to giggle so muc! _ “Yes. Bilt evidently believes in a Thinks Election Is Certain for G.O.P. WASHINGTON, Oct. 13. — The facts of returning prosperity and not the empty oratory argument of the campaigner will win the congreasion O pillared pride of Athens’ hilled Acropolis Gives the honest promises of this, R they shall glorify these green ways When new tomorrows are old yesterdays. iain ae al election this year, John T. Adams, chairman of the republican national | || France Has Closed committee, declared today in sizing | eal Homes, No acks, comets, decared ‘efay, tn shin Season for Frogs 6. P. standpoint f A h it t | PARIS, Oct. 13.—It will comtabout) In fact, Adama said, the election 8 ope 0 re l ec & | +1,000,000 per year to enforce the law padi 0 has been won because of re | urning prosperity. WASHINGTON, Oct. 13—Are the country are builders paying ade | forbidding the catching of frogs be Bstaroes 0-0. sa Americans nation of home builders | quate attention to the construction | tween April 18 and June 14 The or one of shack-builders? |of small homes. ‘Their main interest |iaw wag passed owing to the threat Mayor Donates Her Housing authorities, studying thia|!® in large bulldings Jened extermination of the edible Salary to Jobless question for the American Institute | Consequently, the Institute of | jotrachians. SOUTHPORT, Eng., Oct. 13.—Mins! of Architects, say we are about 50-50 | Architects has #ingled out the small Maky Hartley, newly elected mayer, jeld—homes containing six rooms or en her salary of $2,500 to a ¥ } * ’ ° ° has ¢ se—for its educational campaign. | Wife’s Diary Wins fund for unemployed ex The Liberty Bell Bank ‘Teaches Thrift and Patriotism! at prefent. In other words, half o! our new houses are not homes. : as The old saw, “You have to build | KNOWS LITTLE Di for Hubb | Ep two hotises for experience before you |ABOUT DRTAILS ivorce for Hubby 4 : 29.00 find out how to build a home,” is} Ordinarily, the home bullder talks LONDON, Oct. 13.—Her own diary, é 30.00 dead wrong, according to the tnati-/to a contractor, sees no detailed pic- | containing among other things, a % 33.00 j tute, and it is costing thousands of |ture of his prospective home, and ts|lovetastts recipe including “atx | | 30.00 Americans their hard-earned savings | disappointed when it is Sniehed.|ounac «# ve and “four lps well 00 when they soak them inte unwisely | Aino, he knows little of the “chnicai | squieess4,” caused the defeat of Mra i | | 00 planned houses. =, side of plumbing, heating, lighting, | Nora C. easdon in a divorce suit HELP BUILD painting and landscaping. The bu-| brought by her husband. REAL HOMES | reau will post him on these subjects | so | The Institute of Architects is or in other words, educate him on housing short.ge. This the Institute! S,S. S. Will Prove to You in Your! | ganizing the entire country to help | bullding a home jot Architec.s sees an opportunity Own Casethe “How” and “Why” | |home-bullders get homes, rather| Government housing experts say |to make the average home not only| of ite Remarkable Blood-Cleansing | jthan shacks, for their money that the United States needs at least! better to look upon, but a better| Power! In but @ few Isolated sections of | 500,000 new homes to relieve the place in which to live. HE famous Liberty Bell stands for Freedom, Happiness and Independence. The Liberty Bell Bank, its replica, is ~~ a symbol of the Liberty Bell. Let your children “‘ring’’ it with their savings NOW, and it will mean THEIR freedom ie want, and their happiness in years to come. The Liberty Bell Bank teaches both Thrift and Patriotism and is, by far, the most unique savings bank we have ever offered our customers. Your child wants a Liberty Bell Bank, should have one, especially when there is no expense in connection with getting one. MINIMUM Prices Include War Tax MAIL ORDERS Shipped C. 0. D. Without Deposit Pike Street || Tire Shop W. OU. Standing Elliott 0446 roe, Pimples May be Small Boile! it ls built on reason, Sctentifie uthorities admit ite power! 8. 8 8. ower, it builds red-blood- what makes fighting- | blood destroya lmpurt. | oils, It always wine! because you utmost int Flavor poo Fragrance at a Price thai is low indeed ~ ! ie It builde nerve-pow: bower, the tight-fisted power whirls a man up into suc It gives | women the health, the ang m plexton and the charm that imo World! There are the reasons th: made 8. 8, 8. today the great blo: | cleanser, body-bullder, success builder, why Ite have made tears flow from the souls of thou 857 15th Bt., cA Savings Account Opened Here with $1.00 or More Obtains a Liberty Bell Bank Sensibly Packaged pea rman Sens. ibly Priced Ss. Ss. Ss. makes iG feat fe your agam Southeast Corner—Second Avenue at Columbia Largest Bank in Washington