The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 8, 1922, Page 7

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TRER 8, 1922. LD MAN” IS (Heads ¥. W.. A. $550,000 Campaign} “ul DESERT TERROR Settlers Are Frightened by ~ Strange Being | Colo, Nov. SA man and - NATURITA, man-—apparentty hall feast—-who leaps on all fours the sage brush and cactus ‘qubaists on the uncooked flesh wilds of animals and birds in the decert, bas bewildered and ter. nts in the vi-| scores of reside ty of Naturita ; nae being has a year the strange / od his huge body gaunt and ‘and his features drawn about | ining, beastly eyes-—-to seize Gevour chickens, or has been | eacaping back into the hidden | of the hills about the prop ‘of the Standard Chemical com- Mime after time erm y, which produc H in that section ¢ I iiigs have seen the wild « 4 game out of hiding | < | i Many have followed , e hair-covered is moceasined or Hy byt never have discovered his The strange being--whether man Up halt. deast—was deseribed by John F Mullen, resident manager of the | Chemical ¢ any, Mullen | preparing to or @ man-hunt Higgs tos asked the ff to co ‘The reason the wild man | farteen allowed at larke for so lone fagties, Mullen declared, ts that hits : tn the wild wastes has been comparatively barmlens, has he been known to attack fact he fled tke a deer and wer miners came upon hin. ecently, however, farmers have ed of a marauder who hen’s nests in their poultry. milked thelr cows and car- ged et? young piss in such numbers cause losses running Into thou. of dollars. Farmers in this re ge are accustomed to rodents that ty devour a few hens or @ young pig, but when these s reached such colossal that a herd of cows was @ry day after day when drtv- eiitto the barnyard at milking time, farmers rose op in arms Mrs, Arthur Curtiss James BY MARIAN HALE are not making Americans out of The leading woman globe trotter| them or introducing flapper styles. . of the this country, Mra, Arthur Cur-| “The Japanese girls appear at ail +. then offered the informa-|SS* James, of New York, has been | functions in the picturesque kimonos Ghat he and some of his men|*ticted by the Young Women's | of their own land h the strange hatf-man, hate.{CPristian assication to head the na | “Yokohama and Tokyo are anxious EB which was obviously harg|UOnwide campaign for $550,000 to|to take over their own leadership Bt for food. And Mullen was|*ure its home and foreign pro- ed with a little more help will te —_ gram. able to, In Singapore, Burma, ily appointed to lead the hunt. 1" si-5. James, who has crossed thé|cutta, Bombay and other Indian ocean 20 times, has just returned] cities the anmociation is developing from a cruise around the world with | native leaders, |her husband, Commodore James, in| “Honolulu has @ thriving associa- their yacht. tion, but needs a training school to | “From September to June we never | prepare for leadership hundreds of feeased to marvel at what America in| girls who are eager to enter the {doing around the world.” she ex-| work. plained, “and how much of the work| “In the Philippines we missed the in foreign lands is carried on by the | friendly blue triangle and part of the young women of the association. work we expect to raise from the “The very best American ideals} campaign will go toward developing are being passed on to the women of | that field. Also, we want to start India, Japan and China, and at the | operations in Ruasta, where there is samo time the best that ts the hert-/at present great need. natorial {tae of their own lands Is retained.| “The work of the Young Women's Sa anes cetn wan a poor] “In. Japan I noticed that altho | Christian association in now being American secretaries are teaching | carried on in 47 countries, and not eustea| Japanese girls American ways they | one of theee would abandon it.” Peak cape ss Yes, and We’re Just as Cuckoo as Wanda Today the by Rev, 0. By Wanda von Kettler Awtul sleepy today. Bet you are, too. If not, your neighbor ts. For just about eight-ninths of the city’s population found it impossible to stay put Tuesday night without q knowing lection returns, Hence, ; Nebraska Election the pred nestled close to telephones, | LINCOLN, Neb, Nov. §-—Ne-|tistened in on radios, and found its HERE’S MORE ABOUT ELECTION ‘ARTS ON PAGE ONE tative Mondell, republican the last house, failed in his iget into the senate. Hitehcock, Nebraska; Maryland; Frelinghuysen, decidedly late and decidedly carly hours. Have been told to discuss election night. It was one busy night. Can't decide whether The Star of flee or the auditor's office was the busiest. At 8 p. m., the time set for re- turns to begin coming in, every light on The Star switchboard flashed on—and the board re. mained a flicker of lights until midnight. Seattle by the thousand asked over the wire, “Who's ahead?” Meanwhile, keeping just « little bit in advance of the switchboard operators, o staff of reporters gained infor- mation over office phones from politieal headquarters and the auditor's office. from the republican landslide|town districts, where returns were 1920, has elected a democratic] written high on blackboards until the ies tron alt atx dastrtots WETS MAKE BIG GAINS ‘and in general gone strongly dem- erratic with a single notable ex: Wets scored big gains In Tuesday's voting. ‘ception—it has repudiated Senator Gilkert M. Hitchcock. iliinots, in a referendum on the; 4 P 5 | young mob of people made restoration of beer and light wines. | onal visits to The star ‘ottian, 8 glad-handing that tatter, Please don’t be too particular the way we say things. We're sleepy. Awful sleepy, today ef . Victor Berger Is Wisconsin Victor | 0%: »y = majority estimated © | wee there for themselves, the figures MILWAUKEE, Wis., Nov. s—|Cted 00,000. Several wet cOngres| Down therw dt that aforementioned L. Berger, socialist, was|™en were elec | auditor's office in the countyclty Sected over William Stafford to| Massachusetts, barns 4 on otra, | Building, the mobs swarmed in and (@ngress from the Fifth Wisconsin|™ent of the Volst ‘ay nye jout, observittg the continually istrict. Practically complete re- ia > nl gn sc against @ |} changing figures on the blackboard ferns gave Berger a} . [ary regime. —but more so, observing the jubilant seit ae her papa atte In Ohio the dryx defeated the refer | iq not wo peeak auedionme tank Arizona endum on the proposed constitution: }o¢ whom took up thelr stands at = mocrat re ce gorsen aon joo dood and /this popular resort for the evening. A ht wines by a small majority, 12 " J | Elected Governor | “xem york state elected many wot! oat it tha tine ne the wounteult u ered at the office of the county-city p PHOENIX, Ariz., Nov. §.—Elec-|to congress, while the result of the! hujiding, pump-handling Sheriff Matt ton of George W. P. Hunt, demo- | senatorial and congressional contests | starwich, now declared the mont pop feat, ax governor of Arizona, has|in New Jersey was a distinct wet) vice man in the county, due to his | p Peen conceded by Gov. Thomas E, | victory. Jelection with more votes than any l, according to repubtican! California, on the face of available | oth,6 Jidate in all the race; shak S Wetate headquarters today. The lat-|returns, had rejected a state enforce: |ing the hands of Malcolm Douglas, brag showed Hunt leading im/ment act. Dan Landon and the defeated poil | (Me state by 4,625 votes. While Representative Andrew | tay 60 Voistead, author of the dry law, was| yuh? defeated for congress, his successful) well James A. Reed Is opponent, Rev. 0, J. Kvale, is even | anyway f ° . + |drier than Volstead. ‘: Ahead in Missouri : + LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 8.—James A. Reed, veteran democratic ames Rebels Slay Three eras ay Missouri, wan reasonably) — Free State Guards — pg et Was leading KR. R. Brewster, | Po edgy as Natal ibe gig Mill Worker Hurt fepublican rival, by approxi-| 9‘? #0) 4 Lonesome. A * | Balely 55,000 voten on the face of| Wounded when Irish insurgents, re by Falling Timber Fetiens from 2,519 precincts out of “CWNS their guerrilin warfare, at-| struck by a timber at the Seattle Unalbd in the state. Latest figures ig me pg, ae.| Mill and Logging Co.'s plant, Tues ‘Were: ‘day evening, Herman Tiede, 42, of Reed, 242,112; Brewster, 287,019, |l@red to have been heavy 42d ave. 8, and Genesseo wt., sus tained a probable skull fracture Tiede was taken to Providence hos. pital. His condition is critical Street Musician Retires Wealthy - . NOTTINGHAM, Eng., Nov, 8.~ Croson Will Talk After playing = handorgan in. the Prosecutor Giese Record Traducers TACOMA, Nov. 4. ‘aftermath Coming as an t to a bitter pre-elec i iy DB, Proseotting A reiOD | «treet of Nottingham for 40 years, at Gyro Meeting iy dames W. Helden filed wuit today | Mt: and Mrs. Joseph Antonio have} cari —. Croson, president of the five members of the Conati.|"°Ured. They saved $45,000. , school board, will address the Gyro tution Detense league, demanding | Gamages in the sum of $40,000 for ¢ ber 9, on “Benefits of Civic Clubs.” Seed ander. oe Unwritten Law Does) tic Gyro ciun tn making prepara Wen charges the | weal to entertain on N rer 23 tebe oui in pot naveruas | NOE Save Bonquerot |r, vitiand, of Vancouver, i. Gx ts libelous statements relating to| _ CHABTRES, Nov. 8—A jury of | district governor, Northwest District Fecord ax a prosecutor. The| lid French peasants refused to be| of Gyro clubs. e charged Hellen wns lax iq {ifluenced by the unwritten law plea | et 38 Dronecuting disor: d convicted Jacques Ronquerot of x Py berlerly characte jand con a nquerot of | “ os murder for shooting Paul Coulon inj Was Love and Not Duke Caetani Is eal ys Theory She Wante MANCHESTER, Eng., Nov. 8 Named Italy Envoy Knocked at Right Minn Vera, Jacobs explained in court Aint It was semi-} that the reason she fell out with her = Place, After All Boasts announced that the Duke fiance, William Lack, was that he Talian faa ae been appointed NEW YORK, Nov. 8.—John Bar- {always tried to teach her Einstein's watlor to Washington, \ton, who tried the scheme of knock-|theory of relativity > Reed jing at every door in his neighbor. ete RENT BOM es cables from Rome stated hood when he lost his way at 2 a.] SAIGON, Nov. & Rated the pAyeZano would be m., finally found n lodging place, hut | of Canthodiu, #8 years old, hax taken ‘the xt Italian envoy to,it wasn't his home. He slept in w'ax hin latest wife o girl of 19. The Unites i king says he will live to be 100, club luncheon on Thursday, Novem: King Sarowath THE SEATTLE STAR FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET 1,000 VOILE AND GINGHAM HOUSE DRESSES —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORD Hi vm, A Featured Offering, Thursday: At a Remarkably-Low Price NEATLY CHECKED GINGHAMS—FIGURED PRINTED VOILES A wide range of very attractive styles in the favored colorings. Six styles as sketched. All sizes cut full. Reduced to.....$1.15 75 Women’s Hats At a Reduced Price In the assortment are attractive models in vari- ous Trimmed and Tailored effects; also some smart Felts and Velours. ‘ Every Hat representing a substantial reduction, at this low price—$1.95. —rie pownsTains sTORE Decorated China Butter Tubs 75c In miniature tub shape (as pictured), these China Butter Tubs are tastefully decorated, and fitted with removable ice drainer, Low-priced, 75¢. THE DOWNSTALRS STORE Hand-Decorated Mayonnaise Sets 75c Bowl, plate and ladle (8 pieces), complete; hand-deco- rated, in several pleasing de- signs. Can be used for whipped cream as well. A good value at 75¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE White Cotton Dresser Scarfs $1.00 With embroidered’ dots, 4 finished with a_two-inch hem. stitched hem; $1.00 each THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Women’s Part-wool Stockings $1.00 There good-looking and ser- viceable Stockings have seamed backs, wide elustic tops and reinforced heel-and toe. Heather-mixtures, in brown or Cordovan, with blue clock- ing. Green with red clocking. Sixes 8% to 10. Pair, $1.00. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Women’s Part-wool Union Suits $1.65 Fine ribbed quality, Dutch neck style, with elbow sleeves and in ankle length, Mercer ized neckband and drawatring Also bodice top style, with shell trimming and ribbon shoulder straps; ankle length. Sizes 36 to 44; at $1.65, —~THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Reduced to $1.95 Pair 200 PAIRS OF WOMEN’S SHOBS—Bluck Vict fords and Tan Calf with low heels, in the Mostly NARROW Sizes 8 to 6. $1.95 pair ‘THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Low Kid Ox Pumps, WIDTHS Reduced to Sizes 16 to 44 60-inch Japanese Table Covers At 95c Each The popular blue-print Japanese cloths, in fast color designs of: Chrysanthemum, Hydrangea, Iris, Wis- taria and Butterflies. Low-priced at 95¢ each. Heavy Absorbent Cotton Toweling At 15c Yard A serviceable material for roller towels or other purposes, where a heavy absorbent fabric is desired. Width 1614 inches. Unusual value, 15¢ yard. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Good Shirts for Men 79c All the qualities which men—or women who shop for men—expect to find in Shirts at this price are em- bodied in these good Shirts of Madras or Percale. Sizes 14 to 1814. Low-priced at 79¢. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Men’s Artificial Silk Ties 50c Made in a new and pleasing shape, and offered in a large variety of tasteful colorings. This kind of Tie men receive cheerfully as a Gift; 50¢ each. --THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Boys’ Corduroy Knickers $1.75 The kind that save a lot of Mother's time, which would otherwise be spent “patching.” Made of good- wearing, narrow wale corduroy. Sizes 8 to 17. Pair, $1.75. ~THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Women’s and Misses’ Black Vici Kid Pumps $4.85 A POPULAR one-strap model (as pictured) for street or school wear, With Goodyear welt sole and comfortable medium-military heel. ‘An excellent fitting Pump at an attractively low price. Size 3 to 6. Widths AA to C. Pair $4.85. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Inf ants’ Wear THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE offers Mothers the opportunity to clothe their Uttle ones attractively —at LOW prices. * INFANTS’ WHITE DRESSES—of Batiste or Nainsook. Short or long styles. Prices, 40¢ to $1.25. * INFAN BOOTEES — 40¢ to 85@ pair. * INFANTS’ KNITTED SACQUES — $1.25 to $1.75. INFANTS KNITTED SHAWLS—83.50. * WOVEN WOOL BLANKETS —Bassinet size, $3.50; Crib size, $4.95. * INFANTS’ SHOES—Sizes 0 to 8. Prices, 50¢, 65¢, SS¢, 95¢ and $1.15. * INFANTS’ CASHMERE STOCKINGS—5O@ pair, * SILK-AND-WOOL -STOCK- INGS—75¢ pair, * INFANTS’ | RUBBERIZED BIBS—25¢ to 50¢. * RUBBER PANTS—25¢, 35¢ and 5O¢. Extra large size, 65e. * KNITTED LEGGINGS—Red, Brown, Gray or White. Pair, $1.50 and $1.75. * NEW SHIPMENT OF CEL- LULOID cnd RUBBER nov- elties for infants. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Women’s Bloomers 45c to $1.95 New shipments have added many new styles, in such ma- terials as: Crepe, English Sateen, Muslin and Plain Sateen, In light or dark colors, Good assortment of sizes, Prices— 45¢, 65¢, 75¢, 95¢, $1.25 and $1.95. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE Medium Weight Crib Blankets, 15c To provide for Baby's comfort, these medium weight Crib Sheet Blankets are very necessary With Pink or Blue borders, Size 27%x37%, LB each —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE

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