The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1922, Page 13

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TION LADIES! We are going to give you another chance to get these fine quality, well made and durable Aluminum Tea Kettles and Tea Pots at a ridiculously low price. Several weeks ago we had a similar sale and hundreds of women almost swamped our store the first day. Tomorrow and Saturday we are going to sell another lot of these popular kitchen utensils at prices that should make you all sit up and take notice. The wonderful popularity obtained by our great sales was never so forcefully demon- strated as at the present time. When we began these sales a year or so ago, the knowledge of their merit did not extend beyond a few women, but each week they have learned more and more of their genuineness, until now they are attended by several hun- dreds of women during the two days’ sale. 2-quart....57c 3-quart... .67c 4-quart....77c 5-quart ..97c There nothing jabout the offering |Harry Seymour, are taking |most of the honors at the Moore ter this week. In gfet, what }they do has been done a thousand ie extraordinary of Anna who T-cup......37c¢ 9-cup......47c DON’T THESE PRICES SATISFY YOU THAT YOU CAN’T AFFORD TO PASS UP THIS SALE? times before on local vaudeville stages, They dance, they sing and joke, Still they are encored several each Mine Seymour even comes back on times at performance |the stage an act later and ts en jcored again, Ite» Anna Seymour's my |personality that keeps the act ‘i Sale Starts Tomorrow Morning and = Bi) tn» sign: x Ends Saturday Night Mise Seymour—or Mrs. Henry Ra ey when she te off stage—will! wt her husband and his sym- phony orchestra tn providing enter jtainment at the National Vaudeville Golf Ball Kills | 12-Year-Old Girl | EDINBURGH, Nov. %—-A ball driven by Sidney Patton on a local | golf course struck a 12-year-old gtet on the temple and killed ber tn stantly Convicts Bar Jazz | at Prison Concert LONDON. No » ‘onvicta it Woman Can’t Lose | rentonvilie” prison, piven their Husband, Insane |); * of Classics! or Jaze music at LONDON, Nov. 9.—Tho classical weekly concert, decided for the band & «a convicted murderer an ESTER WESTIE RN 1422 First Avenue, Bet. Pike and Union Central Public Market—Up the Incline Boy Kills Mother to Get Show Money| RELFAST, Nov. 9.— Refused by hin i mother money and permission to at- tend @ moving picture show, Patrick | Cahill, aged 13, killed her, took the confined as insane, the courts have money from her purse and attended | refused to grant Mra. Alice M. M the theate | Re therford a divorce. her hue nd | Not a Laxative Nujol is a Inbricant—not a medicine or laxative—se cannot gripe. When you are constipated, not enough of Nature's lubricating liquid is pro duced in the bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doctors prescribe Nujol because % acts tike this natural lubricant and thus replaces AAING, HOUSEWORK EASY Clean steel knives and forks, or lg stains and grease with SAPOLIO | SAME PRICE For over 3() years Ounces for (More than « pound and a half for a quarter) d 2m USE LESS than of higher priced brands Satisfaction Guaranteed MILLIONS OF POUNDS BOUGHT BY THE GOVERNMENT and! and | | Artists’ dance, Thursday night }eafe, and to which the public is in vited which will be held at the Bungalow Santrey gives a dance in every city that he visite in vaudeville and affair im giv-| n to the National Vaudeville Art| Inte’ mick fund whict the proceeds from the Santrey and his or comnined an one orchestras in’ the country, have lauded every: | where. In Vancouver, where they Appeared fast week, it was necessary for them to give two dances in or-| Ider that persons who were turned] away the first evening could be giv-| Jen an opportunity to dance SUCCEEDS WHERE. DOCTORS FAIL Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Often Does Read Mrs.Miner’s Testimony Churubusco, N. Y was under the doctor’s care for over five years | for backache and | had no relief from his medicine. One day a neigh- bor told me about our Vegetable Sompound and I took it. It helped me so much that I wish to advise all women to try Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegeta- ble Compound for female troubles and backache. It is a great help in carrying achild, as I have noticed a difference when I didn’t take it. I thank you for this medicine and if | ever come to this point again I do not want to be with- out the Vegetable Compound. I give you permission to publish this letter | so that all women can take my ad- | vice."’~Mra, Frep Miner, Box 102, errs N. Y. It's the same story over again. Women suffer from’ ailments for | years. They try doctors and different medicines, but feel no better, Fi j nally they take Lydia Pinkham’ Vegetable Compound and you can see i in the case of Mrs, Miner. jling women ought to try this | medicin It can be taken in safety young or “old, as it contains r ful drug Advertt been + | | oment Of the Stomach Dangerous ‘Thousands Have It and Don't | It,” Says Physiolan Frequently Mistaken for In How To Recognize Know er more| + ore | jor} Jed tongue, bad breath. ning | stomach, frequent rum | biting tn stomach, bit tations, | was, wind and et ity and call it Indigestion when tn reality their trouble ts due to gastric ca- tarrh of t mach,” writes a New| York phy Catarrh of the stomach Is danger- ous because the Mining and « nurfa cannot mix with them, This condition soo: dently disease in the fer assimilated food. The bloc luted and tries the throughout th y. Gastric apt to form and frequently ao is the first sign of a deadly rrh of the stomach a « and draws the blood tc he bisurated m exe hydro- | our form (powder or tablets), especially | prepared for this purposs. ' ravaged by those direanes which |in walt for the devotees | York and | Ga. | pera. }| gayest of the Vaudeville Frolic Planned| FAMED BEAUTY | Me oore Star to Furnish Fun DERELICT NOW Effie Alsop, Once Toast of| Land, Drug Victim N.Y, Nov, ent that kills, and NEW YORK, ‘Ten years of the p |then the grim entry, “Alooboliam and | the mal poisoning,” on the ord at Bellevue hospital, New York, | summarizes the pitifully trag career of Effie Pope Hill Alsop, who was a noted Southern beauty, when, at the age of 17, she elected to be- come an “old man's darling” and! went to the marriage altar with 1a. | ward B. Alsop, 70 years old, « mit-| lionatre Pittsburg steel manufac turer That waa tn 1912. Now, at the age | of 37, she te to all outward appear ances an old and broken woman Ne of disapa tion, penniless, bereft of beauty and waiting in vain for a helping hand or « word of cheer from those who) made merry with her while she went | ding, careening a skidding along the downward path that leads GAY PARTIES | While the money lavished upon her by her aged hushand held was the toast of many @ gay party in the haunts of night life tn in HMuropean capitala nined her taste in gowns raved her beauty ning at her expense and her wine, Parties of ny led with her to B an h Now this parasite crew has vanished. It exists only tn the disordered images that rine mock her in her fevered There remain to her only these div torted visions and a ceaseless craving for drink and drugs. Just the other day she was found raving and hysterical In the dingy, | heap lodging-house room where «ne had been existing in squalid poverty out she Women and while drinking copt nin t irope guests to dreamn | From there wan but one destination | 4 pauper patient's cot in the hon. | pital | Effie Pope FIN was the daughter | of Dr. Jamen Hill, of Washington The famtly was socially prom. | inent. In 1909 the girl, then 14 yenrw| old and a dream of southern lovell- | ness, went with her mother toa mer vacation resort at Lake Tux-| away, N.C | Edward Brown Alsop, ¢7 yearn old, | | was the owner of the resort property, | He was spending the summer there with his sons, Harold and Edward, of Din firet wife, both of whom were then students at Harvard | CHARMED HER D ADMIRER The beauty and the charm of the 14-year-old Georgia girt appealed not | only to the fa but to the sona. It does not appear that father or sons anwumed the role of muitors at that! time, but the father’s Interest in the | “child” was such Uhat under his pat- | ronage she went to New York to be| educated. Among other things she/ studied dancing and music, This training period consumed three yearn | After her marriage to the elder) Alsop in New York in 1912 rhe re-/ vealed that not only the father, but both sons had id court to her and that If she had chosen to do so #he | could have been & young man’s | bride. | Six weeks after the marriage, Mra Alsop was taken to the Spring Hin} sanitarium at Litchfield, Conn. mt! wan announced that she was under | treatment for a nervous breakdown, | At this time came the firet rumors of trouble between the bride and her aged husband, along with the revern- tion that on the day before her mar riage he had deeded property valued at more than $1,000,000 to his two nona In an Interview at the santtartum the young bride protested that «hej § would love her 70-year-old husband, even tho he should be penniless. DID NOT MARRY FOR MERE MONEY “4 did not have to marry him to be certain of @ living,” she said a love my husband and I'll be satisfied if he keeps me supplied with squabe and raspberry ice. After Mra. Alsop was discharged from the sanitarium her husband leased a summer home for her in He aleo maintained an expensive hotel suite in New York and had homes in Washington and Pittsburgh, They went to Europe in April, 1912, and retured in June me later she returned to without her husband This ule the subject of much retarn in November over and back, Mra Alsop had been the host to a party of men and women. One of the men to be a western clergyman, | till unsteady when he! « © gangway of the liner, and had given the steward a ring as = curity for payment of her champagne | Massach use tte. by ran out EJECTED FROM j THE COURTROOM Mrs. Alsop had been back from Europe only @ few hours when she again got her name in the newspa A woman friend, one of the “fast set,” was being tried in the night court for kicking a window pane out of taxtcan, Mra. Alsop, full of curigasity and a: tificial excitement, hurried to th courtroom and laughed so hilariously r the testimony that she war ted. Still pursuing the pace that kills. the young bride became a famtitins figure in the night life of New York and in certain unconventional beach colonies on the Jersey shore. She and three other who shared a FOLEY’ ‘S Willie's Cough’ QUICK RELIEF Wo Oplatos Ingredients printed on the wrapper Stood the test of time, serving three gener Lorgest Selling Cough Medicine in the World beach bungalow were criticised be- Fancy Srnishine for cause of their which they lounged | porch. Piied to their critics and seemed tolen are deserting thelr famous che- | ating in the cemeteries of V z enjoy the publicity Alsop then #0 ous allowance that once she was ar- rested for being unable to pay a taxt bill of $1.80. nounced that ™ mi Arthur soctety dancer off the stage ¢ debut maintenance band, charging that | shower | cruelty. a divorces on grounds of desertion Just when Mra. Alsop entered upon the final career ix known only to her settlement money lavished upon her | | time in the wild cabarets and then fe "| |into oblivion until picked up a dere- lict not long ago. the fast life did to me in 10 years she 4 drink and smoke in fast company.” NO BITTER EXPERIENCE Secretary bill becawse her traveling allowance | such pe of taxation? We Tell it With VALUES Here’s the Very Latest in MAN-MADE SPORTS oats —~ With the real college spirit depicted in the lively models, an unusual measure of goodness is attached in the quality of the all-wool coatings and the tailoring. The Big, Agreeable Surprise is |} Found in the Fact That They Are Priced at Only Without Competition The beautiful two-faced materials, Herringbones, } Tweeds, Mixtures, Polo Cloths and novelty weaves appear in correct Fall-time colors The hand-made button Yoke silk-lined and holes give that finished fashioned with jaunty tailored appearance, pocket and belt effects while many have buffed with plain or pleated edges, adding to their é backs, mannish character, In Sizes 14 to 42 New York San Francisco Portland Las Angeles 1023 Second Ave., Corner Spring St., Seattle \Conspbery Crosses Ruined by V: VIENNA, Nov. 9-—A vandal raiment tn the front they re- scanty on Girls of Mandalay Thru newspapers DELHI, Nov. 9.-Mandalay wom- roots and smoking the more civilized | destroyed hundreds of crosses lgarette. ing the graven |Lord Offers Estate at Big Sacrifice | Woman’s s Dogs Be Beat Those of the LONDON, Nov. 9.— King G “1 ‘ DURHAM, Eng. Nov. 9%.—Lord ‘ed two retrievers in Crufts: lonaire had become “too slow.” | strathmore has offered to sell his $1,- ’. but both were beaten by , nmerstein put her on asa 00,000 S Dat she was hooted {000-000 Streatiam estate fer $185,000. \dogs of Mrs. Quintin Dick- “sirtoe'trat ‘Those Who Drink japan file suit for separate should eurely try GREEN TEA of kinases’ amounted to It failed, but Alsop obtained It is green tea in perfection—fresh, cl: and flavory. uperior to the fiz Japans font od tasted. y all Grocers. R. & H.C. toon. i 3383, Eil. 0350, Black Paste ShoePolish Positively the only polish that ah pe oily o : E shoes -No disagreeable odor You pay more but get more QUALITY & QUANTITY Has the largest sale in America F. F, DALLEY COMPANY Inc., Buffalo, N. Y. TY curtailed her gener- Farly in 1914 she an-| life with the} ome” She downward On the} stages of her Aslop she fluttered about for a} “Girls, see a said. “Don't think {t's smart to Why do you advocate © Dormat use it has ‘ork Sun. Liquids and Pastes for White, Tan, Brown and Ox-Blood Shoes.

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