The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 20, 1922, Page 4

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Pantages Building Birthplace of Most for the for Christmas We are offering, at an excep ly low price, women's sole felt slippers, rib ed, in many colors, felt slippers with pad soles, also with leather and heels; three colors, blue, brown and black. at LEATHER SLIPPERS $3.00 Jeather slippers at $5.00, kiddies, felt bootees, below, tn light and red— 11% to? $1.25 Girl Writes of Brother Who Must Have Morphine— ynthia Grey: THE ON Fears Physician Gives Him More Than Is Neces- sary and Asks What to Dear Cynthia Grey: My brother has been ill for a number} ,. of years, finally submitting to Do. two major operations during the war, At times he suffers terribly and finally the attend- ing physician gave his wife w his attacks of suffering. norphine to administer during my sister-in-law would give him a hypo when it was neces-) sary. After a few months he judge of when he needs help t refused to let him have it for self administration, so he) oni decided that he was a better han his wife, but she pluckily | promptly went to the physician and got his own morphine, | not letting his wife know anything about it. When she found | out about it she remonstrated with him and tried to show him what a powerful drug he was using and how he would sap the small amount of vitality he had left so that he could not} get well, All she got for her pains was abuse | wand he said that he didn’t | to} beseech his wife to give him medi: cine, Now my sister-in-law has been the main: financially and cared for him & baby besides raising her little family; ehe ts trying to save jenough money now to take him to the Mayo santtartum. 1 asked her why she don't demand that the doc- tor stop giving the drug to him aud she said she was afraid that her hus-/| band would need tt sometime and she could not get it and then he would) | die and that would make her feel that | she was responsible for his death. I) advised her to talk it over with tho| doctor, | She sald: “1 asked the doctor If it was all right for him to have the | drug and the doctor said it wae all right, Then I asked the doctor how leould we ever get the drug out of his system and the doctor said that) he would get over tt. Now I could add a great deal more, how she has given him a sterile hypo | when he was moaning and groaning in territie pain and he has gone to sleep and slept the night thru; of/ the pitiful stortee of his intense suf. | | fering and that he would die If he did not have that morphine right then. But surely physicians ought to | be wise to those pleas. I never knew! her to fall to give the drug when it | was absolutely necessary and it ts {really uncanny how she ery of Originality With just a few shop. ping days left, a visit to our Annex will offer many original ideas tn gifts that will not lack of apprectation— TOTEM POLES (all stpes) ,Girls, Look!” wonderful walking SANTA CLAUS comes this week with every loaf of our bread. your grocery and get aii man for any of the breads named this dandy little Walking Doll FREE. “THE LIFE IS IN IT” WHOLE OF THE WHEAT FINELY A light, sweet, wholesome health bread. \ Miss Grey will receive callers || in ber office Monday, Wednesday and Friday, from 1 to 9 p. m. an@ en Tuesday and Thuredady from 11 @& m. to 18 m. each week, Please do net come at other times, ea It seriously inter forea with her writing. he needs her, 1 have seen her awak en from @ sound asleep and go to his ald before he knew himself that he | was about to have a bad attack. Now isn't there some way that those doctors giving him the drug can be restrained, even if they do think that he is incurable? Ougntn't| a law be passed prohibiting any physician letting @. pationt himself | have dangerous drugs? I don’t mean | that they must go to a doctor or! nurse In such @ case as this, but why | not let the nearest relative of wuch | & person have tt In their care? Sure- | ly @ person fll enough to need such drugs ts i enough to have someone | else administer tt. I understand that | @ county nurse can give narcotics, why should not the wife as long as she Is capable, get a certain supply regularly and make her responsible? Please do not publish my name Ma. No reputadle physician would give your brother more morphine than he thould have. If you feet sure he ts receiving more, you should go down to the bureau of intePnal revenue, re- port the case to them and Jet them | ck up on the physician, Bevery! physician who receives drugs in al legitimate. manner,. must sign for! them. s0 you can casily sce how this would prevent him from piving his | patients over-dosca. 1 do not feet that tt would De o | tise plan to permit any one other than @ physician or @ treined nurse! to handle narcotios. j / eee {Christmas Suggestions ; |for Mother, Aunt or | Married Sister | Would Remove | Birthmark Dear Miss Grey: I have a birth- | mark on the side of my face, and 1/ | would like to'know if they have ever |Harry K. Thaw Dear Miss Grey; Will you please | State the name of the man who killed | Stanford White in the Madison Roof | Garden and who later married Evelyn | Nesbit? ZR Harry K, Thaw. eee |To Eat Oyster Cocktail { Dear Miss Grey: Wl you please ‘tell me if an oyster cocktail when served at dinner should be eaten with an oyster fork or a cocktail spoon? Me | There tan't any such thing as a) |“cocktail spoon” #0 far as I know. | Oyster cocktail should be eaten with an oyster fork. } Together Christmas “So you're going to have a family reunion this year, Tom? ‘That's |mighty fine. Christmas ought to mean a lot to you this year.” “Yeu, it will, My mother and father came out from the Hast for the remainder of the winter last week, and you know my brother, whom I haven't seen for ten years, has located in Portland within the THE SEATTLE STAR E-MAN WOMAN BY RUTH AGNES ABELING CHAP, 10—-THE WOMAN BEGIN HERE TODAY The life of ATR W ody, © ” Everything went lovely as long as |, tt had died and that her father TIN This w an her care, but then came with her little baby trying to tell her GO ON {TH THE STORY Justin glanced anxtously at his daughter during breakfast Her night she had «pent knew that all was not going well The “shining morning face” breaks into} smiles and the unwill- | ing step to school is quickened when the schoolboy’s bread is! spread with The Great Energy Spread j | |, A |r condition quite as they want tt DR. EDWIN J. BROWN'S DENTAL OFFICES face bore evidence of the! Ol4 Parsons | A MAN LOVES , however. He was rare peop who tn atinetively know when stlenoe ts truly golden, ‘ At length Kate, herself, began to talk “Father,” | anything | thing eve which Invo! “No, ehild, tone. “Have wo ever lost a trunk—or hey we one stored away some where? she naid, “do you know | wutea trunk-—or has any: happened in the family da trunk?’ | mild surprise tn his aveling in his lif had need for more | than a ¢ vag! Your her and 1 never owned « trunk in our Itvent* The thing passed without a smile. Kate's heart was too heavy for amit: | ing Her brain wan busy on things | of the past, Bhe was turning over | the matter of Chinatown Allee and Dorothy and Dan's feeling for them “After allk-why ehould he have cared more for me?" Kate war think ing aloud Justin caught the train of her thought | “He would have cared more for you, Katie, just as naturally as flowers turn toward the sun “You are the kind of woman men | |love, You're not the kind they flirt | with, not the kind with whom they make loud carcusal and who then sink, namelena, into oblivion “You are the kind of woman « man wants to be a daughter to his mother and mother to his children. “There are women and—there are | |women,” Justin was reminiscent, | “there are chatter boxes who at eventide torment you with details of 4 day's shopping or the illness of some detested relative, there are |those who never find « clroumstance jand who tnsist upon mouthing the | thing over, “and then, Katie.” slowly, “there are thom itke yourself, who form, unknowingly, a golden band whieh | spans the world of men—the women of the quiet heart—women who can accept their disappointments tn at. | ence and rine above them, women who understand the need of ailence by men who would be great, “The restful woman, earth's riot, In eloquently quiet; that silence means, not te. HY whe, amid WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 20, 1922 SD PS PO PS PO PO PS OSES PDE SPS PBS PD PS PS PO ROAR PD PO AS RS il Bel Sib bE OL OBL AL The Store of the Christmas Spirit PH ORS AS PS AO PS PS AD PONS NO AE RS ROARS RS ASRS RO AO RS RO RS In Our Basement Bargain Booth for Thursday Selling We Offer SHIRTS $1.00 Quality Shirts in many attractive patterns and colorings. A wonderful value. 1,200 Hagadorn Silk and Fiber Ties at 45c Striking Persian Designs. Fiber and Silk Ties, in a very snappy assortment of bright and more conservative colorings. A large variety of these quality ties, at this exceptional price. —Bargain Booth; Basement But ike the sunlight, bright and beautiful— “That's the woman who holds not only man's love, Katie, but the love of every living oresture—dogs and birds and chi'dren and—men, You're that kind of woman, child. “And so Dan would have had to, love you more than the others. An the old man finished speaking a neighbor passing in the road | whistled | “Letter for yout he called as Kate | appeared tn the door. | (To Be Continued) j (Copyright, 1922, by Seattle Star) | Average OCEAN FISHERIES CO. 1525 Ratirend Ave. Main 0990 “Oldest and Most Reliable” COCO OO CCO CCC CC CCC CC CCC OO S. Friedlander & Son : Make There are also thousands of other gifts here that are priced reasonably low. A collection of imported Euro- — Novelty Jewelry, brought home by Mr. Friedlander rom a recent trip abroad, is displayed for your selection. This beautiful collection is au; ing of the newest and most fashionable things from the This a Christmas of Watch Giving Give a gift worth while. A watch purchased from Friedlander’s will Jast as long as time {tself and be a sort of lasting pride to the recipient as well as the giver. Friedlander’s Watches are highest quality dependable makes, sold to give satisfaction and pride of ownership. There are hundreds of watches of standard makes here for your choosing. leading jewelry centers of the world! <= Ts fA @718—18 Kt. solid white gold engraved cane; fine 17 Bulova, Movement | |Family to Get 6720-18 Kt. solld white gold engraved case; fine 17 Bulova Movement past few weeks, and he will be here | y with his family.” “Say, you will have @ real family | ¥ 150—-Green gold Jewel 6827-—Solld platinu lowell fine 17 Jewel Bu ment ented by a select show- warranted for 25 yrs; ¢] Bulova Movement finest diamonds and sapphires; In buying Jewelry as Christmas Gifts, Friedlander as- sures you of dependable quality, painstaking service in making selection and reliable authority on the correct- ness, style and quality of every article purchased. There are gifts here to suit the requirements of every individ- ual purse—priced from the lowest to the most expensive. filled case, 18 Jew $25.00 im set with lova Move. 9180.00 188-14 Kt. solid white gold engraved case; fine 15 Jewel Bulova Movement 976-S—18 Kt. solid white gold engraved case; Bulova Movement 6716-18 Kt. eolla white gold engraved case; fine 17 Jewel $17.50 Bulova Movement $40.00 6754—18 Kt. white gold case with solid platinum top, atud- ded with finest diamonds and sapphires; fine 17 Jewel Bulova Movement $80.00 fine 17 Jewel » $35.00 for pound and half loaf. A crisp and delicious loaf of white bread that you will be sure to like, VERY APPETIZING GRAHAM BREAD with the FREE WALKING DOLL week. sure and ask for breads made in splendid new bakery by the GET SOUND BAKING CO. "East 0691 wathering, won't you? I wish you | joy.” “Yes, we've been busy buying | Christmas presents all round, and have a turkey ordered. Tho kiddies are hysterical with joy already. But how gbout your Christmas? What are yOu up to this year?” “Guess we'll have @ quiet one at home this year, The wife's sister, at Bellingham, wants us to come up, but it would mean a new sult for me and # dress for her, and we can hard- ly afford them before the first of the year.” “That's a shame, You'd better find some way to get the clothes and |run along. Too bad to mope around alone.” “Yeu; I know. We had about de- cided to go, and may yet.” “Say, why don’t you and your wife | 0 to Cherry's, and get the clothes you need? That way it ts only neces. sum down, The rest te paid on monthly installments, you know, aft- or the first of the year. way, they have one-third off on! January 1et. They are Jond ave., in the Rialto building, tween Madison and Spring, just over [se Pig'n Whistle. ‘Take elevator.” Advertisement it 1016 See. sary to pay @ comparatively smal’ | And, by the | § sults and dresses, even ‘now, before | 6714-18 Kt. wolid white gold engraved case; fine 17 Jowel Bulova Movement §50,00 94—14 Kt. solid white gold - engraved case; fine 15 Jewel Bulova Movement $35.00 682—Rulova Phantom, thin- nest and finest 18 Jewel Move ment, Solid white gold en graved caso $60.00 6714-818 Kt. solld white gold engraved cane; fine 17 Jewel Bulova Movement $27.50 ( 684—Bulova phantom — thin nest and finest 18 Jewel Movement. Solid green gold engraved case $75.00 6716-S—18 Kt. solid white gold engraved case; fine 17 Jewel Bulova Movement $40.00 . Friedlander & Son “Famous for Diamonds” Seattle Gruen Agency SECOND AND UNIVERSITY SEATTLE

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