The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 4, 1923, Page 5

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te A eR fe A THURSDAY, January Clearance Sale Regular price Wale £149.75 Above Suite consists of 5 chairs, I arm oh and extension tadle Chairs Have Qane Pancled Backs and Leather Se Friday and Saturday SPECIALS air, buffet, china closet oe Purchase Certificate Free Lamp Complete Regular Value 3 foot with purchase ever $200.00 Bring This Certificate With You . e Purchase Certificate Free Silver Set Regular Value Aluminum Tea Kettle $1.49 Tea ve ») and over up These made, seourely ri Kettles wooden eted on. ar woll handles Purchase Certificate : Free Axminster Rugs Regular Value $10.00 choice of Axminster Rug, inches by 12 inches, with purchase of $100.00 and t pur Aluminum Double Boiler Paneled Sides Special 89c AD exceptional value in Alum With You tnum Double Botlera. Handles Peeeccccocce securely riveted on UNBAUM BROS FURNITURE CO. INC. GIXTH AVE. scfocen PIKE ond PINE Guaranteed Electro Irpm. with cord attached, With purchase of $50. and over up to $100.00. Bring This te FOR ITCHING TORTURE Use Antiseptic Liquid Zemo ‘There ts one remedy that seldom falls Zo stop itching torture and re Heve skin irritation, and that makes the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any Gruggist can supply you with Zemo, which generally overcomes skin diseases. , Eczema, Itoh, Pim- ples, Rashes, Blackheads, tn most cases give way to Zemo. Frequent ly, minor blemishes disappear ove: Itching usually stops in- Zemo 1s @ safe, antiseptic | Naud. clean, easy to ute and de pendabie. It costs only %5c; an | extra large bottle, $1.00. Tt @# pow itively safe for tender, sensittve ‘ gking.—Advertisement THIS YEAR— sa Get The Heat You Pay For If you’re not getting satisfactory ser- vice—CHANGE COALS. You can change without having to experiment with new ones. It’s simply a matter of using— CASSIDY WELLINGTON COAL Which is famous for its exceptional heat- ing qualities—and at the same time—has the advantage of really saving on your coal bills. Every Cent you put into it brings you A BIG RETURN IN COM- FORT. And you ‘can be certain that every ton is just as high grade as the last. Use CASSIDY COAL—beginning now—and realize true economy and true comfort. ARROW COAL CO.. F.C.FERREE , President 4400 Fourteenth Ave..NW. ‘ rings are used in the Greek | ceremony, one of| 1,000 NAMES IN “DOPE PAPERS” Records Are Seized in Odk- land Sanatorium tT A. DONALDSON BLES, Jan, 4—R ik Ror LOS AN of th De." ords ot operated un. ot “De Gatos st. “dope sanatorium Charle the “Barker John Scott Barker Oakland on 4 Blessing der syetem under arrest in charge of selling nar cotics to the addicts he was supposed to be curing, have been seized by fed. eral and etate nare Dr Barker, operated the sanatorium, but agents. Blessing, an understudy of Dr. pald @ royalty each month to the Oakland physician Am tient ng the pai Mat welzed waa ® pa ug the ot nent men and women of en, and other parts of the state, who had either ated there or were iiated as The list t fed a num. | ber of well-known film stare. Dr. Blessing, who ts In Oakland, has domanded the return of the pa pers and records Among the lotters In possession of | the agents are several from Dr, Bar ker, in Oakiand, to Dr. Blessing, in Hollywood, stating that a beautiful sereen actrem of national fame waa & patient In the Oakland sanatorium last summer and had successfully | completed a cure for the morphine | habit, contracted because of over | work and nervous strain | It was this actress who recom: | mended the “Barker ouro” to Wally | Reid, last October, his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Davenport Held, said today Reid went to the Gates street Insti tution and was treated for one week and was later treated for a week at home, for which services the amas | ing sum of $4,000 waa obtained, ac. | ording to Mrs. Reta On the sanatortum records Reid's age wan given at 31, his birthplace Missourt, and he was listed as @ mor. phine addict of two years’ standing, taking «tx grains a day. A “partial withdrawal” had beem accompliahed, according to the notation on the san- atortum records. ‘The records also linted the name of ther of Notationa jeted to herotn | conta: names been pre & man reputed to be the b well-known pr! aald he had been for three years, and had once before been given treatment In the howpltal of the city jall at Salt Lake City. Teddy Hays, prize fight trainer, | was credited with bringing him to the Institution as « patient. He was ated as entering on December & | In one letter, addressed to “Dear | Charies,” and dated Inet surmmer, Dr, Barker, writing from Oakland, de sertbed the “thrill he experianced” when he saw the film actrens in ques then one evening on the screen, | “knowing, as T do, that she was then was getting on splendidly, and a later letter naff she had been cured. She fH SEATTLE STAR ROUGE PROBE | STARTED MER The pleading of Leota Richards, 8, daughter of Thomas Richards, slain by a masked band at Mer Rouge, La., was the biggest factor in inducing Gov. John M. Parker to un- in @ bed In our pinca” He said she | dertake a state investigation of masked terrorism, Leota went with her mother to Baton Rouge, state capital, and | was addicted to the use of morphine, | pleaded with the governor to bring back her father. The gov- the letter stated. \2 Die When Car Skids Off Road BOTSH, Idaho, Jan. 4-—F. A. New. let, 72, and his sontnlaw, Roy Can son, city electrician of Bolsa were [instantly killed when thetr automo. | bile skidded off an loscoated pave | ment and turned over tn a dry trrt- gation ditch near Pagle, five miles | from Botse, yesterday Mrs. Carson, who waa eftting on her father’s lap, was pinned beneath the car, but escaped without « ncrateh. RUPTURED? TRY THIS FREE New Invention Sent on 30 Days’ Trial Before You Pay Simply send me your name and I will send you my new copyrighted rupture book and measurement blank. When you return the blank I will send you my new invention for rupture, When It arrives, put it on and wear it. Put It to ovary teat you can think of. test the better you will like It. You will wonder how you ever cot along with the old style, cruel spring trusses with hard, gouging pa: belts with leg strapa of torture. Your own good, common sense and your own doctor will tall you It is only way in which you can ever i C After weartag it days, if it Is not entirely satia in every way—if you cannot see your rupture b convinced that question of tim you are out not Any rupture @ppliance that is sent on 30 days’ {rial before you pay is worth tryin Why not tell your ruptured friends jot this offer? I refer you to an bank hera. Dr. Andrews, 118 Koch Bldg. Kaneas City, Mo—Advertise- ment. Old Friend Is Not Recognized | y & return it and The harder the| or| Wooden Playthings BY MILTON BRONNER BERLIN, Jan. 4—The Iittle tin soldier and his brother, the little lead soldier, are dead. That, I think, ts the most revolu- | tionary thing the stranger oan find in Germany. And just as the toy soldier has passed off the scene, so have the toy gun, the toy cannon, the toy helmet and the toy sword. Germany ts tired jot the very notion of armies and } war. | Toy manufacturers took the hint. |T prowled about the big department [stores of Hamburg and Berlin, with | thetr pre-Chriatmas displays, and in no place did I find a single plaything niscent of armaments and armed #, with the exception of a few | wooden, lead-painted toy battleships, | probably left-over stook. The change, of course, was obvious in the sections devoted to boys. The one thought that seemed uppermort tn the minds of toy makers and toy Gealery was that both the glory and necessity of hard work should be taught, There were delivery wagons, mafl | wagons, wheelbarrows, push_carta. fed the bieger boys there were me chanical toys—autos with devices that made them run; stationary en. gines; cranes, For the very rich there were even complete sets of rails and tracks. In a word, an at- tempt hag been made to mirror the | “Who's the tall, handsome girl over there, in the Canton crepe! Gress? She looks famtiiar, nome: | | how, but with her head turned away | 1 can't recognize her.” | | “She puzzies me, too, Her hat | | shades her face, and I can't recog | nize her. Good looking, isn’t she She's turning and coming over here, Oh, my goodness! It's Grace. [dant that © good one on us? And we didn’t recognize her.” | “No wonder, in all the new fin lery, I never in my life saw her look | half no well.” | “Sh! She'll hear you. Hello, Grace! We've been wondering who | the tall, handsome beauty was talk ing to our hostess, Thought it was | thing.” | ‘Girls, don’t kid me. Renlly, didn't you recognize me in my new duds?” “{ should say not, and I have just been saying that you never in your life looked #0 stunning. I've known you long enough to demand to know the price. 1 know you paid about $50 | for the dress, but I can't guess on | the hat.” | “Well, since you must know, the | hat wag only $7.50—ot It half-price and the dress, my dear, was only | $29.75. I think myself I got a bar | gain.” | “Two bargains, | me where.” | “At Cherry's, my dears, I have a charge account there, and, let me tell you, they are having some wonderful | reductions right now on their Coats, | Suits, Dreases—in fact, everything. They are in the Rialto building, on | Second ave, between Madison and | Spring sts., Just over the Pig'n Whis tle, Take elevator.”—Advertisement. , 1d say; but tell | some imported duchess or some: } “ Germany of today, Instead of the ernor could not do that, but he started the probe which may bring to justice the slayers of the child’s father. GERMANY IN 1923 What Germany Bought for Christmas Little Tin Soldier Very Much Dead So Are Toy Guns, Cannons and Helmets Popular This Year Germany of yesterday } Metal ie at a premium tn Germany |now, #0 this was a wooden toy Christmas High-priced toys, In the main, | were neither exhibited nor demand jed. Profiteers and warrich were the only ones who bought expensive ly. The working class bought the cheaper and simpler things, And even these so-called cheaper things are not cheap to a German, The chil dren of the very poor went without toys. In the United States we charitable organization which that Santa Clause comes to the hum- blest homes, In Germany chari organizations are so busy supplying one solid meal a day to undernour ished school children that they haven't anything left for luxuries Mike toyn, Kris Kringle—the German Santa Claus—ta atill beloved tn Germany, but he disappointed many « kid this past Christmas season. have bee TOMORROW: New Germany’s Shipping. CASTORIA For Infants and Children |IN USE FoR OVER 30 YEARS | Alege bears the Signature o' Familiar Shoe Store to Close Its Doors: MEN’S AND BOYS’ SHOES SALE NOW ON Your Opportunity to Get Good Shoes CHEAP LADIES’ AND CHILDREN’S SHOES AT SLASHED EXPIRING Surplus Stock Must Be Turned Into Cash THIS STORE CLOSES SOON DINBAM-STREHLAU SHOE Cd. mune. yo —Store Third and t No. 1— THE RHODES FRIDAY HOUR SAL 0. D. orders taken on Friday right limit quantities bx The Hour Sales asmnuch as they are all od No mail, telephone or € Merchandise, and the to for tht {foot week are ¢ attractive 1 quick ol 9 to 10 SILKOLIN 250 yards uitable for drape: comforts. It is wide and comes @ide assortment tern aranc rventory 10 to 11 | | MEN'S COTTON SOX; 0 pairs, in black, gray 11 to 12 ot ot bi them full blue, Palm Beach, cor in a and white. Sizes | t pocket, St to 11%, b wize tr wold former an a pair, Or 8 for 50¢ ot and colors, Form 00 a yard. For t the Draper 20c PORT ik DKESSES 46 of them, including printed crepe de Chines, | GINGHAMS, fancy wash silke and| inche radiums in light rs | quality and a variety of pat ko terns, Small sizes only terns, Formerly $8.95 each.| for his this t, a yard Kb erty each ever hour, in ection, at For 9c 27 and 3 @ splendid 1 ir id These a yard 8 wide mater! and Priced | che pat ea hour, in hour MEN'S WORK SHIRTS; t and with | ¢ inches |GIRDLES; 25 29 PAGE 5 — GO ES Hour Sale reserved, 1 lot» priced uu. CURTAIL Iack |1- and 2palr rte tinghams. ‘The form- mand |er are co edge The rons ually low to uding Marquisettes and hemstitched with and others eige and in- Notting ame are in allover pat $6.76 a hour at pulr dirdles in na in nd 30 only ste | line se $2.00 each. For this hour, each 75¢ tt c 25 Suits Plain and Fur-Trimmed $16.85 ry attractive values are offered tn this group Spe colors, and in size $1.60 « sult Department, of Suits, which have been priced for clearance. fant 2 to 3 | 3 to4 100 Children’s Rom pers cial—98c s from 2 Special Friday, O8¢ a suit. 4toS Formerly $1.16 te For this HALF PRIOE Biastic narrow widths sizes 22, 23, 24 A broken ling formerly at Rompers of Gingham, in a good assortment of to 5 years. Form in the In VEILINGS; a g00d assortment of fancy mesh | BLACK KID GLOVES; 60 | INFANTS’ WOOL LEG pairs, in two-clasp b0e,| 494 in small sizes only | tow me 15c | Pri |in the Women's Glove partment, HAIR BOWS; 109 of them tn various colors, | at, a pair made up. Formerly selling from 500 to $1.00 | each. Priced for quick cleanup, this hour, in | INF/ the Ribbon Department, 30c jand w each oes esos ceed makes. 8 are 3 to WOMEN'S BLOUSES; odds anf ends of 40| months on! Former! Crepade Chine Biouses tn light and dark col-| $1.25 and $1.50 each. 8 ors, and in @ broken line of sizes. Formerly | cial for this hour, In th 95. Then reduced. Choice for $1 00 | Women's Knit Un ceerecss |derwear Dept, ea. and chenille dotted Vellings, In navy, brown, | taupe, purple and black. Fermerly 36¢. 650, 850 and $1.00 a yard have been For this hour, a yard De wool ani variou also, and of style, A 4 special for this hour, 49c NTS’ SHIRTS, of silk \* Dlr eeseeee 69c GINGS, in | only The a pair. | Infante’ Dept. 4 plain white, and of a good weight, | | © sold formerly at $1.50 50 pairs are priced special for this hour, in the 50c | * BOYS’ BLOUSES; 70 tn all, 6 | of good quality percales in y | splendid patterns. Sizes to 16 years. 8 : e|this hour, im the | Department, DAIRYMEN NOT |Citizens to Work TO DISTRIBUTE) Rajecting the offer of the Associ ated Dairies to sell etx distributing dairy plante to itq members on a longtime payment plan, the Beattie Milk Shippers’ association at a meet- ing Tuesday decided not to enter the | (istributing business and to confine ite efforts to that of production. Tt was the annual meeting of the shippers organtzation and Carpen- ters’ hall wae well filled with dairy. men from various sections in and near Seattle. jsounsion of the Associated Dairies’ offer occupied much of the fle problems and reducs the number | P- of deaths from aute accidents, a com- mittes of citizens selected from prominent clubs and civic organtza- ons will work to better conditions, if the plan suggested by Dougias A.| Shelor, manager of the Automobile Club of Washington, ts aflopted. Mrs. Mackie, the well known New York actress, pow a grandmother. and whose hair ts still dark, recently day. One faction seemed to favor | made the following statement: “Gray the acquisition of the distributing eed pe ened bres naa be im- s mediately turned black, brown or! plants, included tn which was the iicnt brown, whichever shade you Mayflower dairy, wMle the other/ desire, by the use of the following held out against any move that| simple remedy that you can make at) would combine production and distri. | home: “Merely get a box of Orlex powder | fo same head. Tho! bution under the o nee at any drug store. It costs very lit lhy position of the latter group prevailed | ti. and no extras to buy. when the vote was taken. jin 2 og, of distilled or rain water and | Directors for the new year were|comb it through the hair. Full di | clected an follows: Representing the| rections for use come in each box lected as ora” oie One bex will last you for months. producers, president;| «1¢ 19 safe, does not rub off, is Thomas J. Owen, Robert Guitteau, | not sticky or greasy, and leaves the Frank Terrace, W. Nakiyama, T./hair fluffy. It will make a gray Sukamaki; representing the public,|hatred person look many years ¥. T. Short younger.”"—Advertisement th th th te wash it out. get rid of dandruff is to FUNERAL SERVICES for ve . Carrie Phillips, 78, Seattle for Traffic Relief | wna cea pecember #1 at her In an effort to solve existing traf- | 10f2 Portland st., will be held m. Friday at the G Gertaking Co. Girls—tf you want plenty | beautiful, glossy, silky hatr, do means get rid of dandruff, for it 4 starve your hair and ruin it if 3 don’t. Be. It does no good to try to The only sure en you destroy it entirely, is, get about four ounces nary liquid arvon; apply it at when retiring; use enough to the scalp and rub it in gently e finger tps, By morning most, if not all, | dandruff will be gone, and ur more applications will dissolve and entirely destroy Dissolve ft! single sign and trace of ft, You will find, too, that all r how much dandruff you This simple remedy never fails. vertisement, STORE HOURS: 8:30 A. M. TO 6 P.M. A SALE OF SEASONABLE HARDWARE FOR $1.50 Mail Boxes 25c Star Rubber Heels, pair. ... 4 4 25c¢ Jersey Cotton Gloves, pair....... 75c House Thermometers ........... RUBBER WEATHER M-Inch—Regular 5e— Now. -.4¢ Foot %-Inch—Rekular 4o— ELECTRIC IRON CORDS Formerly $1.50; priced for Friday AT 89c T-foot length; equipped with spiral spring wire, which keeps cord up out of the way while troning. 4 Cans of 19 A pure, natura LESS ...15¢ | ..©49¢ STRIP | L-Inch—Regular 6o— NOW +» G@ Foot EXTRA SPECIAL! Sunbrite Cleanser for c 1 cleanser that cleans, scours, scrubs and polishes. (No Cc. 0. D. 0-CEDAR MmoPS Underpriced at orders.) only with other goods. Delivered CUSTARD CUPS This handy size Mop is made in the triangle shape, #0 you can easily into tho ¢ and is treated with O-Cedar sh An excellent valu Special—Set of Six, for 49c ze at this low price, af and digging of the scalp will st and your hair will look and hundred times better. liquid arvon at any drug store, ounces is all you will need, no You can ¢

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