The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 9, 1923, Page 17

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FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 19: From Coast to Coast) Prowning K King § (0. Boys’ Clothing At Clearance Prices B in Boys’ prs, now at these low 2 Norfolk Suits, Full-lined Knickers SPECIAL 85 Others $13.75 to $18.50 Novelty Suits, sizes 8 to 8; beautiful models and fabrics—$5.95, $6.45 to $9.45. Boys’ Corduroy Suits—Special......$5.95 All Boys’ Overcoats and Mackinaws sharply reduced. Boys’ Sweaters, all wool; $6 values -$3.95 Boys’ Sweaters; all our $10 values; spe. $7.75. Boys’ Shirts, with neck band; special ....95¢ Many Other Remarkable Bargains Browning King & Co. Second at University—Arcade Square Boys’ Outing Flannel Pa- jamas, special. .$1.39 Boys’ English Wool Golf Hose < Boys’ Gray Flannel Blouses . $1.15 W | nimsete on the mercy of the judge. ATS HAPPILY (SES SESes | Smith says today, “It wasn't the | real me, it was my other self—the | thing I count on death to rid me of. | “That done, 1 shall come back to arth as something good, to wipe the | sate clean.” Condemned Man Believes in| New Life CHICAGO, Feb. 9—Condemned to @eath for murder, James Smith sits fn his cell here with an inscrutable smile playing about the corners of his mouth. | When you mention his execution Smith laughs—not the hard, bitter laugh of despair, nor yet the mirth- Jess laugh of a man half-crazed by/ tree, when she sought only simple the continual thought of approaching | happiness. death. | ‘The rich man's son ts Gaston Bols- Instead, Smith's laugh Js a laugh) sonauit, Jr. His father ts the inven- Of joy! | tor of the detectograph. Because the condemned man be-| Several months ago there entered Neves that after death he ts coming | the famous resort in the Adirondacks back to earth again to expiate his/a youth, unshaven and roughly crime, to live a good and useful life. | dressed. When he applied for a job Smith has been converted to the/as a common laborer Brahmin and Buddhist doctrine of | concern they took him on. Felnicarnation, the teaching that the| Miss Catherine O'Brien Boul lives on forever, using many) good-looking young laborer. Their Bodies as its temporary quarters; |cyes met and thelr hearts beat a that death simply means a changing | trifle faster. They were,married De- Of the soul's abode. » |cember 20, So, thinks Smith, when he drops | thru the gallows trap-door, his soul) that Mra. Gaston Bolssonault, Jr., re- will leave the lump of lifeless clay |ceived a shock when her husband that is his body and will enter the | said Body of a pure, new-born Infant. | “You know, dear, there's He looks upon his execution as a/thing that J haven't ever told you. Girl Garners Rich Husband SARANAC LAKE, N, Y., Feb. 9.— 0 married “the poor workingmant" And, lo! he proved to be the son of a miilionatre. Such was the beautiful romance of Mies Catherine O'Brien of Saranac Lake. golden apple from the matrimonial Geliverance from the self that caused | 1 hope you will still love me as much | hhim in this life to rob and kill. | when you know.” ‘The crime for which Smith must| Reassurance by the bride followed. Pay with his life wax the shooting to| “My father and my mother are @eath of Frank O'Connell, crippled| very rich. I've deceived you.” cigar store clerk, when O'Connell| The couple then paid a visit to Mr, sought to frustrate the plans of|and Mrs, Bolssonault, Sr, in Smith and the latter’s accomplice, | beautiful home at Hewlett, L. 1. An} James Butler, to rob him. official pronouncement accompanied She is the girl who plucked a} with @ local | met the} It was not long after the Sereencty| some- | their | Butler and Smith were held jointly Fesponsible for the slaying, but But- Jer received life imprisonment in- stead of the death penalty because of Bis heroic record as a soldier over- Beas Smith confessed his crime in open conrt, without a jury trial. throwing news of the love match to the effect that the parents highly approved of the wedding. ‘The young man’s father sald there had never been any differences be- tween himself and Gaston, Jr., and that he approved his son's effort to make bis own way. For the Week-End eattle ICE CREAM Private Brand Brick For this Saturday and Sunday—a wonderful three-layer brick. Just, note the flavorings— FRENCH VANILLA CHERRY NUT and PINEAPPLE Be sure to enjoy this dessert over the week- end. There’s a Seattle Ice Cream Agency near you—a tele- phone call to it will bring you this exclusive dessert Seattle Ice Cream Co. Main 6225 THE SEATT LE STAR The firs, hundred years aren't the ayree that ylands, fie schemes all Duncombe and nonsense. These W. R. Curtis Of Milford, I, 91 nds, and all that talk about ex ding life is just foolish monkey business. Live @ sane, even lite and you may without any excensen live to be a hune Much beyond that no man can go, It isn’t natural, If grown-ups would pay lens atten- | tion to there crazy ideas and more to their children we might be better off. I belteve the girls are all right—if they are brought up right But 0 few of the modern girls are. Most of these few live on the farm where they are taught useful work from thelr very childhood AUTO SHOW TO hardest! Fi for prolong men, from various parts of the coun Ezra Meeker Seattle, 92 into a sec The uld set thelr daughter instead of letting und wild. 1 went across the country with an ox team and saw the We by men and women who were hel mates to each other, The girls could weave, cook, bake, work. Mention these duties to a girl to: day and she laughs. She ts the mod woman! mothers are.to blame ah washing * them run knows about these new entific Ideas, Maybe fangled I don't But I do nature, No man can live beyond his time, doctors or no doctors! OPEN SATURDAY Mayor Brown to Officially Open Exhibition With every detail of Seattle's mam: moth Auto § an the fruit of nearly a month's untiring labor on the part of Manager A. W Simonds and his corps of assistants, ow complete, dealers and a heavy advance guard) of out-of-town visitors are “marking time” until 2 o'clock Saturday aft noon, when Mayor Brown will of. Giclally open the affair with a speech nf welcome, Simonds announced Friday ‘The show, and February 17 Lieut. Gov, W. J liam ©, McKay, head of the Seattle |dealers’ organization, will follow the | mayor to the stand, and McKay will transfer control of the show for the first afternoon to the Boy Scouts. While the Scouts are in charge, children under 15 will be admitted to the show without charge between the hours of 2 and 6 p. m. Last minute reports that special | | exhibits of ultra-late models from nev: eral auto manufacturers have been shipped were received by Simonds Friday. housed In an auto tent of 100 by 250/ feet. and an accessory tent of 80 by| | 160 feet, are dectared by Iden! dealers to be the most complete ever gath. cred in the Northwent | Unusual conaideration has been | given to the decorative scheme. Chi nese art has been followed thruout, and the decorations committees has transformed the interiors of both| | tents Into miniature reproductions of the Orient. Hundreds of lanters will | illuminate the show, and each car is wet in a Chinese bower. Due to the wide publicity campaign and the fact that the show is ex- | pected to be the best the Northwest has ever attempted, the managerial staged at Fourth ave. | commites Is expecting a record crowd | thruout the week. SPECIAL MATINEE AT STRAND FOR “Y” KING | In honor of Fred Graetz, elected | king of Seattle by boys of the Y. M. C, A, the Strand theater will be the scene of a special matines show. ing of Charles Ray in “Aliag Julius Caesar” and Buster Keaton in “Day| | Dreams,” at 9:30 o'clock Saturday | morning. Tho king will be present ed with the key to the city by May-| lor E. J. Brown and the elaborate | program laid out for his entertain- gare for the day will begin. \Rebels , Mourn f. for | Dead Chieftain) PRETORIA, Feb, 9.—Followers of | Long, Hull and Lewis, executed lead- ers of the Rand rebellion, are to wear mourning Bt one year. Bride Is Day Late, but Wedding Is On NORWICH, Eng., Feb. 9—Mine| Gindys Humber arrived here 24} hours after the time set for her wed ding, but patched it up with her| fiance and was married. Don't Cough Just breathe HYOMEL. It relieves at once. Itismed- icated air-—soothes most remote membranes of nose, throat, lungs. Suc- ceeds where all other treatments fail. Nature’s treatment of over 30 years for Catarrh and other bronchial trouble “Wonderful for croup. Sold druggists. Satisfac- tion guar- anteed or money back. neHinrd st,, will continue until | | Coyte and Wil | | | Emmanvel of Italy t* going to re store the house on the teland of Elba o Napoleon Bonaparte dur Ing his first exile, Longwood house, St, Helena, where Na | bought by Napoleon 111 franca, in now nald to be falling pleces, Chance for somebody new president of Pe Odd, tant It? An went to Zurich entered the P fed engineering : HUNTERS SEEK upled b; The Swine a boy um and stud Becoming @ natur WOLF KILLER The displays, which will be! séQ|¢q Snowdrift” Eludes Grim Stockmen | “Old Snowdrite"—as he ts ranger at Highwood, Mont., snow white timber tional size and beauty. | year thin handsome rogue has deal havoo to the Highwood vicinity, leading packs of hungry wolves even into the corals to | carry on thetr destructive work. | Last spring “Old Snowdrift” in @ secluded spot on th the mother, 4 sisted of seven puppies, (year old female), and fellow himself. that }a “nurse-girl” the old white clever were the wolves althe covered until the ir men, all over 90, tell wv 4 hundred years, perhaps!—a They wt built up know that you can’t buck Out of his own pocket, King Victor | to land te a he Petersburg, desig- d by Stacy Eckert, district forest tn a wolf of excep- For almost a stockgrowers of the | found a mate and they established a home north fork of Highwood creek. The family con- So their den wax within three miles of human habitation, they were not dix- pupples were two | | u here that they're perf tisfled. dm flapp given their views to The Star, So satisfied, in fact, that they 4 other disturbing factors are follows C. P. Benedict Of New York, 91 try, hav Of Brooklyn, N. ¥., % Daniel Kennard | Lat n The me ture take tt to agitate tt, own course.| Of course, girls are always nice. But the old-fashioned girls of my day were far better than their sisters are | day | T were lens bold, perhag at Ic © wholesome Gt ne 6 of the o we try the | 1 never took any prolongation-of-life expe V'm not dyin But 1 bet t | tists who are dabblir | will pass away lo | that I go. | Lead the ample life, Jot outdoor work, absts | bacco and Nquor and about your end m in thene | t and leww forward of the old-timer time. net of the with t fore e work the 60's any They n rried about their age. They knew that if they lived a| clean, healthy life they old age age ver w h n you coming ve plenty from te needn't now they pe too | abc rolonging would live to| om to be worrying Mfe by of GUARD KILLS BEAR BANDIT Bruin Raided “Inn Kitchen | for Sweets | worry Hut don't let any Nappera anno: |treah and a be squelche means of the They are ating, and should f that Ix possible. young too ISTON, Mont, Feb. 9.—A bear burglar came down out of th | moun ins in Glacter park recently |and demonstrated to the national hes bureau that there ts more truth | than poetry in the old aphorism, “It | is better to divide your honey with a bear than to provoke its anger.” Tired of a long summer of herba- |coous diet and bent upon @ honey spree, a huge marauding grizzly bear broke into the commod kitchen of the mammoth Many clers hotel, which had been closed for the season. He broke 50 panes of glass and a number of sashes in forcing an exit and {t evident from bloodstains on the sills and the} |ground that he jumped 1 t to| the ground in making his getaway. | Th of the honey was too ng to be ressted the next night, | he venured back on a second Curill McGills, the watchman, | in waiting for the forager in the kitchen, armed with a high-power rifle, lized citizen of Switzerland, he bullt up his entire career there, Ho re- turned to Poland only after the war. Overland, by Hamb syectally bi vith wug voles and v burg, via Gulf of Ft tol a, thenc water, Germany to quite a stunt, and ts ¢ Shipping Co. sent ship of 200 , laden wing machines, shoes, r, from Ham , the Bal derwe yaem, | trip was such new ships have bee tate make it @ regular run No lens than 27 members of the raid. ship owners are b parliament. An enterprising American, figur. {ing up the high birth rate, among | the Japanese, thought he might maxe | a killing exporting baby carrif and “kiddy Coops” to Japan | ing doing! The kiddies over there | ride pigey-back on mother or nome older member of the family, and squall thelr heads off when put into any such contraption. Young Japan just won't have it. So the aforesatd enterprising American ix looking | elsewhere for a market cee It was an intense moment for the| atchman when he threw on all the! | electric Nghts, illuminating the huge building for the encounter. He found Bruin fi @ hallway, between the | kitchen and the cafeteria, on hi haunche,, shaking his massive head from sid; to side in an alarmingly | defiant manner. ‘The bear roared and lunged forward, but the watchma| took quick aim and sent a bullet |thru the animal's neck. The bear | fell, dying, his immense body. striking against a large box, which collapsed under the weight, ‘The bear was a sient silver tipped grizzly and measured 7 feet 9 inches from tip to tip. Superintendent J R. Eakin of Glacier park took Bob. | sion of the pelt, which the tional parks bureau probabl il dispose of as an exhibit for the Smithsonian Institu | Paris eats, in one year, | head of cattle, 1,127,526 she 526 Inmbs and 424,988 pligs- beautifully into boeuf a In mod ragout de mouton, petit agnon farcie, pieds de poro, tripe a In mode de Chen, and all that sort of thing. 140 D, 208, Like olfven? district last year produ 1,680,000 gallons of Queens and) 1,600,000 gations of Manzanillas. | a sagt A sive disigt ble constructed secretly for the soviet | The Seville, Spain, " alone Q8c '98c and $1.98 | Will be | cleared at ‘BOOTS | ally mac 98c | To Build Rainier |on Rainier Beach wns practically as- j halt PACY 17 —$ SHOE STORE FIRST AVENUE—CORNER GIRLS’ SHOES UNION STREET LADIES’ SHOES C Ladies’ Brown and Black One-strap Pumps, military heels. Made to sell originally for $5.00. $1.98 2.4 Hicut Boots; good leather; to sell for $5.00. Patent leather, calfskin and | Over 400 pairs to choose from. SHOES 2 . . 4 Work and Dress Shoes, originally made to sell for $7.00. BOYS’ CHILDREN’S ‘SHOES 98c Ladies’ black calf and kid with cloth or dull kid tops and military heels, Made to sell originally for $4.00. Clearance price $1 98. Ladies’ Patent Pumps with cut-out side and strap. tary and low heel. Made to sell originally for $7.50. — Ladies’ Feit House Slippers Ladies’ brown calfskin Lace Shoes, with mil- itary rubber heels. Made to sell originally for $6.00, but they go at the clearance price $2.98 SHOE sone 1401-3 First Ave. tx UNION |Five Trains Held Beach Clubhouse | Up by Stray Cat Construction of a $10,000 clubhouse} NEWCASTLE, Eng., Feb. 9—Five trains on the North pets railway were held up because t boys had gone into a tunnel im | suit of a lost cat. Ks sured Thursday, when commttees coliciting members of the Rainier Beach Community club reported that $4,500 had been subscribed, and only the territory covered. The structure will be built at 31st ave, 8. and Pilgrim st, Construction work R. Scott, president of the club, will begin May 1, according to Elmer J resides at 9751 62d ave, 8. Circ: “Dress Well—Never Miss the Money” —=——— 2Part Suits “This Extra Pair Gives Double Wear” months old. To avold detection they crossed the range of mountains and} did thelr killing on the head of Ar-| |row and Martin creeks. It was a long trip over rough mountains, but lit afforded security to the little ones | at home, for “Old Snowdrift” evi- ently knew that a killing near the! would arouse suspicion. Tracks | were found within 200 yards of a well | traveled road, yet no trails or roads é were croused by wolves during the| Wo are notified daily that spring: [fim further advances In” tiros In spite of his cunning, however, | can be expected very soon. | “Old Snowdrift's’ den was discovered _ Why delay your ‘Spring one day by a rancher who, with the | Buying and pay, higher assistance of Mr. Eckert, took out] the puppies. "But," says the latter, | “the Mr, and Mra.“ got away easy. Two of the pupples were taken home by the forest ranger who ts quite a student of nature. So playful and do- ile have these little fellows become that they are boon companions of baby Stacy Eckert Atp it there are 100 traps set ‘Old Snowdrift.”. An expert trap- is on his trail, Yet he stands on four unharmed feet, ever ready and alert to pull down the chotcest veal, and at the same time to evade the trap or rifle bullet that may result him at any time. | | | Remember our prices, and we Invite your Inspee- tion of the Tires, First Class Full Oversize Fully Guaranteed In addition to the Manu. facturers’ guarantee, we personally guarantee every tire wo sell List Price Sale Price $9.00 13.50 13.50 16.00 17.00 18.00 20.00 21.00 22.00 23.00 24.00 25.00 26.00 27.00 Prices subject to change without notice, Mail orders shipped ©. D. subject to inspection, Size 380x314 2x84 B1x4 \w jn A Guarantee of Complete and Permanent Cure HADbeenasufferer from Piles 25 years, but today feel like a different woman.” This is one ex- pression out of hundreds of sim- Har letters received from gratified pa- tients whom I have completely and permanently cured of Piles. If you are interested in knowing the facts about YOUR case, send for my FREE illustrated book. It tells WHY I use no knife, clamp, ligatures, stitches, burning or other disagreeable and dan- gerous methods, Remember my guarantee means a positive and per- manent cure no matter 45.80 46.75 1 0. TRIANGLE TIRE CO. Inc. 125-27 Bastlake Ave, 1 Block North Denny Way w 0 Phone Elliott 2972 government killing DR. LOUGHNEY’S | Wash, few trips from’ Aberdeen, Wash., |he enjoyed It, \tr painful aton proved a big suc any of m recelvo your book b are wrapped ‘Treatment o ner Building. exploded near Odexsa, six workmen. HUMAN winum Mr. Wirum's home is Aberdeen, He js Just after making a} to| eattle to Dr. Loughnoy's offices, here ho was delightfully baked in temperature of 350 degrees for it took aw! Theumatle pain and st His statement follows vere ‘ouble, "T have been affli case trou Bake master d with a very h Ovon. very qulokly over my” ailmenta bakes and ourative diet have «in my case, and advise the treatments to friends who are ailing, “Respectfully, D. J. WIRUM, Aberdeen, Wash." atrongl Dr. Loughney, Famous Dieti-| tian, Publishes New Book “Free to You Postpaid ou mill valve thie book teh AM mall them out RICH band oddrae ‘blainigy ana return mall, ready to mail out, We your ou, will ‘They NOTE—Dr, Loughney’s Bake Oven em ure located at the cor: and Union, in the Crary Rooms S10-H1-818-819-814, f Pitt Dr, Loughney Lnily nurses, New Spring Models One- and Two-Button Coats Sport and Jazz Suits at $40 Two-Pants Suits You will quickly recogn these Two-Pants Suits as the most economical clothes you can buy, because they repre sent the greatest values, | They meet the most exacting requirements of style, fit, fabrics and service. Other Excellent Values $25 to $45 Overcoats, $15, $35 At either price are warm, woolly Overcoats of such fine fabrics, smart styling and trim’ tailoring that you know immediately that they’re worth much more. - OPEN A GATELY CHARGE ACCOUNT Convenient Terms Will Be Arranged 1427 FIFTH AVENUE Between Pike and Union Streets

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