The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 30, 1923, Page 3

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WEDNESDAY, MAY 30, 1228 Sunday Paper Headline [ «s Misleading, Says Blaine 2 Days More! BETTY COMPSON # Councilman A In Paramew Homance— “The Rustle of Silk” with Ce Saturday might . Witwer’ “FIGHTING BLOOD" Series 2 erat ye Ww fact 2 permit me t Saturday in Pre oria Swansen payment of tains. the fe street rail Now! The flest provic cipal and int in authorized and in all costs of operati addition ther Us S| nance =! VALIMiry oF Bonds |WAS ESTABLISHED T upreme o-called ° va aT ALACHUA Aco TA Kont ToT }holders th my interpret cree. In the urt of the Fourte furthe cost operation ¢ or mption of ds could be ral fund of the of th law city, without t ire vo far city officials concerned y Last’’ Wallace at the Warlitser SUNCOM NINCOMIILNO TS GOOD GLASSES Cost so little resh from the factory FRESH ee aes ani } ee TOBACCO here that you! cannot afford \ P< to wear poor ones. 17 Years’ Experience EXAMINATION FREE | Glasses As Low as $2.50 Dale Rothwell, 0. D.| OPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN 327 Union, Between 2nd and Srd ddd. ROLL YOUR OWN wiTh Ris'Le Crotx Papers Attached Homes in every district can found to your liking by watching The Star Want Ad Columns. imposed on the gen This as the ee AAKX\\NNY Star Shoe Store 121 Seneca St., Corner Second Ave. MANY PEOPLE MADE HAPPY —— BY OUR —— ONE DOLLAR Shoe Sale Shoes at Great Sacrifice Greater Values for Tomorrow and All Week yda of people that have attended our sale got their orth and they keep coming. Greater bargains for tomorrow and all week. READ AD CARE- FULLY, come and see for yourself and be convinced that we can u money at this sale, COME KARLY Low Shoe Prices in One Dollar Sale Extra Pair Will One Dollar $2 $1.45 Cost You But | kia and Regular $8.00 yalues NOW $5.95 121 Seneca St., Cob. Second Ave. ealt leathers Pair Regular $4.50 values $5.95 Remarkable Extra Values in Fine Shoes Fixtra pair for one dollar mo Costs Dudies’ Pumps and Oxfords in black and You Men's Fine Shoes and Oxfords in highest grade calf; new wide toes. brown kid, calf and patent leather. ok Negular $9.00 hy $4.95 Regular $6.00 value Now Extra palr for one dollar more. $3.95 and Oxfords, Deller More Ladies’ Pumps and Sandals in gray and beige; newest styles, Regular 57,00 values, values \. . Now oe . These are not included in one dollar sale. Silk Hosiery Children’s Shoes & Slippers . NOW Ladies’ Shoes, Pumps OW Extra pair for one dollar more. $1.95 . ug Fit Silk and Fiber Hose, Broken lines of Children's Shoes and Ladies! § in black, brown and mray Special Zhe, 3 patre for, Slippers. Regular and $8 valuer “rts He Does Not Think Seat- tle Citizens Will Have to Walk Downtown DOES NOT WONDER AT BEWILDE SBME NT wnxious to wbout rt " DOES NOT BELIEVE HE LS INFALLIBLE As one member of the permit mo to stste council, at 1 It that my judgment was t persons to ¢ at times, but I have in. diffe do rew alled in ation t motive inair their homes. everlasting dixgrace of the city if it unpleasant pu’ all do not ading to this 0 will tell whi Very truly I BLALNE, PORT PILING IS DECLARED OKEH Inspector Finds It Is All in| Good Condition | That tho piling under all port of! | Seattle terminals is in excellent con | dition and will not need replacing for |many years was the statement made Tuesday by G. R timber inspector of the Northern Pa | cific railroad, following an examina tion made by him of all undersup ports of the port's terminals. “I found that the port pil far superior in condition and m of treatment to the pil: | Northern Pacific docks, | kins. | “This report by Hopkins disproves jstatements mado by R. V. Higbeo jthat the port piling was In poor |shape and would cost $2,000,000 | replace, a members of the | Wednesday. The manner in which the piles of the port terminals have been treated j with creosote has prevented the de struction usually resulting | teredo worms, ording to port of- |ficials. Many other docks of the city are in a state of disrepair, due to the drilling of the teredos, but the | port piling is in perfect » ay | commissioners of the port of on th Gesideratum port ARMS SORE, GLAD Now PARIS, May 80.—Former soldiers are glad now that they were inocu lated with anti-typhoid serum during |the war. Since an epidemic broke fout in Paris, three times as many [Otherwise the destiny of the living | Barker {women as men have contracted the] | disease, medical authorities report. | POINTS MADE BY POETS | Small s it lasts; Of humblest friends, bright crea- ture! scorn not one. The daisy, by the shadow that casts, Protects the lingering from the sun. dewdrop Hopkins, general | from; rvice is true service while} it| SI ATTI rAR 2038 YEARS ( )F ACTIVITY Jonathan Mills (left) Hubbard (right) has live Washington with traight-edged her make her owr near a Hubbard, born dre sees. 103 just reached her 100th birthday. Courthouse razor, father bartered with Indians. old, Mre, Harriet Mills shaves himself and without aid of in Pempey, N. Y., recalls how At 100, she continues to and ear , O. He reads China Has Great Powers of World Scared Stiff | Country Has 400,000, Believe in Fairies; (Editor's Note-—What's a t Why “wind. chi nd-water” doctor are Why do} & aque ? You answer to these que > graveya yuld understand why now badly situation in who BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Chita today las ared stiff any do with a ‘ou Koing to ¢ 400,000,000 people anyway I believes in fairiéa?”’ they g themselves. city up the ring ame a large opposite Hankow, na. A high hill cuts the town in.two, making it difficult jto wet about w years ago a road was cut Hen ie hill. A little while Jater the viceroy got a carbuncle on his neck ‘The Chinen ddetor told him the seat lot the trouble lay in the dragon under Wuellang hill. In blasting the ae they had cut Into the dragon's neck and he wan sore ROAD IS FILLE CARBUNCLE HEALED In a panic the viceroy ordered out the coofles he could muster, and had the road filled. Then the jdragon let his carbupcle he An American eng r bull! near & Chinese village. factory had a tall chimney the summer th rm-laden river wat d yphoid followed. med the chimney. people that evil spirits lwere climbing to the top of the \chimney and from there were vol planing down mto the town, A del egation of citizens waited on the on demanded. the stack is a fac The Dur * drank an epl tory demic of doctors b told the They torn There be down. are no graveyards in China. People are” buried all over |the place, in isolated graves... The in dotted with them. T wriggle thru them. Farmers. plow around them. The “wind andswater” priests have to find a proper placo for each corpse Jconsulting the two currents ning thru the earth=-the tiger rent and the dragon current amine the’ color of the and determine which is male and which female ground; and what not count reason is run- eur. OX- and the peace of the dead will be leveriastingly shot to ple | Building railways | therefore, instances next to !mpossible, |causo the feng-shul doctors, as these }"wind-and-water” geome called, Have taught the peor to disturb gravea will forever damn jthe living and the dead. Of course, the “feng-shul” priests can usually be “fixed,” in which Jcases some other resting-place c pital for treatment. | SIX INCHES FROM DEATH | cy This heavy concrete section of a gasoline filling station roof missed Mrs, H. R. Bronson by an even half foot, when) the car she was driving crashed into a pillar, at the wheel. The impact caused the roof to fall. Mrs. Bron-| son suffered a nervous shock and was forced ta yo to a hos-| She was seated he great § } the} 0 Native | by | ground | | and highways, is difficult and, in seme | be- | 000 People Who Still What’s to Be Done? jbe found “just as good” for the de | parted | S THRU WALLS ARE NEVER STRAIGHT Gates thru the walls of Chine They series of two never straight are “staggered,” or three \« f no! ina ag straigh past Evil spirits can in and so car In the same its “spirit t uch gates. hot h before the door at ateel way sereens” The gre kw 0 ied with the it those of ¢ located by t Hanyang. modern ma yuy, and rivaling w and er” | ) miles from the coke ovens Many om the ore a Chine Hed by an au. locomotive, or is run a river steamer, while try dge a devil, If a devil is one way to get rid of him nly to dart in front of some rapidly moving object, and the devil, | trying to follow, in struck or run over.| Wheelbarrows, in which most jeverything is hauled in China, are | purposely never greased. Their hid- cous speaks ‘and groans drive the devils away. | | What, the United States and “other! | ‘cat powers are asking, are you to do with such people? INTERVENTION OF POWERS MAY COME Yet, it is fully realized, something | munt be done if endless trouble maybe war is to be averted Banditry is on the rapid increase. In some provinces bandit gangs 90 powerful that they threaten to take over the local goyornments. In- | ternational intervention, perilous as that would be, may yet have to be resorted to, as the Pekin govern- or are | |ment tottérs. Pershing’s drive into Mexico after Villa was not ‘such a howling suc: | ces Yet he based his expedition on home What, then, would a punitive expedition into China be— $,000 miles across the Pacific—and | among such a hostile, uperstitious | and numerous peopl That's why the great powers are | scared. | JUST ASK OPERATOR LONTON, May 30.—“Hello opera. jtor, will you please give me the weather forecast for tomorrow?” | pat's the way it’s being done here | now, providing patrons call after | 5p. m. | We | Eng., May 30.—~Aj lcalf born to a cow owned by R. F,! has two heads and three| | COXWOLD, jeans. | DR. EDWIN J. BROWN'S DENTAL OFFICES 106 Columbia St. Seattie's Leading Dentist | for pg Ee a ‘BRINGS TO CHILDREN’S CHEEKS | Mother; Brew Dr. Carter's K. & B.| | Tew at Home—Good Health to All the Family | | Keeps liver and bowels in proper| [condition and ends bitious attacks) and sick headache, | Give to the children when peev jish, ‘Chey like it, and it acts very |gently on their little bowels. jaure you get Dr, Carter's K, & B “Only $86.00 Round trip Seattle to Excursion fares to ai Eaatern Points THE ROSES = THE GROTE-RANKIN OTTO F. KEGEL, President APRON THURSDAY at Grote-Rankin’s in the Month-End Sale Home Frocks $1.95 $2.95 Only fast color materials are used in the making of these Home Frocks. Dis- tinctive styles, the skirt cut generously full and finished with deep hem, clever touches of hand embroidery and low pricings are all attractive features of the showings. AT $2.95—The 1 m, made of fine b shade AT $1.95—T) Do die ec and nov die pocket —Second Floor $1.95 In the Month-End Sale Coats-Capes Suits 25.00 $35.00 $25.00 $44.00 $59.75 $59.75 Dresses $37.00 $44.00 All At Radical Reductions! Garments unsurpassed in style, materials and workmanship. Coats, Capes, Suits, Dresses, for all occasions. Sizes 16 to 44, —Second Floor $44.00 $79.50 18.00 $51.00 Month-End Sale of Dinnerware A clearance of dinnerware patterns that we will no longer carry in our stock. In this disposal is domestic, imported semi-poreelain and china dinnerware. There are plain white, white with gold and conventional patterns. The sets will be sold complete—32, 42, 50 and 100-piece sets—all at greatly re- duced prices. For example: 32-plece sets of plain white semi- porcelain, in the well-known Ranson pattern .. $3.98 Si-plece sets of Derwood white a8 gold dinnerware, $12 95 rrr) . reduced to ... +. an porcelain in 50-plece nets Americ in a conventional border $12 95 . $23.75 design for Several Patterns of Odds and Ends 50-plece set, with 18-k gold border; In Dinnerware Marked for Quick Clearance a very desirable dinner set Here are Cups and Saucers, Plates, Bakers, in fact dishes of all kinds. _ A Sale of A. B. Gas Ranges Offering Exceptional Savings on High-Grade Ranges. Sale Prices Include Connection and Fume Pipe. 50-piece set of American semi- porcelain, with pink floral dealgns fan 0-2 $21 95 50-plece Johnson Bros.’ English scarentn ice" $20.7 $28.50 50-piece English Semi-porcelain Dinner Set, Pasadena pattern. . 50-plece set of Bavarian China, the Stanford pattern, in black $ 5 and gu... 78.7, Hemstitched Marquisette 39c Yard 300 yards Hemstitched Mar- quiseste with lace-trimmed or At $25.50—Cabinet stylegswhite enamel oven door ‘ plain edges. In cream or.ecru, | panels; four burners. At $46.75—Ranges with elevated ovens, four steel burners, steel broilers, white enamel door panels; right-hand and left-hand models. At $55.25—Ranges with elevated ovens, glass doors, four burners and simmerer, enamel broiler, white enameled panels and splasher; right-hand and | left-hand oven models. At $69.50—Ranges with elevated ovens with glass doors, four burners and simmerer, white enamel splashers and- panels, enamel broilers. At $75.75—Ranges with elevated ovens, enameled broilers, white enameled splashers and panels, four burners. At $92.75—Ranges in all-gray and white porcelain, four burners, non-rustable oven, enamel broiler. At $123'25—Large size all-porcelain Range, en- amel broiler, four burners and simmerer; glass door. —Basement Floor An Unusual Offering of Handkerchiefs One-Half Price Regularly priced 15c to ic Puré linens, sheer cottons, Ppongee, crepe de Chine and” sport gihghams. Ginghams 15c Yard Amoskeag Ginghams, 27 inches wide, in an attractive range of patterns and colors for aprons and house dresses. French Percales 23c Fine French Percales, 36 inches wide, in a beautiful showing of patterns. Very fine | quality and fintsh, 5 SURE PROOF “Bridget, has Johnnie come from, school yet?" "Yes, sir. “Have you scen him?" STILL COMING WEST WINNIPEG, Man., May 80.—More than 00 persons were inspected and passed thru the Western prov: inces during March, according to No, sir. | Thomas Gelley, chief immigration “Then how do ‘you «know A si heres EXTRACTION FREE DAILY OHIO PAINLESS ¢ dQae Our Vy which 4 not cover the roof the mouth | you have two or ‘moro teeth. Natural Rubbee $5 0 2" wet of Teeth THEY WERE WED ~ ‘How did you chance to meet yt second husband?” “Oh, just by accident. He er my first husband with his auto," CUTCURA HEA] THING ECZEMA | On Hands In Blisters 3 Months, Burned and id Could t Not Wake “ Twas bothered tered. with eczema my hands for about three Tr broke out in blisters and : and burned. I could not put ray: hands in water or do my i work. I tried several nothing seemed to do much goo I began using Cuticura Soap Ointment and after using one © of Cuticura Soap and one box Cuticura be saiave Twat man, Wallowa, Oregon, 2, 1922, Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Tal~ cum promote and maintain skin. skin comfort and skin hi ‘The Soap to cleanse and Ointment to Liga and bh ‘Talcum to powder and me Dizzy Spells Are Usually Due to ‘onstipation When you are constipated, not enough of Nature’s lu- bricating liquid is produced inthe bowel to keep the food waste soft and moving. Doc- tor’s prescribe Nujol because it acts like this natural lubri- cant and thus secures regular bowel movements by Nature’s own method—lubrication, Nujol is a lubricant—not a medicine or laxative—so cannot gripe. Try it today. ToROTA LAXATIVE PS LUSRCANT ir present patronage seeohoinsne Work ts willl GAVIOg koed e tatlafactton, re y mes All work jArantoc or 1 Examination free. onc! OHIO CUT RATR

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