The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 23, 1923, Page 2

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PAGE 2 ATTLE STAR TUESDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1928 Boxer Bringing Reindeer|1%0. OZEN CARCASSES COMING RONDS AWAIT. yi oME I HOMES BUMWAU) FOR BETTER AMERICAN HOMES BEDROOM FURNITURE reductions— AMBRICAN at extraordinary OUT 10 AMERICAN MARKETS Bureau of Education Ship Misses One| Port, So Teacher Must Wait Six Months for Her Next Mail | By Seaburn Brown Ever live annoyed be ame in an hour late? Thar may be you like to be a school teacher at Shismaref inlet, Alaska, and have to wait for your 1 ‘or the Just because a bit of rou should happen to preven ing of a ship? month—and now will wait unt!) tron grip of ice. The sturdy little motorship Boxer turned over to the Alaska of the federal eau of ation now nearing th. of Seat tle on the rety 4 Yoyage Into th of the Alaskan coasts, landing on her lone above-mer ned ing served 40 governm bringing out an unus 2,500 reindeer carcasses for can markets. town and be ‘evenin’ mail But how'd x me spring breaks every e with the al cargo of Ameri- “This reindeer meat ven the way of an experiment Wagner, head of the Seattle office. explained Tuesday. “It 1s our belief . that a valuable trade in this line can be built up. In addition to h @ total of 101 native school Work includes medicinal relief among the Eskimos and Indians and the @are of reindeer herds. Transports tion difficulties have until this time stood in the way of commercializing the herds, but if the initial attempt/ shows a profit the reindeer industry may develop into something worth | while.” | But tne trade activities of the| Boxer, which ts also carrying a quentity of furs and tvory, are of secondary importance. It ts neces gary that all of the schools, along | the coast as well as inland, be vis-| ited twice a year for renewal of} supplies. Conl, mined at Wain, wright, In Northern Alaska, {s dis-/ tributed, in addition to general | freight and mail. “In all some 4,000 natives—with @ few whites who aro distant from | of the interior; and the Boxer has wolved the problem of reaching Mearly half of them,” Wagner said. “On her maiden trip, which con- gumed the time between May 21 and July 28, sne did not cover the entire field; but since starting on ‘the fall voyage, on August 4, every School on the coast has been ROUGH WEATHER DELAYED THE SHIP The Boxer was expected to ar. Five in Seattle last week, but owing to rough weather in the Bering sea, GENUINE BULL DURHAM TOBACCO Pullmans California From Seattle to San Francisco Los Angeles Southern Pacific Ly. Seattle ...... 11:45 p.m. Ar. San Francisco 11:30 a. m. Ar. Los Angeles.. 7:55a.m. For Reservations jone liott 5580 attle ico Seattle Ticket Offi 1407 Fourth Avenue ) probabl | training are not regarded as suffi-| dock about the 10th of | Efforts to alleviate the tnevita jonelin f life in the Ne made by fy wives together wheneve: In many th hes in one of the 1s ry husband acta as the phys n or tends to the reindeer herds n the same port | Most of them appear to like the once they are used to It, and] s surprising how fow to ration when a vessel | fn an infrequent appearance,” was Wagner's statem Woman Hit by Auto in Tacoma Is Dead TACOMA, Oct — Mrs, Simes, one of two persons struck by @ speeding autolst on a city t Sunday evening, ts dead as a of her injuries, while the victim, Loretta Smith, 3-year id chil jowly ig. Police search has failed to reveal the iden tity of the driver of the death car. acing wish 23 cove ITY FIGHT for the Ra-| nity will be held Fri-| 26. Mr. R.| rated lecture | on the future of light and power} in Seattle. | belief of Br Ella | y | No haze obscured the beauty of Its HEALER'S WORK Isaiah Spends Monday Blessing Handkerchiefs BY LELAND HANNUM Noarly ing Brother 1 er, of Biloxi, M when he was @ 1,000 persons were await aiah, famed faith heal s., Tuesday morning sled to start his 48th day of “miracle working’ at the Kirkland auto park. He wil remain at Kirkland for the rest of at he bh this week, least, ay an nounced. other Isalah did not demor powers Monday The an pa euler took the day off to tho thousands of handkerchiefs left with him by bellevers and which are said to have curative powers when 80 blessed His “vacation” followed a hard day Sunday, when between 5,000 and 8,000 persons visited the huge tent at the auto park Lake Washington and its shores rk and dreary with n gath reported healing joa ent tr were wd beg the tent. But as her Isaiah and his dis Kirkland oania in Tuesday morni 1 their belief that the elemer re divinely favoring the little town and {ta farfamed visitor. Thick tufts of fog draped the tall- | masted lumber boats and barges all around the lake, but Kirkland wae free from {ts depressing influence. bright f wooded hill and bright white dwell ing houses "God smiles on Kirkland and BrotherIsaiah,” aa an aged half-blind woman devoutly remarked aa she stepped from the ferryboat Tuesday morning. American Groans When Australians Play Ball Max Miller Sees Favorite U. 8S. Sport! Murdered in BY MAX MILLER (In the Melbourne Herald) America’s national game, baseball I've seen murdered, slaughtered, sat upon, turned upside down, annihi to appear exactly as Australian foot: | ball would appear if played by Americans. Fitzroy lost to St, Kilda 7 to 3 in the Fitzroy field on Saturday after. | noon. But to this story the score is! incidental. So are the names of the teams, So was the score-board, | which for the first time in my life! I saw placed on the same side as| the grandstand, Instead of on the) Opposite side. But wait, that much is nothing. And nothing, too, Is the confession that Saturday was the first time I ever saw baseball played in bare knees. And nothing, too, {s another con-| fession that Saturday was the first | time I ever saw baseball uniforms! of which the trunks were of an en- tirety different color from the jump- ers. (Maybe here they are called shirts or jerseys.) And Saturday, too, was the first time I ever experienced the sight of | a line between pitcher’s box and| home-plate. But one was not even enough. The Fitzroy field had two such lines. What for, or of what use, I do not know. And—this is the surprise of them | all—the signaling between catcher | and pitcher was done openly, was| done right out in plain sight, was performed directly before the eyes of both teams and all the spectators. | No, do not let me continue, I may say things unfair to beginners, yet how, oh how, at this signaling, the| Door throats of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth would have groaned, wilted| and finaliy choked. These scene almost was enough to make an American lean against the Nearest telephone pole and cry—cry ax if watching his dearest, sweetest, most loving friend being hanged, drawn and quartered. For that much | does an American worship his sacred baseball, To belittle the game is sacrilegious. DECISION HITS “U" GRADUATES Court Rules Normal Work | Necessary to Teach Announcement that the recent rul- ing of the attorney general's office has nullified the efforts made by the recent legislature to ron out alleged defects in the state certification law for school teachers was made Tues- day by A. 8. Burrows, county super- intendent of schools, “As the law is now Interpreted,” Burrows sald, “teachers who gradu- ate from the University of Washing. ton or from Washington State col- lege cannot teach in the grade schools without first attending one of the state normal schools for nine months and then taking an examina- tion. “This situation {s absurd, when four years of university or college clent to fit a teacher to do work that a normal school graduate tn en- titled to.” The changes hs passed by the last legislature, Burrows explained, would give the right to teach in any grade to graduates of university or four- year normal courses, and the right to teach in all grades up to the ninth, inclusive, to teachers completing a two-year university or normal course. Since the legislature adjourned, Burrows said, the attorney general's office has ruled that the state unl. versity and college cannot grant dl. plomas to teach in the elementary grades, even tho the graduates may pass the required examinationn. The matter will be discussed at the W. B, A, meet here Thursday and Friday, it was said lated, disguised, and, In short, made |‘ Ithe clas Melbourne Yet do not let me become harsh. do not want te be harsh, and to If from becoming #0, I close my eyes for a moment to pleture Americans at: to play Australian football Louis baseba.l diamond. FOR MOTHERS) Miss Madeline Veverka, superin- tendent of the primary schoola in Los Angeles, flayed the present} Americanization program, at a din- ner given in her honor by Seattle clubwomen at the Y. W. CG A, Monday night. “Too frequently the school falls short of its alm in Americanizing| foreigners,” she declared. ‘There| has not yet been developed a sys- tem in which the mother is Ameri- canized. The child 1s taught the| language and history of America in class; the father gets his knowl- edge from daily life, but the mother is ignored. This makes a widening breach between the wife and her husband, and the mother and her children,” Miss Veverka {s herself an Am- ericanized woman. She came to this country from Czechoslovakia when she was 10 years old. She receiy- ed her higher education at the Uni- versity of Chicago, at the Colum- bla university and at the University ot Colorado. Ordinance Provides Repair Work Cash A new bond issue of $200,000 to fi- nanee repair work on the municipal stroet railway was proposed in an or. dinance introduced In the city counct! Monday by Councilman John E. Car- roll. The repairs are to be made in the wholesale district south of Yesler way and west of Fourth ave. An ordinance proposing a $150,000 bond fasue for the project was introduced some weeks ago. It Is proposed to withdraw that ordinance in favor of the one providing the larger sum. EGGS SPOIL OWN CHANCE THE DALLES, Ore., Oct. 23-—~ Amateur yeggmen labored long to break into a local warehouse, and finally succeeded. Then, in their clumsiness, they turned the comb. nation on the office safe, which had been left unlocked, and were unable to open it again. Characters Picked for College Play Ruth Hecht, who scored such a tre. | mendous hit as “Mary Rose’ last | year, hag been chosen to carry a role} in “He Who Gets Slapped,” the all- University play to be produced in Meany Hall on December 7. Others who were successful In the tryouts are: Dr. Ralph M. Blake, Albest R. Lovejoy, 8. A. Nourse, Jr., Gertrude Doffson, Sidney Rood, Joe Greenleaf, Jr, Philip Roche and Ralph Neely, Military Prisoners Escape With Guards NEW YORK, Oct. 23.—Five mill. tary prisoners oscaped from the army reservation, at Fort Hamilton, Brooklyn, Monday, and two sentries who guarded them have disup- peared, URY VIEWS DENTAL WORK ALBANY, Ore., Oct. 23.—Dr, Har. old Jackson, dentist, won his suit for a dental bill when the court ex. amined the teeth of tho defendant and agreed that his molars had un. dergone repairs to the amount of Victor Console womens Model 215 i join our * STANDARD Console Club pay 5 down in the ror Co! membership cLun ured by t ment of only $5 4 which this No, 2 NKOLE Model chine in delivere . then You pa in small, ¥ payment leet your records As would books tn the our PHONO ord Depart- SEES NO HOPE FOR LONG LIFE Doctor Says Glands Have | but Temporary Effect | CHICAGO, Oct. 21—"Don't pin! too much hope for long life and in creased energy on monkey or hu man glands,” Dr. A. BE. WebbJohn. non, dean and chief surgeon of West Middlesex college and hospital, Lon Gon, warned today. The transplanting of glands ts in the experimental stage, Dr. Webb- Johnson told the United Preas when he arrived here for the annual clin fecal congress of the American Col lege of Surgeons. He believes giands have a temporary stimulat ing effect, but It is only a matter of time before th absorbed by the surround | Progresa may be made in the fu-| ture, he sald, because some success | has been achieved In transplanting giandas from one animal to another Dr. J. B. Eagleson, Seattle, said that life expectation has been in. creased abbout 10 years during the past 25 or $0 years. More than 3,000 physicians from all parts of the world are in attend. Ance. Tho congress will last for five days, CHIFFON VELVET Very thin white chiffon velvet fs to be very popular this year for wed- ding gowns, and naturally this tuxur: fous material needs little in the way of trimming. INDIGESTION!!! UPSET STOMACH GAS, GAS, GAS shew a few Pleasant Tablets, Instant Stomach Relief! Instant relief from sourness, gases or acidity of stomach; from indiges. tion, flatulence, palpitation, head. acho or any stomach distress. The moment you chew a few| “Pape's Diapepsin” tablets your | stomach feels fine. Correct your di- | hestion for a few cents, Pleasant! Harmless! Any drug atore.—Adver- tisement. IF BACK HURTS BEGIN ON SALTS No man or woman can make a mis- take by flushing the kidneys occa- sionally, says a well-known author. ity. Too much rich food creates | acids which ciog the kidney pores | so that they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the waste and poisons from the blood. ‘Then you} ket sick, Rheumatism, headaches, | liver trouble, nervous constipa- | tion, dizziness, sleeplessnoss, bladder disorders often come from sluggish | kidneys, The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, | or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of pas- sage, or attended by a sensation of scalding, begin to drink soft water! in quantities; also get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any relialy pharmacy and take a tablespoonful ; in a glass of water beforo breakfast for a few days and kidnoys may then act fine, ‘This famous salts 1x made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been; used for years to help flusu clogged | kidneys and stimulate them to activ. | ity, also to help neutralize the acids | in tho syatem so they no longer cause frritation, thus often relieving bladder disorders, Jad Salts ts Inexpensive and ean-! not injure; makes a dolightful effor. vesoont Ithiawater drink, which everyone can take now and then to help keep tho kidneys clan and tho hlood pure, thereby often proventing serious kidney complications, By all means have your physician examine your kidnoys at least twice a your, Advertisomens | every item in our st Furniture is included Jedroom and odd ock of Quality complete suite pieces, Furniture from the best manufacturers in America, inecludin g those of the East and of the Northwest. Sale priced for the remain- ing days of this wee Wp At k, an opportunity for afford to miss, ance of our liber ing this sale. own Better Home. You are extended the a al, helpful credit service dur- ervic Setter Furniture that will make yours a “Your Credit Is Good!” saving that you cannot ist- e that will help you to 100 of these bedroom suites to GO at these supremely low prices: CHIFFORETTE VANITY DRESSER DRESSER 6720 8-in. top, 28x84-in. mir- ror. Silvertone gray enamel or combination walnut, Special for this sale, BED 5285 —full size, exactly as pic- tured. Silvertone gray enamel or combination walnut, Special for this sale, 4835 —exactly as pictured. 34- in. top. Silvertone gray enamel or combination walnut. Special for this sale. 6745 —46-in. top. Mirrors 18x 86 ins. and 10x26 ins, Silvertone gray enamel or combination walnut. Special for this sale. 100 of these steel beds tremendously reduced in price— this substantial steel bed. Vernis Martin or white enameled. g-in. fillers. posts, 2-in, Very special priced for this sale of bedroom fur- niture. STANDARD FURNIT URE CoO. L. SCHOENFELD & SONS Found SEATTLE fecond Ave, at Pine St. jeod 1864 TACOMA L. Schoenfeld & Sons Exonerate Husband in Heiress’ Death WHITE PLAINS, N.Y. Oct 2-—Charles H, Webb, husband of Mrs. Gertie Gorman Webh. heiress, who died under mysterous circum stances at the Westchester-Biltmore Country club, has been exonerated in @ presentment returned by the grand jury investigating the .wom- an’s death, Glasses $5.00 FREE EXAMINATION GLOBE OPTICAL CO. 1514 Wentlake Ave. Near Fourth and Pike In the extraction of teeth we say to our patrons: If we hurt you, don't pay—could wo say moro? Sot of Teeth From $5.00 UP Gold Crown and Bridge Work From $4.00 UP Boston Dental Offices 1422 Second Avenue Wo Stand the ‘Tost of Time 22 Years in Ono Location The findings of the jury wero handed to Supreme Court Justice Joseph Morschauser, Tapestries From Versailles Stolen PARIS, Dec, 23.—Two Gobelin tapestrites, valued at 2,000,000 francs, were stolen by unknown men, who worked thelr way into the chateau at Versailles today. The celebrated specimens each Measured 140 square feet and were among the finest of the Gobelin works. Suits Mixed; Bury Man in Wrong One SANTA BARBARA, Cai., Gct. 28. -—The clerk in a local hotel clean- |!ng establishment mixed two sult jtagu and the result is the best sult jof a Santa Barbara business man jes in another man's grave today. | The business man received the wrong suit. He notified the cleaner, who went to an undertaker and told him a mistake had been made. |The undertaker sald he was sorry but that he had just buried a man in the other suit, Girl Crosses Ocean to Meet the Groom VICTOIA, B. C,, Oct. 23.—Travel- ing from Yokohama to meet the groom, Miss Vera Jakovenko was married to J. D. Jones, of Seattle, when the Empress of Russia docked here. WHITE FUR IN USE White fur is used extensively this season to band gowns of black vel- vet. Paris cannot do too much with the black and white combination. Shoes for Little Folks Very Special $1.65 Pr. For little boys and girls we offer at a big saving Black Vici Kid Shoes, button style, good solld solos, spring heels. Sizes 5% to 8 Men’s Work Shoes Very Special $2.45 A great bargain of Men's Work Shoes in brown calf, with heavy hemlock soles and heels; a good fold shoe that will gi plenty of wear, Sizes 6 to 11, Women’s All-Wool Sweater Coats $4.95 Cloved-front Swoater Coats, heavy knit collars, full belted, with pockets; made from pure virgin wool; heavy weight. Col: ors; Oxford, gra brown and Navy, Specially priced for to. morrow, Wednesday, $4.95 ca. Misses’ All-Wool Knit Coats $3.50 In a heavy weight for school wear, Closed front, Tuxedo and slip-over styles, Colors: ‘Tan, brown, navy and red, trimmed in contrasting colors, Sizes 82 to 86, Very special, 8.50 each “SHE STORE THAT, SECOND AVENUE AT JAMES STREET OCTOBER MERCHANDISE SALE Double Inducements tomorrow—Wednesday—with every purchase. Note the fol- | lowing items are al! specially priced for tomorrow—Wednesday. $1.25 Cotton Bats Special $1.00 Roll Cotton Bats, size 72x84-inch; weight about & pounds. White, lily cotton; unrolls to full size comfort. $1.00 Crib Blankets Special 85 Each Crib Blankets, size 30x40inch, in pink and blue; assorted animal patterns, Satin Camisoles Special $1.25 Camisoles, made of a fine quality of messaline with double shirred, elastic top, in assorted light and dark shades. 35c¢ Men’s Sox Tomorrow 25c Pair Men's Sox, drop stitch Cash. merette, heather mixture ery dressy; regular — price 860; Wednesday, special, 26¢ pair, Fine Pure Wool Hose 95c Pair Women's very fine Cashmere knit allwool Hose tn cordovan, brown or black; an exceptionad value for Wednesday, spectal, 95¢ pair. 5 Lbs. All-Wool Blankets $9.00 Pair Size 66x80 all-wool Blankets ‘n pink and blue plaids with’ ribbon. bound ends. Boys’ Pure Wool Sweaters $3.50 Heavy Wool Sweaters, the slip-over style, with double collar, in all the contrasting school colors; sizes 28 to 36, Women’s Union Suits Special $1.00 Winter Union Suits in pure white soft wove finish cotton, in sleeveloss style or with long or short sleeves, ankle or knee length; all sizes, Black Sateen Aprons Special $1.50 Each Bungalow Aprons of black mer- cerized ‘sateen, trimmed neck, short sleeves and pockets with figured cretonne and colored rick braid, Men’s Heavy Work Shirts 89c Each Heavy Blue Work Shirts, cut full size and well made; regular $1,00 value, Wednesday, 89¢ each,

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