The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 9, 1923, Page 14

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

} coe sammy ment and federal hospital No, 59 at of compensation and hospitalization. * Association’ with his two oldest “ehildren has resulted, he claims, tn ~ Was first taken to the hospital, is ~ and hospitalization because he hasn't | World Looks ay ; Hinders Gov » BY LELAND HANNUM « Life is a pretty hard proposition ‘at best, but when you have no money dependent on you and you are aft ‘Mileted with that’ dread disease, tu: Dereulosis, it may seem that there Is nore coli gray than. warm, cheery to your own little clouds, And that’s the way George G, Wilson, late of tho United States army and the Seattle fire depart feels. “Wilson told The Star Thursday that he js without funds, dependent on a small charity from the Social Welfare league and the King County Veterans’ Relief society and in need their having contracted thelr daddy's ‘OWN affiiction as a skin test recent: Jy showed, The baby, born last Feb- ruary, just a month before Wilson thus far free from tuberculosis. _ And with all these troubles on his ‘mind, Wilson is downhearted. and feels that the world, at least the local Office \of. the “Veterans'; bureau, is against’ him, and that ho tsn't get ting a-square deal. He was dis- charged from the Bushman hospital aha At Tacoma ‘about a month ' an@ he can't get. compensation the necessary evidence under the “And he is worried over tho welfare ot. sting little wife and the of the Veterans’ bureau} Tepareiny acter that Wilson ts/ jot tion and. compensa, it because he has been | This Sick War Veteran _ Red Tape et. Here Explains His Case thus far unable to show sufficient evidence that he contracted the dis | ease while in And a wifo and.three small children | amended Sweet law the veteran must | or a bureau physician such @ state, of affairs within three yeara after dato of discharge from service, son's examination affidavits, say, were eight months past the lim: | of his case had shown that there was no alternative, Black for ernment Aid; Bureau Under tho} Leo, show thru examination of his own! Wit they it and they can not keep him tn the | hospital nor give him compensation | legally, ‘They added that tt ts not the policy of the bureau to clacharge & man from the hospital If he is too sick to leave, notwithstanding the fact that} his claims may not be what they) should be, but that a careful survey | So there you are, Laws are made to be abided by, and notwithstanding personal feelings, the bureau is bound to obey them, But when a} man ts Ht and has a family of Ittle} helpless children, and his pockets ar empty, and he 1s being supported by charity, life has a dark outlook, And! Wilson is worrled, } Harold Lloyd Will Make Own Pictures| LOS ANGELES, Cal. Nov, 9—| Branching out for himself, Harold Lioyd, film comedian, has purchased | a dOucre studio qyte west of the alty, It was announced today, Lloyd | plana the expenditure of $1,500,000 | in: completing» his film plant, | ——_ ~-+-- | “The world’s largest salling vessel is 482 feet long. It spreads 60,000 | feet of canvas, | Freedom and the College, _ Meet, The Russian Soviet Republic, Fortune’s Fool -He Was “Just Folks,” Sons and Lovers. “FREEDOM AND THE COL- LEGS,” “Alexander = Meikeljohin, formerly president of Amherst cot-| fege; Century Co. The. book is a collection of the most significant pronouncements of} the educator whose uncompromis | ing stand on the trend of Ameri-| tan education, especially in the col-| loges and universities, last summer captured the attention of the entire country and has raised a storm of comment. Mr. Meikeljohn says fn his Intro-, duction: ‘These papers are at- tempts to define and to describe} the teaching and the learning, of} freedom. ‘In all of them the under- fying question is, how can a people) bé kept steadfast in fts determin- ation tobe free; how can citizens, foung or old, be trained to be in- telligent and efficient in the pursuit ‘of freedom of activity? | “With one exception, these papers) were all written during the last six} years, ‘that is, since the entering of the United States into the great war. 1 am interested to note, as I read them again, that, with one ex-) ception, these later papers are all affected by what we call the ‘post-) war state of mind.’ It may be! worth while to make allowance for this fact as the papers are read.” eee “NEVER THE TWAIN SHALL) MEET,” Peter B. Kyne; Cosmopoli-| tan. That [illustrious and beloved Irishman, Peter B. Kyne, creator) of Cappy Ricks, and many another| enthralling tale of Pacific Coast Waters, has just discovered the} South seas. And all the high ro- mance, all the exotic coloring !s ‘crammed into the new novel, “Never the Twain Shall Meet.” Imagine a successful, hard-head-| ed business man of San Francisco! guddenly saddled with the guardian-| ship of a-South Sea island princess. | Imagine her falling in love with him with all the impetuosity of her race. She was called Tamea, Queen of Riva, but there was nothing) tame about her, unless it was the trusting, adoring. caress she be- stowed. upon stalwart Dan Pritch-/ ard as she nestled under his coat) lapel, and defied the world to take) him from her. Imagine that another girl, a typ!-| cal product of civilization, cultured, intelligent, self-restrained, but ar-/ Sent, {6 also in love with him Tamea had kissed Pritchard twice within five minutes! But Maisie Morrison had allowed Dan to kiss her only once in 12. years. | Then imagine the dilemma of this young Californian. He is young,| with adventurous longings unsatis-| fied by the prosafc life of a ruc- cessful business man, strong sense of the sponsibilities of civilization. great affection (which he analyze very well) fot Maisie. En-| ter Tamea—fragrant, sensuous, of fering delicious posaibilities—includ- yet with a ties and and re- ing social ostracism and financial doom. | Which did he choose for his/ mate? | It would be unfair to the reader| to give away the secret; Pete Kyne tells the story with a characteristic skill in narration which sweeps you| to a conclusion as satisfactory as it is unexpected. cee | “THE RUSSIAN SOVIET RE- PUBLIC,” Edward Alsworth Ros: Century Co. | Probably no book so far publish-| ed in English gives so accurate, so readable, #0 vivid an account of what the soviet republic has done during its first critical years, And taking this latest book with the| author's two previously published volumes in his Russian trilogy, namely “Russia in Upheaval” and “The Russian Bolshevik ‘olu-| tion,” it is provable that the three| give the truest picture available in English of the revolution that un-} seated Nicholas the , the revo-| lution that unseated Kerensky the! and the jurse of the Ne from its establishment thru ita first tremendous years. Professor Ross preserves the im- partiality of the historian. He ex- poses the dismal failure of nation- alized Russian industries and shows the communists steadily retreating 1918 | batini; of the first importance. Henry | James, Sir James Barrie, Hugh Walpole, May Sinclair, Jack Lo +] Showing | | repre | Never the Twain Shall "| toward the capltalism they tmag-| ined was forever done with. On the other hand, he charges that the} division of Russian in the state de-| partment at Washington under Sec- retaries Lansing and Colby was al-| lowed to become a nest of Russian nobles and American husbands of Russian emigre princesses. | Professor Ross follows the facts wherever they lead. He believes| the agrarian revolution which !s rolling over the world breaking up great landed estate originated with the Russian upheaval; but he thinks that everywhere communist ideas have split and weakened the} Socialists, and that capitalism !s now safer and stronger than it has been in many years, i eee 8 FOOL,” Rafah Sa-t Houghton, Mifflin & Co. All who enjoy@d the Turld lights of the Fr s revolution “With Searamouchay dr the brilifant buc-| caneering days of Peter Blood, or} the adventures of the Sea-Hawk, the corsalr, ‘will now welcome with delight a turn-in Restoration Lon-| don with the always masterful Col.| Randall Holes. | Late of Cromwell's army, Col! Holles finds it impossible to obtain a commission with the royalists. At his wit's end for money, daily he becomes more impatient and embit- tered, until, careless of his reput: tion, he decides to fling away h or as well, and Duke of Bucking m the abduction of a popular act Of what hap- pens thereafter, of a thrilling duel and strango adventures, of “FORTUN n- dertakes for the Holles’s fight for redemption, batini tells in his finest style London is the background for this story, the gay and careless London of the Restoration, whose glitter and laughter were sudden- ly blackened by the specter of plague. Once again Sabatini makes the past not only live but fairly} shimmer with vitality, | eee “HE WAS ‘JUST FOLKS’,” com-! piled by Cash Asher; Laird & Lee. } This volume {s made up of tri- bates to the late Warren G. Hard- ing which appeared in a long list of American newspapers following is. death. | The life and character of the be loved president is thus presented most eloquently and completely. It ia rather amazing, in fact, the mul tiplicity of facts which are thus losed. ttle is given representation in the book thru an editorial w appeared on the age of T Star the day following Mr. Hard- ing’s death. “ere “SONS AND LOV H Lowrance; Tho This is the book that first call- ed attention to D. H. Lawrence's genius. The poetic beauty of and the deep sense of life England into an ization that here w new writer| don, among the better known, and a host of readers were moved to extraordinary ine, Year by year ‘Sons and Lovers' has reached a wider and wider au- dience on both sides of the Atlan- tie, gaining in vitality as time paes- ed. This is the ne author's edition this book uniform in with Mr yrence’s other This publication under the imprint happens to coincide the publication {n France first French translation of, and Lovers. of design novel: Seltzer with the Son of Grain Loaditice Exceed Old Mark WINNIPEG, Manitoba, a record inore figures of last y in the Western | commenceme ber 1, province since crop y @ 82,219 ¢ nting $ bushels, as ag 80,828 cars loaded, or 120. 28 bushels, from September 1 to October 14, 1922 The Bon Marche “I’m Here’’—Says Santa Claus Boys’ All-Leather Shoes | Made with heavy brown elk uppers, Goodyear welt sewed oak | leather soles, leather counters and rubber heels—on the Mun- son Army last. Full errs eee $3.50 to 134 . for 100 Girls’ Coats $8.95 and $10.95 Coats Which will be suitable for school and general wear, in unusually sof, pliant qualities of polaire, overplaids and stripes and tweeds. Tailored in girlish, jaunty styles, and An Important Saving! Sizes 8 to 14 i neatly finished. Beaverette and self collars. In shades of tan, gray, brown, navy and heather mixtures. Girls’ Wear, Second Floor—The Bon Marche vamps and soft toes. $4.0 Sizes 1 to 2 at.. Goodyear welt sewed, oak lea rm last, Misses’, 11% to 2, Sixes 5 to Slzea 11% to 2, Those fine big fellows, with convertible collars, all-around belt, with deep moleskin lined book and lunch pockets—just the coat for the fellow who’s going to school. and plain effects. knickers, $11.75. Sizes 214 to 6 at ther soles, $3.95 144 Prs. Growing Girls’ Oxfords $3.50 | Brown lace style, made with heavy oak leather soles on elther footform or Engtish last, with low rubber heels, Sizes 2% to 7, in C and D widths. | Upper Main Floor—The Bon Marche ‘ $4.50 | 180 Pairs Brown High-Cut Lace Boots Wide foot- | with school heels. Infants’ and children’s sizes have spring heols, Sizes $%4 to 11, $3.45 most of them fur collared, % trasting materials, Bizes 2 to 6. ored styles, good quality polairc. Fellows! Don’t You Want a Other Mackinaws $7.50 and $8.50 All-wool Suits, for school or dress, two pairs Brushed Wool Sweaters, striped in school _ colors, $7.75 and $8.45. , “Black Bear” Mackinaw $9.50 Mackinaw _ Overcoats 4 to 9, $5.50. (in nifty lent value, $1.65. Rain Hats, 75¢ to $1.25. Upper Main Floor—The Bon Marche CHRISTMAS TOYS! Everything is ready—lots of toys for gifts—lots of fun and scores of little folks going wild with joy delightful new things. 12x4 Steam Engine $2.50 Stands u| has p brass base plat firebo wheel 2 American Flyer in diameter, pright, lished boiler, n, iron x; Fly “% ins, Doll Bu Mechanical Train $5.00 Passenger train 26 Inches long Flat Fiber esy $4.50 Rape ameter. enene ayith Natural finlsh—loom woven piston rods and brake, tender, _jmported Jatesl. Bound | co’ gRugo car and coach, stations | sruetion: 16 Inches long and semaphore; 4 sections straight inches hi double sp and 8 curved track for 103 inches. oval wheel: Fourth Flo In the Food Shops Armour’s Star Eastern Hams Extra fine cor Freshly Butte ude churned Mammoth New York Cheese, rich, creamy, Ib Armour's Star Sileed packed under rome iy Ib fe 4 Tomatoes 12'/c Dozen, $1.50 Madrona brand, large fresh, clean, 1923 at Happy Home Sweet Cora, fancy product each Yacht € Veltow Venches, large cans, in Byrup: dosen, $2.60) eac Silver Run Early Sifted small, fancy pea doz. Rellanee Chinook Saimon, cans fish; doz can Union Square Pumpkin, cans left; special, can Bon Marche Bread, Delicious, who Butterhorns, walnuts; 6 £ Pound Cake, Cake Butter witt Congr Apple Bakery—Upper Main Lb. 31c n-fed hams—by the 400 the plece onl small Jelly, Paul's Switt Cream b Ten Macon, | | mndo of fre nt su- | Hom Marche May b. de fresh and unt can Walnuts, . Ib. A new lot Special cans, | Bon Kpecial Shlend cial Saturday, 1b Kernel B ihe. tor doz re delicious blend of black tea Citag 2 Ibs, Sey 1b abe heavy | New Oranges, Sunkist, thin h akinned, sweet nnd” juley rea dozen si, Binek Figs, 1b iz Chocolate, $ Ide jist a dozen, | Cherries, jie | daintics'n i Loaf 10c; 2 for lesom: baked freshly! Tracks and ¢ Coffees Cakes White and Devil's I Cakes at oor—The Bon Marche From the Candy Section Assorted Chocolates 59c Lb. Cream Nut Roll 42c Lb. Food Shops, Upper Mal in Floor—The Bon Marche 15¢ for SAtur 100 offee, x1 . “ S100 Genuine Orange Vekoe Tea, a made candios and other y priced. 19c filled . 25¢ Layer 756 ——_ Walking and Talking Dolls $3.00 Unbreakable Composition Mama Dolls, stand hes high, painted hair and eyes, with fig- ess, also shoes and stockings. Dressed Dolls $1.95 Jainty dreasen—dolls full jointed, sleep. good wig. Lithographed Drums $1.00 With black hoops and The Bon Marche Overcoat Supremacy At The Bon Marche $34.50 Nationally-known garments made by Michael Stern Kirschbaum Unsurpassed —for style —for variety —for real value! A wide selection of the latest models and colors. Raglan and set-in sleeves, plain, half belt and belt-all-around styles. In plain grays, brown and fancy plaids and heather mixtures, i; Men’s Wool-Mixed Underwear Heavy weight Wool-mixed Shirts and Drawers. Durable, well-made garments, in natural gray. All size Garment MEN’S SHOP La Main Floor, PIKE Baby Shop Specials! 50 Infants’ Coats at $5.95 Polaire Coating in tan and blue. Jaunty little belted styles, In aizes 2 to 6. Wool Jersey Dresses Wool jersey is the smartest wear for tiny tots, and these dresses are gaily hand em- broidered, tucked, or trimmed with con- In winter shades, Little Tots’ Coats For ttle boys and girls, nizes £ 10 6, In nicely tail- fashioned Fur collars, Baby Shop—Second Floor Corduroy and Wool-mixed Knickers, excel- Rain Coats, $3.75 to $10.00. Kid Body Doll? to Dress, $4.95 Real kid body, fully jointed; 17 inches high—with eyelashes, sleeping eyes and sewed wig. (a ef; the Lower Second Ave, Entrance exciting new toys with him that we have been working beavers to get him we've enjoyed bully much as we hope you'll enjoy seeing It! and be sure and him your name address, so he answer you. boy and girl too! Fourth Floor $5.95 tinations quicker and in much better condition forelgn countries and their “last-minute” date Australia & New Zealand Nov.21 da (Lower Province) Dec. 20 ina (Interior) . Denmark .. States $8.95 of And sure enough he tet And he brought much hundreds of tled. He's an awfully Jolly old ehap, tho, #0 ng hin workshap on the Fourth iloor—as Write to him, tell- ing him what you want for Christmas, He has a toy for every little who comes to see him, Christmas Postoffice and Wrapping Service—Open Saturday, Fourth Floor Packages mailed before the last few weeks arrive at their des- Belqw fs a list of ike tell can si Ch South Afrien .. Yukon | Territory | Ite Horse Good plaids styles) sizes Washington. lacy styles. Crepe de Chine Gowns $5.95 over the lace, insets and In honey dew, They are trimmed with twisted Lady Fair ribbons. flesh and orchid, Dainty to give or to own! Lacy Silk Step-Ins $2.95 Some of these are in the dashing French style, with full lace frilling up the sides, and others content themselves with lace edgings and touches @f ribbon. Good quality creng de chino and sadium, Shades of orchid, flesh and honey dew. Second Floor—The Bon Marche white cords 17-inch Jointed Face Powders, in all shades, | Duo Compacts, $1.25. assorted de 5O¢ and 75¢. Toilet Water, in all floral odors, signs Dolls $1.50 Luxor Cold Cream and Vanish- $1.00. Balancing ing Cream, 50¢. Juna Bloom ‘Toilet Water, Clown Full jointed, with shoes Luxor Rouge, in medium and $1.25. Performers stockings. doll has eye Sunglow shades, 5O¢ and | Rybi's Perfume—a new odor; lashes, sledping eyes and mo. $1.00. ounce, $3.00. hair wig. Upper Main Floor—The Bon Marche “Perrin’s” French Gloves—“The Glov —are here in a complete line. most popular new numbers: French Lambskin Gloves $2.50 Made-in 2-clasp style black, white, beaver, gray and tan, Fine French Kid Gloves $3.00 French Kid Strap Wrists $4.50 A popular style, pique sewn, with heavy embroidery, In mode, beaver, gray and brown. Upper Main Floor—The*Bon Marche $1.95 In black, white, brown, gray, beaver, log cabin and silver. “Onyx? Silk Stockings at $2.50 With smart “Pointex” heels and lisle hem tops. black, brown, gray, fieldmouse, otter, cinnamon and nude. Upper Main Floor—The Bon Marche For Women and Children $1.50 Inside design. Handkerchiefs 18c—3 for Ma Floor—The Bi he mpagme ..Dec. 13 Tub Silk Gowns $3.95 Pure silk, tested by the University of launder nicely and wear beautifully. In and tailored Shades of orchid and flesh. ‘A very special price for pure Silk Crepe de Chine Gowns—and these are full 60-inch lengths, with the lovely new, wide armholes, lace edged, Luxor Toilet Preparations Popular New Perrin Gloves s of Quality” Here are some of the with Paris-point or embroidered backs, Perrin’s best quality—yery smart 2.clasp style, in Parls-point ot heavy three- and five-row embroidered backs. Black, white, brown, gray, tan, beaver and mode. Full-Fashioned Silk Hose Reinforced heels, toes and soles, with garter hem tops of Iisle. In shades of Handkerchiefs 2 for 25c Imitation Tissue Handkerchiefs with small striped borders—pure linen ones in solid colors—'kerchiefs of sheer lawn with unbelievably dainty colored checks, while others adopt the solid colors and embroidered selection ues. Pongee Handkerchiefs ornamented with stitchings In brilliant shades; pure linen in solid colors with cleverly embroidered corners and corded offects, and unusual Paisley affairs combine to m: a most: pleasing problem. All are splendid v Wil In black, 50c novelty

Other pages from this issue: