The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 29, 1924, Page 7

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UYALLUP FAIR'SALM'S BRIDE I$\(" MR. ARBUCKLE IS HERE DRAWS CROWD = MOTHER ig * paulliimus S Says It's Best in! Baby Son {heers Romance ie ‘ Twenty-Five Years of Millicent Rogers t YORK i Ladwig| 2 walled lust 1 von are! too, but hy Buropo whe over after his count has been ad fatherhood, but has not ited to the christening, and sof the family so there will It a be ht pound od it jooks like hia father, Millicent said t, $40,000,000 helrens, mar-| city, Janu-| s year. They went to} r the bride's father, Col wera, declined to accept Ludwig, and for a danced | over and brought back his daugh-| eptember crowd on baby cam LINES MISSING. Students at “U” Handled | Hold Last Rites | With Dispatch _for Lake Victims | Sit As ve Id Sun | diocks across r of J. Harned | wa, elr lives | sf0n ston cam . when the hall were thre lesing | - of Meany at 1 o'clock | f m 20 are clam eld Tue ng from James for Miss Margaret Delane effort to save whose life lads, together with were drowned. to receive thousands w fering for admi There were es, to be sure, but | § Y+|they moved fast; as a consequence | f the | were kept short and were dispelled tn | William | the course of about two hours, To-| The body | morrow there will be more lines, but | f m recovered. | owing to the improved ar : son of W. J./more systematized methods of reg Harned, 201 ave, S. Reed |tration now tn vogue, the registra. | was the son of Mrs. Minnie Reed, |tion offices at the university wilt! 3106 Sixth ave. 5. resemble a world's series | tay was the first of! tration seas vast! some stu y courses. | Zoth bridge and court| The cts about 5,000 | played, with - —equipped with the celebrated Lorain Oven Heat Regulator. Lorain equipped Gas Ranges enable you to cook and bake with- out even a failure. It allows you to do “whole meal cooking” in you are miles away. Every Clark Jewel and Reliable Gas Range is same high standard specification. A size and style of finish to meet every requirement of every purchaser, SEATTLE LIGHTING CO. 1308 Fourth Ave. MA in-6767 the oven while built on the MONTH-END CLEARANCE OF SMALL LOTS WOMEN ti PETTICOATS | rtment of bright nd black and Accordion - plajted in fancy effe to $2.05. 100 PAIRS WOMEN'S HIGH AND WHIT! ment (only 50e¢. PUN and $1.95. REMNANTS of Cotton Goods in wide variety of dress, lingerie’ and domestic weaves in desirable lengths. At sharply reduced prices. REMNANTS OF SILKS AND WOOLE in various useful weaves and lengths, also at sharply reduced prices. DOWNSTAIRE STORE 2,000 Yards of 36-inch: COTTON CHALLIE VERY dainty rose, Dre fering of Cottor Nine patterns attractive a SUFFICIENT forte: quantity den-like Challie 1 18 coloring Three-pound batts ortment of lattice-and-flow flower pattern th comforts 1 othe 6 for : 1] 8c YARD Special, Tu y, 18¢; 3-pound COTTON BATTS SPECIAL 1 this batt for filling 72x84-incl pecially priced, Tuesday, Complete With t gold z shapes—interlined, gold braid. plete Georgette Silk Shade Pp" TURED is on Lamps in this meer are gracefully turned and finished in the new- 1 color effects. le arm, cord and separable plug Georgette silk shades in several very skirted fringe Md trimmed in Low-priced, 100 BRIDGE LAMPS $8.95 e of three styles of w-priced offering. The Equipped with adjust Tuesday, at $8.95 com “Samples” of Curtains, Curtain Ends AT REMARKABLY LOW PRICES _— = Mr. Roscoe Arbuckle. BY LUCILIZ BUTLER M"*, OBCOE anes C KLE laug? Arbuckle of yore, but 3 At 22c Sample Curtain engi a the Squares in a variety of gen headline num lace and net styles wisi tlecacer| Average length one (1) n yard. Vatty in San wan due SAMPLE galow, At 75c— 114 yards. At $1.50 fringe. ——_. SAMPLE artificiz number of other fine quality Average length 114 CURTAIN ENDS in bun- Honitan and coarse nets and filet. Many with beautiful fringe. Average length CURTAIN ENDS in silk, filet-grande and a materials, mostly with yards, Bridge stand- attractive and Squares At 35c Sample Curtain Ends in Filet and bungalow and coarse nets. Some lace - trimmed _ styles. Average _ length 1% yards. VNSTAIRS STORE | { ie Mr. Arbuch overing 2 and endir minute ttal : Hl Seatth \y¥—gave * ven; Girls Should Ignore Men Who Try to Spee mo & Norma incident. | 1 friends. | A year. birthday R MISS GREY: r I wan there bond Ito me. » T made a mis do not know you,” You see,” he mused, half to iim. | Without saying anything? ef, “I had risen from the ranks.|the kind to encourage them. think a person often becomes | their speaking to me. famous without sort of recognizing! jit. Take old players with whom I Seto ignore the creatures. } There are some men who cannot believe that their attentions and remarks can possibly fail to flatter any I threw my home| Woman, They succeed so often with girls of a certain class ybody| that they look upon all women as easy prey, and they con- i been mower to| sider themselves perfectly irresistible even when they ad- be here! dress young women whom they know to be respectable. Overlook them, not ostentatiously, but quite innocently 1 have been/and naturally, as if ignorant of their existence. Not to be seen at all is the height and depth of humilia- A worked before I was recognized comedian—-I had a o them feel 1 a famous desire to m4 | was not up-stage; open tothemand made ev welcome. Had make friends I would not I was in no wise Rappe's death. nd innocent by a Jury J} women © responslbie for of 12 men | T have a great deal of | prejudice to overcome, but wherever I have had an opportunity to meet Beg Aaimeniarrmealtenin ein Dear Cynthia G years past I have been reading t! | | | tion for their odious kind. to appeal to their sense of fair p I have been able to convince t t Tam entitied to an even chance | latters written to you, and the kind om judge me by my fu-| letters of advice and help written | her than by my unfortu-|>y yourself in reply, and I have ast Jotten thought how kind—far from |the usual way of the world treating unfortunate people who need a little pee shown them, 13, 000 See Walla Walla Auto Show) For nearly two w vg {all honorable means to obtain em- WATts sb bi amy waht ‘auto | Ployment that I might live and be hy announcement| dependent of charity, only to be ont would pat the| turned down because of my age, till rent would put the)y really feel that I am down and thru the forest ro-| 0.1 lst of highways to be) “y ama natural-born eltizen of the j built by out of forest money. Uma-ltrnited States. Am near 60, an | tilla county has built five mites of] alone in this world. Strictly tem | road from Weston to the mountain| bemate—do not even use tobacco in jand will bulld five more next year.|any way, Was never drunk, never | Union county is arranging to bulld| committed a crime. Was never ar ja road as far as the reserve line.| rested, Naturally quiet | Over 3,000 pald ndmisstons to the| my own business. Tt has been sug | auto show during the first two days,| gested to. me that you might in | it was announced. lit, here ia about what 1 would like \Tuesday Last Day iy era j to File Returns |i. waces suits (L just finished | ‘Tuesday, September 30, ia the lust | WOrk for some people out on a small |day of grace for corporations that|Taneh, and for $35 a month). Am a | must file capital stock returns with |carpenter and have tools. Know lthe internal revenue office, for the| how to use them, Am handy at all July 1, 1924 to dune 30,| Kinds of work on a ranch and vre- , last, was the original | fer cotintry to city. I worked nearly , but an extension to September | five years at South Tacoma for tho nted by the government, |N: P. railway at car repairing, un til two years ago, when 1 was lforced out in the shopmen’s strike. I was one in four that did not voto yét we had to strike, 1 mighty slim sine then as 1 am tired of some way assist n “Ma” Ferguson Is | Eligible to Run} )ie fs: AUSTIN, "Tex, Sept, 29.—Mr 1 want a home, |\Miriam Ferguson, democratic nom-| knocking around, Lam the young governor of Texas, is eligible}est boy of a large, well-respected [to hold that office, District Judge|family. My mother stilt lv nd George Calhoun ruled here today, and Tam trying to help care ‘The ruling was made in answer to] for her W. 8. G ja suit filed by Charles Dic | Antonio atte Dog Found guson's name off the ballot, on the] My Dear Miss Grey I wish to ground that the state constitution|thank you very much for printing Jimplled the governor of Texas must} my letter fn The Star in Fe bo a min. my dog that 1 lost last week, We | inee for to keep Fer. years T have tried | and mind | to Them on Street; Do Not W Words on Them BY CYNTHIA GREY Very often whén I am walking the streets young men I have never seen before sp of course, } feel insulted. ” and pass on, or should I simply go on Please do not think that I am I do not, and hate the idea of | mothers, one in the exclusive upper | in getting em-| West End, the other in the inclusive | ployme As near as I can word jlower Kast were near nervous T can be comfortable | po | |Mothers in New York Fear| }flat on Monnoe st., aste Isn't it right to say “I} JANICE Cynthia Grey will recetve callers on Monday, Wednesday, and Friday. from 1 to 2 p. m, and Tuesday snd Thursday, from 11 to 12 @. m., at her of- fice in The Star building, 1309 Beventh e. found the dog thru your column and} certainly appre tion, MF A. MOORE. TWO CHILRDEN. ARE MISSING Kidnaping of Boy and Girl NEW YORK, Sept. 29.—Two |hysteria today as they of their missing children Mrs. Franklin Roshek, wife of a weulthy broker, sobbed in her lux urious apartinent® off upper E way for fear her 14-yearold son, Franklin, Jr., the hands of kidnapers. Mrs, M Butwich, wife of poor laborer, refused the kindly min istrations of neighbors in her little as sho ¥ Idyearstd daugh- “the little Re® Riding Hood" | t Side, who entered an} rire with (vo men Sunday afternoon and has not been seeh awaited re for news of he since | children, I shall inquire further into} § 10, it than you did into my impulses and | Police were working on the theory | that both children may have been | kidnaped A nationwide seareh ts today for the ehildren, under way Cloth that has been disfigured and the color changed by acid may usual ard to}ly be restored by soaking the spot a fow minutes in ammonia, fe your co-opert |e, = Cynthia Grey: f The Tangle LETTER FROM ALICE WHITNEY TO ALICE HAMILTON GRAVES M I haven't] | dared to think of you since I left that day after confessing to the hing which I did to y I prob rrible jyears to your age in the last weeks. I would not be surprised have made you doubt eve the world—yes, a He above; for I know, you believed in Lesli did in your God. darling mothe and me as you Looking back over the last few weeks I think I must have been in- sane, I know now how it fs t posedly respectable people c once surprise the community by com- | mitting diabolical crimes, and I know how they feel when they wake up and wonder what devil has been liv- ing in their bodies and working upon | them in satanic desires. Mother dear, I can tell this to no one but you, but I have always loved Karl, As a child I named (secretly) | my boy dolls after him, and you will remember I always loved and played | with boy dolls more than those repre: senting girls, As I grew older, he was the saw 1 I read. I used to t Was tho most fortu’ world becaus. his d up when he looked at } ut I used to cry myself to sleep night after night, when I saw how voted he was to her; and I think from my st childhood I grew more and to hate her f sho did, I know that I her with a mt ald have Jerous hatred for rl so unhappy when und married John, if I had not had a sneaking thought | that perha jme. I did eve now he would turn to} gs in my power |to sympathize with him, all the while trying to show him that there were girls in the world in whom great love such as his would beget | his love Mother dear, think back to the time when you were a young girl just budding into womanhood. Did you not have a great, romantic urge? Tam sure more gitls have it. You could not haye made me acknowledge it then had you tortured’ me on the ick, but waking [ thought of Karl, sroad-|and sleeping I dreamed of him, Wak-| port ling, my thoughts were more or less may have fallen into/ unhappy, but sleeping, Karl always] op sbattio, loved me, he was always my prince, with whom I was going to live hapr ever after. If you remember, at the time of | disagreeable. I had times of great elation and times of great unhappi ness. Mother dear, you put that down, as did all the rest, to my }, but I believe if ever I have moods. real hero of every play 1} n the stage a ry story | reating him as hated | sing such a profound re- sut I've been thinking a lot lately. In fact, I haven't much to do but think. Karl has been leaving me quit ittle alone. He is much dis- ap} , ne, and whether 1 will fever n back his regard, I do not know I do not, I do not want to mark? (Cop: 1924, by United Press) | TOMORROW: The letter continued. ‘Ad Man to Talk on | a Perfect Campaign What constitutes a perfect adver- g campaign will be told the Ad club Tuesday by F. 0. G. Schindler, of the Schindler-Smith agency. His subject will be “Funda- mentals of a 100 Per Cent Advertis- mpalgn.” Before coming to Mr. Schindler was asso- |eiated with Johnson, Read Co. of |Chicago. This company prepared the charts and material on which |Mr. Schindler will base his talk, | whic h will be illustrated with charts. H. C. Campbell, president of the | Western Engraving & Colortype Co., |who attended the London conven- | tion of Associated Advertising Clubs jof the World, will speak on “Echoes |From the London Conyentio Philippine Leader Sees Independence Sailing from Seattle for the Philip nes Monday, Manuel Quezon, pres- nt of the Philippine senate, sald that he expects his country to be |given home: rule by congress within |a few months, Complete independence of the islands, he said, will follow | within ears. Quezon arrived in es several the United months ago, and has intervening time working at the capital in the interests of Philippine independence. He said Monday, that leaders of both parties | ne ured him they favor his pla sr the islands’ freedom, Port | Mavastne to | Open Agency Here Port and |spent the Terminal, a national |monthly. publication issued at White- stone, N. ¥., devoted to exploitation {of American ports and to the devel: opment of American ‘inland water- ways, will establish in Seattle an agency for the purpose of handling the magazine's business in the mas jrinc and waterfront circles of “this city and Termina? récently car |ried an extensive article on the port il which this city’s wa+ erfront possibilities were exploited jand in which the port's present fa- cilities were aptly deserilged, | aited | Lestio's wedding, I was particularly |LODGE MEETS TUESDAY Seattle Lodge No, 7, Degree of Honor, will meet in Evergreen hall, 1409 Ninth aye, Thesday night, at | ‘ards will be enjoyed from and dancing from 10 to 12 public is invited I'm not blammg you at all, You} are the sweetest and best mother that ever lived, You only trusted to my common sense and sane intelli. gence too much, You/did not take into consideration that most children must be taught all the ethics of life. Strango, isn’t it mother dear, to A Sensational Announcement |] Avilt bo made in Tuosday's Star, Tee ce Aeknt lo pave motte | don't miss it Friedman’s Union Store

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