The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 28, 1912, Page 8

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per bottle : Prima Vista Burgun Bpecial, per gallon Regular prices of are $1.25. Gordon x $20 SA i . s x08 Ina. PROMPT DELIVERY WE HAVE NO VENDERS Ne. 900 MAGIC WHITK- O° Wash BRUSH, Se ‘The ey. bristle In this brush te 3% Inches I and inches wide. You can spread the white- wash or kalsoming right with one of these good brushes: you work easter with it; it is much more durable. 2c Whitewash Brush 1c 248% Fiber Scrub Brus te Go 14x44 Tampico Hand Brush $2.00 Linemen’s Climbers. .61.00 Be Ruby Lantern Globe Me l@c Red Fiber Lunch Box oe We Red Fiber Lunch Box... We $0 Japanned Dinner Pail.. 40c Tin Dinner Pall = ne BAI organs 1415-1417 FOURTH AVE. NEXT DOOR TO PANTAGES ost humane topic of the Pag “Children Who Labor, showing the vitality question when brought into our homes. “The Tenderfoot’s Trouble,” a Western comedy filled with the funniest situations ever seen ina picture. “A Visit to Madeira.” one of the most beautiful scenics ever shown. “The Little’ Match Setlew” a rama filled with human heart interest “The Taos at Home.” an edu- cational that is truly instructing interesting. Five (5) complete photo plays. Always a 10c Show for 10c Taught F Home Instruction Special Offer to Readers of The Star In order to advertise and intro duce their home study music lessons in every locality, the International Institute of Music of New York will give free to our readers a complete course of instruction for either Piano, Organ, Violin, Mandolin, Gul- tar, Banjo, Cello, Brass Instruments or Sight Singing. In return they simply ask that you recommend their Institute to your friends after! you learn‘ to play. You may not know one note from another, yet, by their wonderfully simple and thorough method, you can soon learn to play. If you are an advanced player you will receive special instruction. The lessons are sent weekly. They are so simple and easy that they -are recommended to any person or Nttle child who can read English. Photographs and drawings make everything plain. Under the Insti tute’s free tuition offer you will be asked to pay only a very small/ amount (averaging 14 cents a week) to cover postage and the necessary sheet music. No one should overlook this won-} derful offer. Tell your friends about it—show this article to them. The International Institute has successfully taught others and can successfully teach you, even if you know absolutely nothing whatever about music, The lessons make ev- erything clear. ‘Write today for the free booklet, which explains everything. It will convince you and cost you nothin: Address your letter or postal card to International Institute of Music, 98 Ave., Dept. 261M, New York, N. Y. THE SEATTLE NOBODY—By Meek. HURRAH FOR TAFT WHOS DOING THE SHOUTING FOR TAFT? The Capital stock of the Washington Trust and Savings Bank *_ ie owned by the stockholders of ‘The Dexter Horton National Bank of Seattle A SAFE BANK With Savings deposits of five millions of dollars and a Capital, Surplus and Profit account of an ad- ditional half million, the Washington Trust and Savings Bank is the largest Savings bank or Trust company in Washington CONVENIENT BANK Located on the ground floor of the New York Build- ing, at the northeast corner of Second Ave. and Cherry St.—the heart of the business and financial district—easily accessible from any part of the city. BANK OF COURTESY Where prompt and efficient attention is every The wage earher and are ac- YOUR ACCOUNT WILL BE APPRECIATED INTEREST PAID AM “smc” 4% WASHINGTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK Second at Cherry DIRECTORATE: New York Bidg. N. H. LATIMER Cc. J. SMITH J. W. CLISE W. H. PARSONS M. W. PETERSON C. E. HORTON R. H. DENNY Today's Btyles Today BRADBURY SYSTEM Suits are now offered in all the latest fab- ries——tweeds, serges, cashmeres, worsteds and mixtures—-in a large assortment of the most attractive and popular shades, comprising the new blues, grays, browns and tans. Foremost among the latest mod- @ els for young men ts the full box- back Coat. A selection is very easy from such a large stock, together with our liberal credit plan, and the prices are the same ag cash. $25.00 to $35.00 on Credit |) EASTERN Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Alo., Near Union St. “*Seattle’s Reliable Credit House”’ That Heips PERSONAL ATTENTION TO YOUR TEETH In this big office your teeth ¢ thoroughly examined, f there is no charge, then your case In taken by the proper opaaiatinn in your particular work, and the same dentist will give you hin per- sonal attention every time you call, All expert Tentizte—ne stu- dents—with a complete equipment to perform the work painlessly. We Cut the Cut Rate Prices EXAMINATION AND ESTIMATES FRE! Silver Fillings. ... ate ta fee | Gold Crowns as low ax Platinae Fillings to $1.50 | Sets of Teeth as low as.... Gold Alloy Fillings. 61.50 to $2.50 | Painless Extracting. . Free ALL WORK GUARANTEED 15 YEARS that guarantees without reserve. Good in the com- ny’s com, 202 Commerce Bldg., Everett, ol -gttlcon, $91 s. ‘erett, and 212 Exchange UNION CUT RATE DENTISTS Srd and Pike, Entrance 305% Pike NDERTAKING PARLORS BROADWAY AND UNION LT ET SAY YOU SAW IT IN THE STAR. | |two mounted men on c' Skwves hy) y Berton Braley When fashion first springs so We laugh at it loudly or jeer it. Woe all shrug our shoulders and glance askew, And swear we will never come near it, Hut presently all of us note the new style, And quickly thereaftern.we grab it, And the fashion at which we were aiming @ smile,» Instead of @ freak, in # habit. Xx mothing “utter” and new, You swore up and dowawen would NEVER put on ‘Tho sort of a hat that wass"intest,” Yet that is the atyle of a Dit that you don And claim is the best anditle greatest Your good wife declared shedwould NOT wear a skirt So tight that she scarcely gould “wobble,” Yet here she comes pattering, natty and pert, In & gown that's excessively hobble MORAL: Now, fashion’s lke vice—ferat first you endure, Then you pity the peopleiwho chase it, And then you reapond tofthe mode and ite lure And fall into line—and ® mbrace it! Se YOU'LL FIND IT HERE NEWS OF THE DAV CONBENSED FOR BUSY PEOPLE REE AMEKHAAK EH * * ‘* OECIDE WHAT 16 PERFECT & * WIFE * * NEW YORK, Feb. 26.-—The #® ® requirements for the “proper # % wife,” according to the John 0. & & Rockefeller, jr, bible class, de # & termined after a lengthy de # % «Btraight shoulders, & Wide hips, ® «Physical vitality and Intel & ® lect. * % According to those present, # & John D., jr, took a prominent .* ‘Ww part in the debate and en * & dorsed the conclusions: * * * RRA AAEED University Community club wil! meet tonight at the branch library, EB. 60th and 10th a . amendment proposed to the city charter, The bond issues will be discussed. Everybody ts ly invited. Built for $2,500 damages has been commenced against the Anderson Steamboat Co. by Mrs, M. 8. An- derson for alleged injuries recetv- ed when the plaintiff tripped on @ joose rope as she was about to board at Muskingum landing, ‘anhington, on October 30. jon Co, has fraction of a city ordinance when the city is said to have thrown jogs and piles into the barbor, Oc tober 18. The company cla this was the cause of the smashing of @ propeller on the Kitsap. SRE REREE HEED AT THE THEATRES i jeore—Robert Mantell in # “Richelieu.” babe Vaudeville, oe & Orpheum—Vaudeville. % Grand——Motion pictures and ® = vaudevilic. * ® REAR RARAHERH Ww. F. cumeari, N. M., arrested here 17, left for that place in company with a deputy sheriff. yest Buchanan {s charged with tho em» bezziement of $3,500, He waited! extradition. A reward of $200 given to Detectives McNamece @n@) Cornetison for the arres' Central Mission Study club will meet at the Y. M. C. A. tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock. The meet- ing takes place in room 216. A meeting of the board of direct- ors of the Washington State Art association took place yesterday in the museum galleries, Fifth av. and Union at., and twelve members were elected, Feb. 28, 1862, just 50 years ago today, Gen, U. 8. Grant returned to Fort Donelson from a trip to Nashville that was to give him trouble. Fo nearly two week Gey. H. W.. Hal- leck at St. Louis had been pacin the floor in fume because he did not get an answer to a tele gram sent Grant. Meantime generous souls in St, Louis and elsewhere were telling him that Grant was probably drunk, As a matter of fact, Grant had not received the telegram, Mrs, History says, because there was an operator between St. Louis and Donelson who was @ rebel at heart, and he did what he thought best with the j telegram. ‘These gentiemen who call a coward must forget As soon as the board of public purchases horses for such a purpose, Chief Bannick will place trol service, The money cently voted by the council, The men to be assigned to this new duty have not been selected. Mrs. Louisa J. Suffern, a 68, for the past ten years a resident of Seattle, died yesterday at the resi- dence of her daughter, Mrs, J. 8. Judah, 722 N. Broadway. Funerad services will be held from the resi~ dence tomorrow afternoon at 2 o’cloek, : Straw hate and dusters are worn in Alaska during this, the mildest winter on record. It sounds like a frost—one of Jack's. »|must remember life is not all one ‘Tis cruel to rub pepper in somebody else's wound, is % not? ‘Tis, Hut that’s bal within ond district Jowa did to Mr. Tate Ga, O. P. elephant when they ushered | al Into congresston al Hfe one Irwin 8. Pepper democrat. . 8. Pepper.’ ex claimed the nom- iby inating § speaker. ; “You bet he 18!" lusty 1, 6 PE That settled nothing was left but to “pepper” the indpatter’s wound. Trenton, N. J., is going to tax all cate $1. We'd hate to live in that neighborhood when the cats start to howl, H, W. Pohiman, business agent for the local Structural Tron Workers’ union, has been sub- poenaed before the federal grand jury Investigating dynamite out- rages at Los Angeles for a second time. Washington was some boy with a hatchet, but politicians in our day cultivate the ham: ‘Upon investigation into the case ‘of Oscar J. Olson, found shot in the back of the head und through the breast on the,N. P. tracks near Spokane av, Monday night, the po- lice and coroner think the man is & suicide. His isndindy claims he was penniless and des ondent. “Board of Trade.” Louie Soccona sustained a frac- tured and internal injuries when a handcar on which he was riding was run, down by an O.-W, freight train, about a mile south of Georgetown, yesterday, He was removed to the Providence hospi- tal, where his injuries were pro- nounced serious, An lilinois man who claimed to be a barber, optician and doctor, was arrested for fraud. if he’s wha says he is, he ought to have been arrested for cruelty. A. C. Cline, until recently propri- etor of Cline's plano house, and a resident of Seattle for the past 15 years, died Mondnay night fol- lowing an illness of about a year, jwill meet Thursday evening, at 7| o'clock, at 110 Cherry at., to hear| >. H. Shields oppose the single tax and to hear a discussion of the pro- posed terminal by Robt. Bridg Capt, J. 8. Gibson and Scott Cal- houn® Supper will be served at 6 ‘clock. Everybody is cordially in- vited. A Milwaukee youth deserted | his bride at the altar when he learned that she had four chil- dren. Ready-made families no longer appeal to our strenuous age. CLEVELAND, Fel 28.—Miss Gertrude Holland, disputing the} charge of the “Spring Maia man-| }agement that she quit, sued in court and won @ wee salary and ticket to Gotham on the ground that she was discharged. A nice day in February is al- ways looked upon with suspi- cion. CLEVELAND, O., Feb. 28,—“You sweet suthmer afternoon,” said Judge Babcock to a couple claiming to be mismated, on. long for your love,” Toledo woman wants to know If it’s right to throw boil. and’ etter try ping the ind wheat cakes hot in- KANSAS CITY, Porterfield told a young woman ap. pearing in his court in a low-necked frock to cover up, and go home and put on some clothes, club) “Cheer each other |f Look upon your children who || . 28.—Judge |} FURNITURE DRY GooDs | BASEMENT SAL FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Closes 1 Hy at Gite, To Sell Thursday at, the Yard ‘ HESE Cretonnes are “strike-off” lengths—as the first-run pieces im a new technically termed—and when cut up are used as salesman'y this offering range in length from 40 to 50 yards, The colorings are all desirable, the fabrics of good, closely. i woven quality—the designs are artistic and the Cretonnes com. - pare favorably in effect with the high-grade French productions = The great adaptability of Cretonnes for artistic drapery arrangements to this exceptional offering at—the yard—12%4¢ and 18¢. A New Purchase of Imported Novelty Sil On Sale Thursday at a Very Low Figure 68c. The Yard-____ (8 —This important offering embraces approximately 600 yards of excellent Silks, , tion that includes effects and colors which are in good demand for making up One-piece Dresses for street and informal wear, and Underskirts. The follo are represented : Persian Swiss Messaline, 19 inches wide, in brown, reseda, Copenhagen and navy. 19-inch Louisine Silk in brown patteined with wild rose design, wine with self stripe and two-toned gray Persian ef- fects. Fancy Striped Messaline, 19 inches, wide, in old-rose, laven- der, plum and thyme-green. 19-inch Peau de Cygne in old-rose and wistaria, with white stripe, Exceptional " Values at 8c Yard 19-inch Louisine grounds striped ig: and green, also g Striped Chiffon 4 green and peac inches wide, feta, 21 inches wide. Jacquard - figured Messaline, in wide. Natural-color brown dot, 26 Broken Lines of Women’s In a Clearance At [ $1.95 Pair HE sizes in the various styles in the lot gre necessarily broken but there difficulty in finding your size in some one model. The assortment inel Tan Russia Calf Shoes. Gun-metal Calf Shoes with cravenette cloth tops. Gun-metal Calf Shoes with dull kid tops Patent Kid Shoes with cravenette cloth tops. Every pair in the offering would find a ready buyer, were the size range 0 materially higher figure than $1.95, Jewelry Novelties 10c —a special assortment, com- prising many artistic designs in: } Beauty Pins Hat Pins Brooches Scarf Pins Be)t Buckles -—all in good quality rolled plate, ° Special, Thursday, 10¢. —~—Basement Salesroom. Velvet Hand-Bags 75¢ Black Velvet ii Hand - Bags, fabric - lined, } with —leather-covered gun-metal frames and cor- deliere handles; same have | inside coin purse. | 75¢. Huck Towels 10c Cotton Muck Towels, good weight, absorbent and ser- viceable, measuring 2)x44 inches. Special, for Thurs- day, 10¢. Basement Salesroom. Bar Pins each } Women's Sp :eial, Basement Salesroom. Oakleigh Linen Note Paper, 50 sheets | Paper with envelopes to match, special B¢ 1 box. Papier Mache Dress Forms, sizes 32 and 34, special 50¢. x Attractive Style, Superior i Workmanship in These New House Dres $1.50 As Illustrated left, a plaid At pretty light-blue or white—trimmed in bands of the plain blue mater- piped in The garment fasters at back and is finished with white pique shield Price $1.50. At right, Dress in plain blue Dress navy and, ial, red, or tan percale, at- trimmed with plaid - pattern material This model also fastens at, back, Price $1.50. Basement Salesroom, tractively Royal Violet Talcum Powdery box. je “Ideal” Tooth Powder, special Fine Toilet Soap, unwrapped § dozen cakes, a percale— | ESROOM ‘Sample Bolts of Cretong Sal * sah

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