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} "you were to we iu the ‘ong months | UMBRELLAS Panton’s $1.00 Umbrella Panton’s $1.25 Umbrellas, 89c. Panton’s $2.50 Umbrellas, $1.69. Three-fifty Umbrellas, $2.39. Five-dollar Umbrellas, $3.95. Five-dollar to Seven-fifty Umbrellas, $3.95. Children’s 35c to 50c fancy Parasols, 15c. Ladies’ very elaborate Parasols reduced one-fourth, one-third and one-half. 50c Kayser’s Silk Gloves 39c. $1 Kid Gloves, 79¢. $1.50 Fownes’ Kid Gloves, $1.19. $2.00 Fownes’ Kid Gloves, $1.49. $1.50 Long Silk Gloves, $1.19. 69c. VEILS AND VEILINGS 69c Fancy White Roll Collars, 39. 35¢ to 50c Muf- flers, 10c. 25¢ Linen Collars, 5c. 25¢ to 50c Lace Jabots, 10c. 25¢ Lace - trimmed Tabs, 5c. $1.39 Lace Collars, 89c. 35c Veils, 25c. $1.48 Scarfs, 98c. 50c Auto Scarfs, 25c. MEN'S UNDERWEAR Sailor Sc White Handkerchiefs, 10c White Handkerchiefs, 7c. 15¢ Linen Handkerchiefs, 10c. 25c¢ Lace-trimmed Handkerchiefs, 19¢. 49c boxed Handkerchiefs (3) 35c. 98c boxed Handkerchiefs (3) 69c. 50c Ribbed Underwear, 35c. 25c Balbriggan Underwear, 19c. $1.00 and $1.50 Wool Ribbed Under- wear, 89c. $1.50 Union Suits, now $1.19. $2.50 Wool Union Suits, now $1.65. $1.00 Union Suits, now 79c. BOYS’ WEAR 25c and 35c Blouse Waists, 15c. 50c and 75c Siewe Waists, now 35c. 75¢ Outin: jamas, 49c. 50c Boys’ hak Rah Hats, 10c. 15c and 25¢ Women’s Stockings (odd lots), 10c. 25¢ and 35c¢ Children’s Tan Stockings, 10c. One-dollar Pure Silk Stockings, all colors, 59c. 15¢ Misses’ Gauze Stock- ings, 5c. Martin’s $3.00 Black Silk Stockings, $1.89. Martin's $2.00 Black Silk Stockings, $1.39. BABY WEAR Babies’ 25c Sacques, 10c. Babies’ Skirts, | 5c. Babies’ 15c Petticoats, 5c. Babies’ Night Gowns, 49c. 75c Knitted Sacques, 49c. 75c Children’s Crepe Night Gowns, 49c. One to one-fifty Knit- ted Sweaters, 69c. Flannelette Petticoats, 25c. Babies’ Fifty-cent Shoes, 39c. Babies’ Seventy-five-cent Shoes, 59c. 15c Embroidered Ribbons, 5c a yard. $2.50 Girdle Ribbons, very fine, 98c a $1.48 Taffeta Ribbons, very wide, 85c¢ a 75¢ Shell Barrettes, now 39c. 95c Jeweled Bar- rettes, now 69c. Seven - dollar and Eight-fifty Fancy Combs, some _ are mounted with 12- karat gold, now 98c. $3.48 Mesh Bags, $2.34. $2.95 Beaded Bags, $1.19. $4.50 Hand - cro- cheted Bags, $2.49. $3.25 Hand - cro- cheted Bags, $1.59. 25c Fancy Purses, 10c. $1.48 Fitted Hand Bags, 95c. 69c Silk Girdles, 49c. $1.69 Hand Bags, $1.19. 95c Ostrich Feather Edging, 69c a yard. 48c Marabou Edgings, 33c a yard. Flannelette JHORGE FRANCIS ioalintidane and Financiers for COMPANY, ae iter & co Institutic 'PANTON’S DEPARTMENT STORE 75¢ Corset Covers, 25c. One to one- fifty Combina- tions, 69c. One to one- fifty Drawers, 69c. 35c¢ = Misses’ Petticoats, 19c. 35¢ = Corset Covers, 19c. $2.25 elaborate Night Gowns, $1.79. STAR—THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1915, WOMEN’S 25c Knit 15c. All $1.48 Night Gowns, $1.19. Women’s Twenty-five- dollar Coats and $1. ‘98 Lawn Waists, all new, 98c. One to one- fifty Net Waists, now 55c. One Dollar Pictures and Prices Tell the story of Panton’s Great Sale 25c Knit Cotton Vests, $1.50 Mer- ode Union Suits, 75c. Boys’ Porosknit Shirts or Drawers, 35c. Women’s One to One - fifty House Waists, 59c. Women’s Eight-dollir Chiffon Waists, $2.78. Girls’ $1.25 Middy Blouse Waists, 88c. Women’s Twenty- five-dollar Suits, new, $19.50. Five to Women’s Sixteen- [a moving freight train from a signal! tower. } > all new, An “Animated Weekly,” polished | Girls’ New Spring Coats, $3.75. Girls’ $12.50 Spring Coats, $5.98. Girls’ Dresses, 98c. Girls’ Five-dollar Lawn and Lace Dresses, F $2.50. One-fifty and Two-dollar W. Misses’ Fancy, Dresses, Half Price. Misses’ Wool Dresses, Half Price. The foregoing is merely a small chapter from a long book filled with wonderful values. You can help a good deal, if you will, by com- ing early in the morning, as we are almost un- able to wait on the afternoon crowds. Pay cash—no c. 0. D.’s_ without goods can a reasonable small parcels delivered No telephone orders No mail orders—no exchanges—for this is Merchandising shorn of all extravagant and | expensive features— And don't spend a cent here if you can do | better anywhere else! SALE NOW ON AS ADVERTISED IN be exchanged—no THE EVENING PAPERS Seven ’Leven to ’Leven ’Leven Second Ave. Right. Rev. bishop of Olympia, address in his series W Comfortable We church “The ity FREE ADMISSION AT DREAMLAND DANCING EVERY EVENING EVERY ONE WELOOME We guarantees the supertority of 1 the Lun re Truss, | trial to prove it | ana make her your wife that you |will give her more than the ro-| made tt better mantic sentiment that passes for; To do this, my boy, there {s only love toda one thing to remember, and that is Until death do us part!’ Most | all the glory of fame that ts won A LETTER TO MY SON |I carried you next to my heart women that 1 have known, sonny,|t another's cost, all the success (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper) Oh, boy—my boy, I h| have regarded that sentence v 8 because one has never Enterprise Association.) great hopes of you and now these| seriously, until all love has been | counted the cost to others, mean 1 spent the afternoon writing a|hopes are coming to fruition, 1| killed and their hearts broken nothing beside the life that ts wba letter “to my son” to be hidden{only wanted you to be a good man It in 80 easy to do the big things |to food deeds and | friendly kinc among these little clothes when [| for being a good m is in your| for those we love, but it is the little | [68 E ' | put them back after 1 have shown | mother's eyes more successful than| things which make love and living My boy, my boy, zs this ey ae them to Mollie. being great bearable. your long-dead mother is standing | Bo only to you, dear little boc Perhaps in the years that have| I find, dear son, that [ am writ-| beside you, and, although you may will 1 confide what I have written. | passed since I wrote this letter, an-|ing a plea for that girl that you I it, she is clasping you to ‘This letter, my dear son, will only |other woman has come into your| will ma that “daughter” 1 shall art come to your eyes, if you have| father’s life. One you have learied er 1 know will lov o fulfill my hopes, my ambt never looked upon your mother’s | to respect d love as mother , but just “loving,” which, in a tléns for you, and [ shall not have liv! face—if, when you came into| Dear, that is as it should be, but|/ man's dietionar means usually died that you might live, In vatn. the land of the living, death closed | just let she who bore you and to| “wanting,” | not enough. Keep I know, little book, that Dick the door that separated her from | Whom you were to be the crown of | her loving you, and to do this you! would think this very morbid, and you forever her existence be your real mother,| will Only need forbearance, sympa 1 shall not tell him about it, but 1 Dear—dearest son wh when |for at least the time you are read-| thy and toleration guess | have put into a written you read this, will be comi into | ing this letter Oh, my boy—my boy—that I «hall prayer my hopes and fear | your own-—I want to be with you| My dear son, I want you to re-| never hold—remember how | loved, 1 presume I shall be holding my now, The mother you have never} that | always dream of you' you; I am afraid | would h boy in my arma before a wood fire seen, the mother you have never n—a man I might be proud | loved you more than I do your fath. and see this letter crackling in the known—I want to come for just alof, with all your father's strength|er, whom it breaks my heart to) blaze, In the meantime I have minute into your lite to tell you all|and some of my sympathy leave » my crumbling dust to! written it, and, should T die when 1 want when you love a woman cause it has given my travail comes, I shall die. easier A. LUNDBERG CO, Appliances and Trusi Deformit rtificlal 14 deposit—no | to the world something which has| because I have done so (To Be Continued Tomorrow.) Frederick gave Inesday on} Two second-run pletures, “The | at Trin-|Champion,” a Chaplin comedy, and \the Vanderbilt cup races, with a} — ———jthree-part drama Daughter's Strange Inheritanc is the Mis-| PAGE 3 HOLD FUNERAL | SCREEN REVIEWS FOR THREE AUTO By Freddie Film |“THE SILENT DRAMA" iPROGRAMS| | ILL GAINES, chief of the | ; registration bureau, call by ste Posh mbes f Night SMASH VICTIMS ed up the writer of this rhe ¢ a f column to protest against the uncle “ ew York words “silent drama,” as ap dancer plied to motion pictures el ' ' ervices for three of “L gat in a movie Tuesday,” |Clemmer Ending Saturday Night tend tiniest all he sald, “in front of a young The ¥ es hE = at ent at Aiea man and a gir! named Stella ‘an p Thana 1 know that was her name, hambra Ending Saturday Night o held Tharaday. because that is what he called che a Cat ay Out,” drama; | Th ae ¢ ‘ M ra hela her. And she called him Harry. 2 “ sky . oe cate th Pat a bl lt Mission Ending Saturday Night ‘ Mark's church | cause she kept saying ‘Who de gee : ‘9 yo oe, ini, en A fark se | you love and he kept anewer [isco threepart dra ber ew ie . er ee "HAN oho kept talking about | Champion” (Charlie Ch n), t ore DOG at o'clock in the 4 reels fa residence Boren ave another girl in the office where . agers aad ae eee oe Ea she works, whom she doesn't H ( ictatiae : hin automobile, and what he's tu the Mansa ot sepoclg a tesa the ‘funeral ae going to do about it conisay ete wanking Sanaa im her wn “All of this was while the - Reve : hero of the picture play wases | | Liberty Ending Saturday Night | rive 5 caping death, and getting mar Williamson bmar 1 Mrs. M owner of the Oc ried, after he had come home | tarps machine, 1 ng slowly at safe from where he had been at ag NE er home, t being of less And a woman who sat on one Grand Ending Saturday Night ment tha shock sustained side of me was telling a friend The Black Box” (Episode No. | whe e learned of her friends about her experience at the (4) two parts; “Animated Weekl leath dentist's, and when they were The Mixup at Maxim comed Although Prosecutor Lundin oré through with that they started [oyijs Last Tr . ered slease from the county on the career and home life of | 1 the Japanese Mary Pickford Alaska Ending Saturday Ni tone « ffe ‘umal, is being “Silent drama! !!!" exclaimed The Battle of the Sexe elt rift Hodge, who the outraged Mr. Gaines. part drama { may take his own life see e8 ree, if allowed his Ibe ICLEMMER rt anese is on RESIDENCE THEATRES it is said, » contin The mer | to draw capacit nage with | e J and pitched in his cot all va lig At Ye College Until Friday. imbling incoherent things which is en ne o sera talack Box,” No. 1,, two) concerning the accident record in Seattle.|° ota paiva Fegowge!! »| Preliminary investigation Wed- the popular Blanche Sweet |Part drama; “A Maid by Proxy,”|nesday convinced Lundin that Ku Owen Moore as the le Oe has fa a sary {itless of any blame for with the tact that ‘the dis] ..mn. ee Ome Wath | rridey ident. The young Japanese, worked two years to adapt ME orpg ad a Pye a bank lowever, has intimated, it ts sald, the great Paul Armstrong play to paese id Peg Leg wo-|that he will end his fe as soon as part drama; “He Fell in Love With |he is released. cosine a dg rnd vga |y | His Mother-in-Law,” comedy merits the heavy attendance ne | | Es in a story laid in the New| nese ha Beeae: orient | York slums and contains plenty of |,,.,, ancelec von action a turn of the camera Be he Dude Raffles The picture ends Saturday night oonly. ee at. Tae . | COLONIAL bs The Colonial has had the %\ ure of entertaining nearly ‘ entire population of Seat. | c = : a’ tle’s dancing colony this week | P. H. Hebb, the Tacoma capital. : with the ‘ernon Castie” pic. | ist and owner of the White river, H ture, in which these famous | power plant, has now branched out * i | dancers are shown in all the | # the discoverer of a remedy for: | modern step: | rheumatism $ | "Nearly every dancing master | For years Hebb has been expert f | im the city hae attended and | |menting with his remedy and he taken notes. | | claims that more than 500 persons “A Modern Magdalen” is | Mrs. Martha J. Slyter, prominent jis : pa Tacoma have been billed as the star attraction. It | business woman of Pacific City and |“ ; Ie a three-reeier, in which Cath- |leader in church and social tunc-| ,,He, has never made any charge erine Counties, former Seattle tions there, is seeking a divorce | fF his remedy. which he calls actress, has the principal role. from her husband, Daniel B. Styter, | 7: Unt cong Kar om oh “=: by or Those pictures will be shown |of whom she says in her complaint Bextor yee? ru Fag vs ee until Saturday night. that, among other faults, he refuses | 282¥- for the manufacturing eee to talk to her. | dispensing of Kar-ru GRAND The Slyters were married in| He so mors a gone by | me rz Wenatchee, August 23, 1910. coma and already is remedy oa How a reformed burglar turn sale throughout the state, love letters| Mrs. Slyter, who was then Miss | x crook again to procure for a young woman which wer wrongfully held by « defeated suit- or Is the Interesting story unfolded | “His Last Trick,” one of the new sects play offerings at the Grand. The thief succeeded in destroying | the letters, but was shot to death before he could escape. The picture is well acted The Grand, in addition, offers the fourth Installment of the detective serial, “The Black Box" and “The| Mixup at Maxim's,” a comedy, The} mystery in the former deepens, and | Martha J. Gray, valuable fruit that city Her husband induced her to sell | this tract, she says, shortly after their marriage, that they might pur- chase Pactfic City real estate. Their home was subsequently | | built ané®s general store establish- | led at Pacific City, where Slyter) | was looked upon for a time as one f the leading citizens. Mrs, Slyter asks the court to give’ her merely a fair division of the real property involved and to di owned considerable | and wheat land near | IMMIGRATION OFFICER QUITS SAN FRANCISCO, April 1.—Har- ry Edsel, island for the past five years, and is understood to have left because ordered to St. Louis at red Irene Hun In 2-reel Majestic Drama this time suspicion in the latest] \iae between them the cows and “HER BURIED PAST / tragedy ts reflected upon Quest, the chickens and household goods. She |} Until Saturday night, Inciualée, hero, Quest is about to establish) giso desires $25 a month alimony alibi—and he has a good one~!and wishes to resume her maiden ‘Class A Th an all | when the curtain falls The picture has several high! spots, one of them Quest's leap onto| name. off with some of Mayer's clever car. ‘om the first the film demands in tense interest. The bill is lightened | by a Keystone comedy, “Caught in| the Act,” which {s a scream | .* } CLASS A | Her Burled Past” Is the title of| , two-part newspaper detective | ory told on the screen at the Clase It is a picture eing A wom wspaper reporter, of fered $500 to solve a probable mur finds a woman has committed crime, hears her complete con fersion, and—but that would be telling, The reporter owes a bill in her moth She needs the rewarg. | murderess tells the reporter ied the man, her former hus- | who had deserted her on the] of motherhood. The child| died. After years of work as al | stenographer, her employer, a mil-! re furniture man, asks her to| and she accepts | husband reappears that she give him kills him ence of a little the home is keenly felt after view | ing the Be film, “In the Man-| sion of Loneliness.” Old and young | | | toons, concludes the show. Th movie numbers are interspersed with some good vandeville | ore ALASKA Do you, as a father, follow the course you demand of your daugh ter? This is the problem solved in a fivereel drama, “The Battle of the Sexes at the Alaska theatre TODAY A MODERN MAGDALEN a big picture in five acts—has a moral lesson—featuring Catherine Countiss THE “CASTLES” IN DANCES A | the of $500 on furniture er's The him marry The and dem | money She | The infl child in the very young—are enjoying this} | picture. Ambrose’s Fury” Is a character Keystone comedy cee NEW SEATTLE HOUSE The Majestic theatre, istic | the latest} addition to pattle’s mavie play-| - —lhouse field, will put on its first] at aed $ : : show Saturday. The new plcture| showing their interpretation, in pictures, |house is located in B: upward of $17,000. rd, and cost of the Argentine Tango, Maxixe, Brasil- ienne, One-Step, Hesitation Waltz and Castle Walk. Keating, the third|MISSION | sion’s movie entertainment for the remainder of the week. The new] ARGIEWICZ CRAWFORD |show began Wednesday. 4 a” 4 | acai Violinist Organist | LIBERTY j The first motion pictures’ ever jean under water, in which the —_ audience {a taken several miles Jaton the ocean bottom off the Ba | Islands, are shown at the Lib Jerty in the film feature, “William |pon's Submarine Expedition.” The| |pictures are Interesting from a} |xclentifie standpoint, They are| ken from an iron cage suspended Blve free) rom the ship's bottom by a flextble rubberized passageway, through which the operator descends One scene shows a diver killing [a shark. COLONIAL assistant commit i of immigration here. has Edsell has been stationed at