The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 24, 1916, Page 8

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a Summer's Day’ WILL SING HERE ible if Are U that they ued creams and lo | is for years without effect, yet Biter five or six days of Stuart's Palcium Wafers their complexions Were perfectly clear Company Monday PAVLOWA BALLET, TOO and opera of the first. magni and in let of the & ceiling. me artistic is to be given at the the jatre Monday and Tuesday, March | T and 28, by the celebrated Row ton Grand Opera company and the Pavlowa Imperial Ballet Russe | ‘The opening night offers to Seat |tle the new Montemezat opera, L'Amore det Tre Re" (T' ot Th Kings) with vannt Zenatello as Avito, and Maggle Teyte as Flora. | Other notables in the cast are | |} Jose Mardones, the Spanish basso, | SHOES and Graham Marr, the English bar | ite | The opera has been presented only at the Metropolitan Grand | Opera house in New York, and tn the cities visited by the Boston Paviowa combination on the pres as wot Rid of Blackheads in a Jiffy Dy Using Stuart's Caiclum Waters.” | * They contain no poisonous drug any kind, are perfectly harmless can be taken with absolute! dom, and they work almost like} fic. Calcium Sulphide, their pal ingredient, is the greatest od-cleanser known to ecience. No matter how bad your skin iy be, Stuart’s Calcium Wafers quickly work wonders with It goodby to blackheads, pimples + boils, rash, eczema and a@ ly. “filled-up” complexion. You} get a box of Stuart's Calcium) rs at any drug store at 50 a box, and you will be post ly delighted with their wonder effect. | Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co., 305 Stuart Marshall, Mich. Send me once, by return mail, a free i packege of Stuart's Cal- and Ordinary Work Broken lines of Men’s Shoes and and tan, lace and button; English Walking Shoes $3.50 W. L. Douglas Dress Shoes, $3.50 Weinbrenner Work Shoes, $4.00 Dayton |f box calfskin; | $4.50 Dayton Dress Shoes of fine all sizes... and Weinbrenner $4.50 Howard & Foster's Dress $6.00 “Jefferson” Hand-made First Ave. South 103 | } Maggie Teyte, Prima Donna lent tour. Paviowa, with her entire Ballet Russe, will present the ballet nov- eity “Snowflakes.” “Madam Butterfly” will be the Oxfords, worth to $5.00, for...... $4.00 and $5.00 “Just Wright” Shoés, black sso. S280 $2.80 $2.80 $2.80 $3.20 $3.20 $3.80 $3.80 $4.30 $4.80 $4.80 CARL SCHERMER $3.50 Rubber-soled Gunmetal Calf lace and button styles; all sizes... Goodyear welt sewn; all sizes... . $4.00 W. L. Douglas Dress Shoes; || Work and Dress Shoes; all sizes. . . Shoes; 12 good styles; lace and button $5.00 “Crossett” Shoes, new Spring styles; lace and button; all sizes... $6 “Crossett” Shoes, of tan and black “Cresco” calfskin; rawhide slip sole. 105 and 107 STAR—FRIDAY, MARCI 24, 1916, For Every Purpose—Dress, Cruising, Logging PAGE 8 1 LET NO MAN UNDERSELL ME. THESE PRICES ARE NOT DUPLICATED ELSEWHERE 2 | re Stuart's Calclum | for a Short | | Time After Each Meal, Famous Prima Donna Comes Many people have been heard to| With Boston Grand Opera | You who know Seattle know that | have the biggest Clothing and Men’s Furnishing Store on First Ave. If you've been in my store lately you also know that it is crammed full with merchandise from cellar to If you've inspected that merchandise, you know further that there isn’t a piece of shoddy in it—you found the best of everything that man wears. Now here is my message to you I have too much goods ALASKA OUTFITS Everything You Need to Wear on That Trip North. Goods—at a Big Saving. Union Made SUITS From the Best Makers in America, Fit and Satisfaction Fully Guaranteed. $15.00 Scotch Tweed and Worsted | Every $20.00 Suit bei at cole BRO dun sear” $13.80 One Lot of $15.00 Suits, 20 good $20.00 heavy weight Blue Serge In ail colors $8.80 Suits, well tailored; $13.80 at ple sty! Choice of the best $15.00 Suits $22.50 heavy silk-mixed Metcalf Worsted Suits; reg vara, toute, slime, DL O.80 $30.00 Hand-tallored Silk-mixed Worsted Sut8' | $19.80 best In my stock in*my stock— $11.80 they're good ones Suits, of fine $15.00 Box back $11.80 riped worsteds; all Hats, Pants and Coats $3.00 “Conqueror” Hats, desirable | $2.50 and many $3.00 Pants, Key- Spring styles in $1.60 Stone make; desir. $2.20 good sizes able dark colors $2.00 and $2.50 “Keystone” Work $15.00 Overcoats and Balmactans, and Dress Pants; neat $1 .80 good sizes in wary $7.40 stripe patterns dark colors YOUR PAY CHECK IS GOOD HERE And You Don't Have to Buy Anything to Get It Cashed. THE STORE WHERE YOU GET UNION-MADE GOODS, A SQUARE DEAL AND Suits and Shoes especially. I want to bring the stock down to normal, and I’ve cut the prices so low that you'll feel you owe it to your pocketbook to \ come. Tomorrow is a good time. “ Your money back any time you're not absolutely satisfied. Not abit of trouble about it. SHOES For Every Man, No Matter What His Business $5.50 Dayton Kip Work Shoes, ‘i Goodyear welts; 8-inch tops...... $4.80 $5.50 “Chippewa” Goodyear welt Pacs, firm chrome stock; all sizes. . $4.80 $6.00 “Dayton” heavy chrome, $5 double-soled, 8-inch welt Work Shoes | a $6 “Red Wing” double-soled, Good- $5 40 year welt Work Shoes, 12-inch tops. | le $6.50 “Red Wing” double vamp $5 80 WGUe $7,00 “Chippewa” Stitch-down Boo OG 20 a Cruisers’ Boots, 12-inch tops...... 12-inch tops; easy and enduring... . $7.00 “Chippewa” light-soled $6 20 Crsers Boba, 16inch tops; al sizes 0 AO $9.00 “Currin” French $8.20 Kip Loggers’ Boots in all sizes and FIRST ROCK-BOTTOM PRICES opera for the matinee. Miss Miura, the Japanese prima donna, will ap- pear in this interesting Japanese role. her support will be Ric cardo Martin, still a member of the New York Metropolitan Opera com- pany, and Thomas Chalmers, the American baritone. Mr. Martin will sing the role of Lieutenant B. | P. Pinkerton, the naval officer. The remaining members of this |notable cast include Mile. Elvi Laveront, the brilliant young mez zo-soprano, who will ppear as re offering |) per cent discount on the be regular prices for our high- work. LADY ATTENDANT $5. BY GEO. W. PERKINS Chairman of New York's Food the Committee The habit of eating fish on Frt- days only should be stopped. Fish Susuki, the faithful Japanese maid|*re just as appe pound and to Madam Butterfly; Paolo Anant-|Uzing and nour- same way an, the former Metropolitan Opera| ishing on Tues steaks: boiled house baritone, and other equally|days and = are and brotled « ‘efficient principals, in the roles of anener and bet- or biuefish, lesser Importance The complete Boston Grand Op-|_ Vary your diet. era company orcher’-a and chorus,| You will be more lander the conductorship of Maostro | healthy, Don’t use can be ‘ABOUT BUYING FISH head, skeleton these can be |for fish soups and fish sauces Halibut costa 15 cents a pound Market cod costs about 15 cents a cooked in the It can be cut up into the tail can be aplit you would mackerel ind it costs about cents lesa a pound than mackerel! or bluefish. Haddock costs about 20 cents a pound and can be the end of the year she should and fine, and|¥heo my pen and my thoughts ’ went wandering off to “poor old|take her rightful place as Spen- d for fish stock, | rent wand te ete it seems that yesterday the “All went well until ambition cooked in the ! Confessions of a Wife HERBERT SPENCER GETS HIS in life would suffer more I started, little book, to tell you © woman's from the breath about Jim's visit to me last night, ndal and what he and Dick talked about, |T¢¥, and there was talk that at | whisper breach of mine sult of M Heathcott against Herbert Spencer, poor little Kitty Matram's husband, came up for trial “Listen to this one, Margie,” said siJim. Then he read “ “Attorney Scotte for the prosecution was both pathetic and humorous at times, and the defendant turned pale at intervals from the vigorous on | clergyma that a marriage with more money might be effect- ed, and he would gain more than just a wife by the transaction ‘All this time, gentlemen, the |defendant was going about with a with some one manner, accepting arief-atricken | condolences of his |the pity and | Roberto Moranzoni, are 0 as | meat so much. siaught. Scotte pictured the bril- | friends and acquaintances, while at . same way as halibut. Both yj | siaugh! Sco! ? J ri id for the Seattle engagement. Use fsb more and baddock are in season all the |liant beauty of Spencer's first wife |home he was enjoying to the full ER OF FIRST AND PIKE |, L& Boheme” will be the opera ish is jul year. and the loving care Miss Heath. | est the love and tender care of my Opposite Old Pablic Marker J) PUCSdAY night. | nourishing ae lean Any fish left over can be used to Cott kave to her at first and after. | client. : Lahoring People’s Dentiat. Sx LAN Re URS rong gg SO make fish cakes, or it can be Ward to the child They called him “the man of 3. BR. VAN AUKEN, Manager. eaten with bread, creamed and put in a dish and ‘This child.’ said the lawyer, /sorrows,” gentlemen; they called = MIDDLETON LEAVES potatoes, ete., will _ had been verbally bequeathed to|him “the man of sorrows,” and all supply all the GEO W PERKINS Many persons go to a fish etore|Mr®. Margaret Waverly, an old |the while he was holding hands. | needa of the body. Charlies Putnam Middleton, ped} 3 possible, buy your fish from a sistant secretary of Seattle school! fish dealer. ‘ Bere, Owe and Children's |district, No. 1, for the past five| When you buy fish, see that you | years, handed in his resignation|get the trimmings. You are en |to take effect May 15. He will/ titled to them. jleave for Boston to take his fa- The meat part of almost any fish ther'’s place on the Roston Stock| may be cooked separately. If you | Exchange. ask your dealer to remove the meat | KAVANAGH'S bo First and Union. 1006 First, .at Madison. strip the bis watch | conductor's will pay fillets give you the trimmings and buy the fillets of fish Instead of the whole fish. ing more or less than the meat of the fish stripped from the skele Some fish dealers have these fillets all ready jsale, but ff you buy them that way | anywhere cents to 20 cents more a pound for |them than if pou bought the entire \fish and asked your fish dealer to off for you TAKES HIS LAST “DIP” NEW YORK, March 24 Jert Manning, a “dip,” left the train | than they can resist them fn their |at Ossining to serve two years tn Sing Sing, he handed the conductor | Manning pocket, | fact that he was handcuffed. A fillet is noth. ona | Jim and Dick shouted at this, but \truly, little beok, I felt sorry for {poor Herbert friend of the mother jected to Mrs, Waverly's bringing up the child because he thought It would not get the Christian culture | “Wouldn't Kitty scream over this he could give it }if she could know it?" remarked Look what happens! jim. “For whatever else Kitty Mal “Evidently the defendant over-|Tam was, she was a good sport, rated his will power, for my client |and T think her sympathies would will tell you when she takes the |be with Miss Heatheott.” stand that {n less than four weeks| “Particularly after his turning after his wife was buried the de-|you down, Margie, as the guardian fendant an making love to jof his child,” said Dick. “Afraid As you see, the Rev, Mr. Spen-|she would not have the proper 3 |cer is a handsome man, and cultur.|Christian influence with you! In ed. Few women can resist bis ;deed, 1 wonder to what kind of in }many virtues and attractions in| fluences he himself was submitting minister, any more |bia baby. It's a good thing she ts too small to sit up and take no tiee! “I sometimes think,” said Dick, “that this conventional waiting aft- er one's wife is dead on the part of the husband fs all nonsense. Es- pecially is this true where there Spencer ob: | platter for from 15 and As Rob-| their favorite | favorite actor. But my client beg; picked the | She pointed out that t despite the| discreet. In this | gentlemen, the man's 4 for time. ey must be aliar case, haracter and itself by reproducing just the kind of music you like to hear in a clear, brilliant and lifelike manner We are offering this instrument, with a special Home bd Outfit, consisting of 22 selections, including two of the finest recordings ever made by the late Lillian Nordica, America’ stomachs: indigestion, and | mad Talking Machine Headquarters —For All Machines —All the Time other Third & Universit You don't PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN ~FOR INDIGESTION OR» Relief Awaits You! Instantly Stops Dyspepsia, |: | Gases, Sourness, Heartburn--Get Some Now! want a slow remedy Its millions of cures tn} dyspepsia stomach it famous th p this perfe in your home trouble world over. | stomach doctor| orders is a revelation to those who keep it handy are small children, necessitating care that only a woman can give.” “I'm with you, Dick, on | score 1 interrupted. “In such mat | ters, one should be a law to oneself. “When a wife is dead she is dead, and that fs all there ts to it But the husband must go on living must take up the burdens, Isn't It foolish as well as cruel to ask cause some people who knew nothing of his nature nor of his circumstances might think he was heartless?” “There, you marrh see, you can get directly after Margie dies, Dick,” safd Jim | “Il would rather Dick would mar ry than to live alone,” I said so berly The picture is all that we can show you here—but come 1] It beats the dickens,” sald Dick * ) rather fretfully, “that hil to the store and hear this instrument—the very finest Colum so always bringing pea ever tate old bia Grafonola built—without the cabinet, Let it speak for I atemtante cana te noudthing cae jattempts end in something very You must not come again unléss you behave yourself,” (To be continued) TAKES HIS TIME a large fifty.cent case from any| sin comes in contact with the stom ach all such distress vanishes. yromptness, certainty and ¢ oming the Worst stomach dis-| alarm pression on his face, Mrs. Gray had reported the matter to the police Thursday the boy employment office with Mrs. Gray's greatest dramatic soprano—this instrument and the record when your stomach is bad—or an| drug store and then {if any one! - all for $59.50, and after a FREE TRIAL in your home, as uncertain one—or a harmful one—| should eat something which doesn't t your time,” ordered Mrs lita ‘ag Ma week pays fob at iall T eeint tations : rt Wat you bata tee ee if what they eat) W. L. Gray, 1812 16th ave. to K mustn't injure It with drastic drugs.| lies Mke lead, ferments and sours | Kinamoto EE Se ea 4s De ee RD SPT ERS ke mh Rebs Meo aM Ble M Fe ape's Diapepsin is noted for its| and forms gas; causes headache, ann, & JApaANe 't bogey wrt — speed in giving relief; ta harmless-| dizziness and nausea; eructations|*8¢ bad hired from the Tokio em —All the Records x Seattle’s ness; {ts certain unfailing action| of acid and undigested food—-re-|Ployment agency. “Your services A in regulating sick, sour, gassy| member as soon as Papo's Diapep-|are not satisfactory ilowpholirny Nohirel gastritis! Its have , clock, and a dejected ex wet! try it And so the romance to the Young | weeks-old girl baby which {s for and settlement worker | adoption, the city editor has been that | him to make perpetual suttee be-| entered the} mother heart clings to her, but great, unselfish Jove demands that |she make the sacrifice. She is going to give Dorothy Louise away. |She makes but one request—that |the new mother be loving; that the |new father be amply able and will- jing to give her cliild the chance she deserves. Dorothy is 6 months old; has |solden hatr, large blue eyes, weighs 17 pounds, and comes from good | American parentage. She has been jcared for by a trained nurse since {her birth, and is the picture of health. Now there are two bables Thi Star will give away to the right folks. If you want either, write | my pleasure. {The Star at once. Applications will ” | But now I am to get more than |be considered if recelved by Mon-— feven with the important c. ¢. | day noon. Don't telephone—WRITE. | | Early this morning a sweet-faced ai young girl made her way into My)" ~ LETTER OF THANKS » | office. ee She breathlessly deposited upon| Editor The Star: The com y my desk a soft, white bundle. | tee in charge of the fourth observ The bundle began to make gur-/ance of National Canned Salmon hes to assure gling noises, a dimpled hand shot |day on March 10 for the out, a pair of round, wide, blue eyes you of its appreciation danced at the light, and Baby |splendid co-operation lent to Salm — Dorothy Louise smiled her way|on day celebration by The Star, into my heart | This is constructive work, and we | It is the old, old story of a falth-|feel sure will be reflected in in less man creased prosperity in this great The girlmother, tho refined and4 Pacific Coast industry. Yours very educated, has no one to depend | truly, upon, and cannot earn enough to|/NATIONAL CANNED SALMON bring Dorothy Louise up as she DAY COMMITTEE, feels she should be brought up. Her TEEL WILLIAMS, “TIZ” FOR FEET ' For Sore, Tired, Swollen Feet; For Aching, Tender, Calloused Feet or Painful Corns —Use ‘Tiz!" ‘TWO BABIES TO BE GIVEN AWAY BY CYNTHIA GREY Ever since Tuesday, when The |Star printed the pleture of the 6 moving about with an unusual air of importance. You see, he is going | |to decide who the lucky new par-| ents are to be. And I have felt just | pli bbed, for, as a rule, that is “T use ‘Tiz’ when my feet ache, bum or puff up. It’s fine!” Whole year's foot comfort for only Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet,;the feet, Use t, tired feet callouses, bun No more shoe more limping with drawing up your face in Tix” and wear] smaller shoes. Use “Tis” and for get your foot misery, Ah! how comfortable your feet Get a 26-cent box of at any druggist or store. Don't suffer. Have goo agony, “Tiz” is magical, acts right | feet, glad feet, feet that nevell off. ix” draws out all the pot | swell, uever hurt, never get ti sonous exudations which puff up! Beware of Imitadions! swollen feet, tender Good-bye, corns, e ions and raw spots. tightness, no pain or Tin” now department

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