The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 21, 1916, Page 9

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~ STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1916, PAGE ‘ASKS FRITZITO- WATCH HER ACT Who Donna Gately's Chain of Credit Stores Buy in Large Quantities and ww For Elevemth Hour Choosing of Easter Apparel or Accessories of Dress White Kid Pumps for You'll Find This Store Ready Silk Top Union Suits Women $5.00 ean) oe: BaserPatersomCo e823 Suits for Easter Choosing, Saturday 05,00 HE remarkable completeness of the showing, the extraordinary values offered and the very clever new styles that have just been added, all recommend this collection for your attention tomorrow. The assortment includes every wanted style of the the new flare effects in evidence. The materials include silks, both taffetas and Gros de Londre, gabardines, serges poplins, etc., in a wide range of the colorings fashion favors for now. ; The range of sizes is complete, ranging from misses’ 16 to women’s 44 Suits that combine effectively dependable quality, excellent tailoring and smart style 0 i) for Leas Dress Well for Easter Never Miss the Money and warmer As the days grow longer t and with Easter ‘fast approaching, it is high time*to “Dress up” in Spring Clothes. Spring Suits $15 to $35 Illustration shows a young men’s model— two button—wide, soft roll lapel—close-fitting collar—trim shoulders—priced at $18.50 to $30. Other models for men of all ages and physique. Spring Coats $18 to $25 Fashion says you should have one—ihe weather insists you do. Come and look them over. They're classy! Raincoats $7.50 to $15 Be prepared for April showers and Spring rains—guaranteed rainproof. Hats, Caps, Shoes and a Complete Line of Furnishings. Girl Imitates Appearing Pantages. |MISS SCHEFF HER Prima, einforced strong hand na wcrome the thigh, 4 At kid with ed Louis A Great Assortment of Women’s New loor new season—especially are EXTRA SPECIAL—EASTER OFFERING WOMEN'S $25.00 COATS AT $19.75 ASHIONABLY correct new styles of covert, poplin and serges, in tan, navy blue Copenhagen, gray and black : A collection of about 40 Coats in all. Smart, attractive, new styles, some full lined others half-lined. All good models, that were in our regular stocks at $25.00, and at that price represented very good values. On sale Saturday $19. 75 Girls! Wash Skirts $119 Charming Silk Dresses im Colored Stripes Shown for the First Time HESE clever new Frocks that can be worn with absolute propriety on the street, at afternoon parties, bridge. or tea parties, and with the knowledge that one is correctly dressed, will be shown for the first time tomorrow. ~They are especially pleasing styles of taffeta and Gros de Londre silk, in black, navy blue, Copenhagen and wistaria. —They are just the smart, at- tractive styles that possess that touch of difference which always pleases one at first glance. ~—See them tomorrow before choosing ... P. Women’s and Misses’ Apparel HIGH-GRADE, LATE STYLE SUITS—In silk taffetas, silk poplins, gaberdines, wool poplins, serges, new checks, new stripes, new combinations, etc.; box effects, beltet and flared models, fmagnificently tailored and finished These suits at $32.50, $27.50, $22.50 and . NEW SPRING COATS---An immense assortment for women and misses; the very latest, including white chin- chillas, plaids and stripe chinchillas, new checks, also poplins, taffetas, gaberdines, serges, etc.; featuring wonderful values in women's and misses’ coats, from $35.00 down to .... -. $11.75 Late Style Spring Dresses Most charming are the dainty creations in dresses which fill our cases, materials and colors are so varied that no as one of the features of woman can fail to find a dress to her liking, We're 9 Junior Review of 1915," the “showing very exclusive models at $7-75 to $32.50, Alterations Free. P When Miss Scheff goes to the | Pantages, curious to see thin child YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD y} lactress conception of her, it per- HESE Wash Skirts, aside from being unusual values, are ex- They're shown in wide stripes of brown, ceptionally smart The sizes are 10 to 17 light blue, navy and tan with white. The material is a good washable fabric of firm quality. The Skirts are well made, and are indeed notable values for $1.19. Fraser-Paterson Co, Third Floor. Girls’ Dresses at $7.50 —A new line of attractive, becoming dresses for girls of 6 to 17 years, Expecially designed for school and general wear, They're made of reps, poplins, ginghams, and per- cal shown Ing range of plaids as well as white and com binations of pink and blue with white. Besides values at | Florence Ring, Who impersonates Fritzl Scheff | Manager Alex Pantages Thurs day extended an invitation to Fritz! Scheff, the comic opera star at the Orpheum this week, to come to the Pantages Friday night as |his guest to see herself as Flor lence King, until a year ago a Now | York factory girl, sees her, | Mise Ring, a girl of 17, gives a lelever impersonation of Mins they’re notable .. 87.50 Third Fioor. being very attractive styles, Fraser-P Girls’ Spring Coats 97.50 —At this price there will be good choosing on Satufday. The coi are especially attractive and the values all one could ask, for the materials are excellent and the tailoring carefully done. —Novelty mixtures, serges, poplins, gabardines, ete, are the materials most favored and the colorings are navy blue, Diack, gray, Copenhagen, brown, green and novelty mized effects. —Sines 6 to 15 years, Choose early tomorrow.... $7.50 ? —Fraser- won Co, Third Floor. The Newest Styles Easter Hosiery for Women ~ HOWING silks, fiber silks and silk boots, in the season’s very beautiful colorings; splen- did assortments, containing the wanted shades. Ample varieties to meet the large demand tomor- row, the. day before Easter. We mention: Our No, 2100, that famous, splendid pure thread Silk Stock- ing, that 1s the finest quality and best value obtainable for $1.00. It’s shown in about forty new shades. —Phoenix Silk Hose, full guar- anteed and known to be thor- oughly dependable. Shown in a full line of colorings; pair..75¢ A fine lustrous Fiber Silk Stocking, which is here in a wide range of beautiful colorings, and is a thoroughly dependable qual- SMART DRESS : ity ‘ 0¢ —Distinetive and attractive patterns in 2 5 <s, fiber silks and linen mixtures, as Sik Boot Stock pure silks, fiber sill » as eae 3 ilk ‘ le ay tig well as very fine imported madras. veing p silk. ow lac! ; ; 2 . —A splendid assortment_of patterns...... white and the wanted shades; eee cE — aes - cresssasassesesss+-$2.00 to $5.00 ~—Fraser-Paterson Co, Firat Floor. Third Fioor. FOR MEN Smart Easter Toggery JX the Men’s Furnishings Section, just in- side the Second Avenue Entrance, and therefore very easy to reach, the particular man will find smart Easter Furnishings to please. GLOVES —Fownes’, Dents’ and Ireland’s makes. haps will mean little or nothing to Our charge system is just, generous and economical, pleas- | ber. But tt will mean everything ant and satisfactory—no extra charges of any kind. Get your to Miss Ring. Easter Suit now and use your credit. Pay $1.00 A WEEK. | For Miss Scheff ts the Pantages 1119-1121 4 | girl idol, and she is anxious for 1 the star to see her work. s Ring is a graduate of a " > York paper box factory, where she received $3.50 a week. Three years ago she took $2 of her week's wages and went to see Miss Scheff play on Broadway. Three weeks later she went again. She then began to imitate Miss Scheff before her factory lends at the noon hour and when she got home after work at night One day not long after this she eaw an announcement of a song contest In a theatre at Avenue B) and Fifth street in New York. As she bad al sung at home she decided to enter this compet: Neckwear at $1.00 noes a Lane’ Seema ite one PECIAL Saturday displays, pened to bear her and it loug before she had & contract. featuring unusually attrac- tive values in the very newest, Later atill when she joined the smart Neckwear ideas. There's present act there came her chance to impersonate Miss Scheff. She a splendid assortment ready for choosing tomorrow. tried it and was so successful she has been doing It ever since—and for a weekly stipend that makes . her old factory pay envelope seem By way of mention: —A new double Cape Collar, made Of organdy with scalloped edge, bound with silk and trim }a mére trifle by comparison. med with dainty narrow laces, LITTLE WAR'S ON WITHIN: BIG ONE |} “scx iis’ wa’ cie Ss fine sheer voile, finished with BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS | hemstitching and lace These (United Press Staff Correspondent) come in two smart shapes, WITH THE FRENCH ARMY IN |] Quaker and Sailor. Set..$1.00 ALSACE, April 2—(By Mall.)—A feud in the middle of a big war, “The Quaker effect in the De : {that Is what this position of Harts. ff Medici Collar is another clever Me «rh hensent oe ‘" “* |mannewillerkopf is; a feud, just ke {J new arrival. It is either plain, t e ¢ i iy 7 ¢ the honest admiration in Pat's eves. |e oanays down in Breathitt coupty finished with lace or colored I wonder why it i* that no one| por French officers will admit edges $1.00 can introduce an unmarried ™An/ang so will German officers, that The very popular and decid- ed ithout . Y_ Por to an unattached woman without this position on the western batt G Col- | edly smart Georgette Crepe Co! the idea of a romance popping into|front has no more and no leas im- ) one’s head. portance than scores of other points lars are shown in white, maize I expect, little book, that thé/sisewhere between the sea and and” flesh; the shades most wanted ... —Franer “£ERERBRBRBRESBSEBEEEEESESESEE CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE mine which I may write by and by, and if 1 do you may publish it if you wish.” “Won't you begin It right away?” asked Pat eagerly “Tam going to walt until Mollie ts back. She eays she has a plan for some work in which she wants my help, I am going to see if 1 ean do both, or if I will have to choose which | would rather do. 1 must work at something, Pat, and without being able stand upright it almost seems aa tho writing were the only thing that I could do.” Just then Alice came into the nd I introduced her to Pat. id, one of my st friends, Mr. Pat Sullivan.” “Pat, I want you to know the splendid, sympathetic companion and tireless worker who makes ny lot at least endurable.” Glove at ......$1. —Chamois Gloves at —Chamoisette Gloves at —A very soft Ca Glove at .. "$2.50 TIES —Unlimited assortment of beautiful and striking effects in fine Silk Ties, ranging from, each ++.++..50¢ to $3.00 PHOENIX SILK HOSE —The guaranteed kind. —Black, navy blue, gray, white, and white with black clockings 50¢ and $1.00 LUXITE HOSE The scientific Man-spun silk that looks and is like worm-spun silk. —Shown in pearl gray, black, white, navy blue, Palm Beach. 35¢ —An extra fine quality at. A very good quality .25¢ WHAT 18 THE UNPARDONABLE SIN? “No, Pat, I don’t believe at this time I can give up the secrets of | my little book. The experiences are still so new, the tragedies are) still unsoften: by time, and the| minute and then sald “Margie, joys are still without the perspec: [why don't you write something that memory will give else? 1 wish you would put some “Some day when life has re@oly-|of those theortes of yours into a ed itself into the quiet waiting of story. | think it would be intense- the twilight hour I may do it, but | ly interesting.” ; see, my friend, altho I am ly-| “I don't know, Pat. I don't Tig here apparently out of it all, I) know. Perhaps when I began to am still living it My poor body is|write for the people to read I fnert, but my mind, my senses, my | might begin to think of the reader, " emotions, my nerves still tingle at/and that would be disastrous. the slightest contact with othe: “It woutd be Ike flattering an minds, other ¢motions, other ac-/ugly woman because you knew tions, other words. I am still the | she Ifked to hear it. However, Pat, old Margie Waverly, with all the iI don't mind telling you that I have old longings for happiness, and I a true story of a girl friend of “TIZ” FOR FEET For Sore, Tired, Swollen Feet; For Aching, Tender, Calloused Feet or Painful Corns —Use “Tiz!” search of it until 1 don't want it any more, and then perhaps out of very perverseness Fate will fling it to me.” Pat looked at me in silence a | earch 0 will go on stumbling tn at eee ee “aneo’ guid,” as Bobby Burns called | switzerland, j them, would simply be speechles#| Every few days the French’ with horror ff by any possibility Pat/and German communiques mention should fall in love with Alice and |scrapping on the knob in the Vosges| she should return that love, and yet} mountaine known as “Old Armand,” to you I will confide something—|or Hartamannawillerkopf, : especially as I do not expect to let! One might imagine that the side anyone read it but you, at least for|nojding this crest held the key ‘to a long time—I know few, better,|paris or to Berlin more honorable or moral women} 1¢ is not so. It's amply the feud than Alice, She is quite 00d) going on, each side determined to| prisoners. tr, iota pil any man lI mayo fuave tha, Ranor-¢ holding the top| Two days later the Germans re- You, little book, know that I have| The quarrel began exactly a year sag Sects Renal er ae no use for a double standard of|ago, A amall detachment of French} Then the French surged forward morals or an impossible standard|Chasseurs established an advancelmaking new gains and taking about of goodness, and because either a/post on the summit of Hartsmanns-|200 more prisoners man or woman succumbs to any|willerkopf. So the struggle for the top of the tefiptation once is no reason why| They were surprised by a larger| mountain goes on. ‘To hold it is an either should not regain morality |force, surrounded and beaten. This|hon r. To win this honor many and “be perfectly good” again |was on Jan, 16, 191 Jeoldiers have died You remember when I told Dick| Fortifying the y strongly ateraon Co. Mirat . Costs Uncle Sam 9 Cents an Ounce to Deliver This Mail words, how'd you like to be the | mail carrier for Uncle Sam from Kotzebue to Barrow, Arctic Alaska? It costs Uncle Sam $625 for each round trip over this most northerly mail route in the world, and altho| this is $1.56 for each pound of mail, | or a little over 9 cents an ounce it's cheap at the price. For the eat each meal. At night the dogs lie down in the snow, huddled together, and allow the snowfall to cover them. In the morning, the driver finds his dogs | by the air holes made by the dogs’ breath in the snow, cember several times, gaining al |foothold, but just before Christmas| the French drove them back with #1 wee ‘Tix’ when Jheavy losses, including nearly 1,400 my feet ache, bum of puff up. It’s fine!” How would you like to travel 1,000 miles over ice and snow, three times a winter, requiring from 25 to 40 days to the trip, walking all the way yourself and driving a dog team of ten dogs and a sled carrying 200 pounds of valuable mail on each trip—for $1,875? In other Luneh at the Hollywood, Pike.—Adv. 213 sition that if the time came when I should love a man better than I did him J should go to him. Well, I believe that thought at léast comes to every woman whose husband is untrue to her, It is perfectly human and nat ural {f you are hurt to want to |hurt back, and yet it Is very prob able that if this ttle book was pub lished, I, Margie Waverly, would come in, for some very sharp crit iciam, because I sald that | ourselves: and wear Tiz misery ir feet feel Get a 2h-cent box of °T druggist or store. Don't suffer. 1} good feet, glad feet, feet that never swell, vever hurt, never get tired. | Beware of Imitations! ' jthe feet. 1 maller shoe get your foot comfortable Good-bye, sore feet, burning feet ferider teet, tired feet bun nd for swollen feet Ah! how Good-bye, corns, callouses, now tment ons and raw. spots. No more shoe tightness, no more limping with pain or drawing up your face in my. “Tiz” is magical, acts right . “Tis” draws out all the pol gonous exudgtions which puff up: at ony We can’t be truthful even with we women would help any woman to yuld almost be If it that blessed end, T v reconciled to giving you, little boo who are a part—tn fact, the greate part-—of myself, to the world 1 have come to believe that the greatest of sing is lying, and that ts why the great spirit of all evil ts called “The Father of Lies.” And I think I will add only to you, little book, that the unpardonable sin ts lying to one’s self, aion point, the Germans captures and 313 as an ob held the noncoms wounded Early iw April the Germans re captured part of the lost trenches, but the French, on April 6, charged again, took all they had lost, to gether with the big rock on the far! side of the summit Humiliated, the Germans pre pared a counter-attack, which they launched April 26, taking every thing back to and {including the sum mit, where they feverishly set to work organizing the position so it would be stronger th men, all un On Sept. 9 the Germans Daily, June Ist to period comparative ¢ lammed home a surprise and retook the summit The French came back at the Ger mank the same night and retook |tneir trenches. The Germans came back in De after a Im attack Reduced i For full information as to rates and routes, call or write aa eral Stopovers General ROUND TRIP SUMMER EXCURSION TICKETS TO EASTERN POINTS ON SALE BY Canadian Pacific Railway September 30th Unexcelled Service £. E. PENN Aweme ¥ 713 Second Ave owner of the dog team which goes over this route has an investment in equipment amounting to between | $8,000 and $5,000 for dogs alone. | It's some trip, with the ther. mome sometimes 60 degrees be- low zero, But the dogs stand it) better than the man, A great many | of the Alaska dogs are almost pure wolf, having been trained up from pups to drag the dog sleds, | The dog teams are used in prefer- | ence to reindeer for several rea-| |sons. In the first place, food must ‘be carried for the team, and the dog food is fish, which is light, is well liked the dogs, is easily packed, and up very little room, The reindeer, on the other hand, feed on the tundra moss, an¢ this is bulky and cannot be carried on the sleds, The alternative is to stop every two hours and allow the tie OR EAE |See to kick up the snow, find thelr MALTED MILK own moss and take two hours tO Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price. You are Interested In a position paying from $150 to $300 a month and will spend §75 qualify, call at once 663 Empire Bldg. to by ASK FOR and GET HORLICK’S takes

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