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‘Crocodiles Were Overfed, | So They Passed Up Annette’ p Small Coin: e The winding up week of a long career of 27 years, which tomorrow will be the beginning, is to be to of lifelong patrons of Redelsheimer’s an oc- on of tremendous savings on Clothing, Hats and urnishing Goods Purchases. We now measure the time of our existence b: for on March 31 Redelsheimer’s will cease t Keer the Flowers os Until the last minute you particular men, hand-| ne young devils, ‘rah ‘rah boys and all, can buy sea-| e, stylish, snappy suits, the latest models, sizes” to 42, and regular values up to $35, for seven eighty- to ‘leven eighty-nine. All Pants at half price and all popular sizes are In a furnishings goods department not surpassed here in town are scores and scores of shirts, union neckties, hats and hosiery that can be bought! cheap you'll suspect we stole *em; what's the dif-| ? Get in on this. Thirty-five cents is the wind-up week price we've on a lot of boys’ shirts and blouses heretofore sold $1 and $1.50. . Four-bits will be accepted in exchange for boys’ ts like we've been used to selling at $2 and $3 apiece, | Annette Kellermann, Who Is Thrown to Crocodiles In “The Daughter of the Gods” Of course the best town on earth will wag along r | How wou you like to be thrown; Then somebody hit upon a brilliant Redelsheimer’s name has disappeared from the into « poo! ful! of man-eating croc: | ea. Feed the crocodiles so tat st before the act that they w familiar front door on this corner, but for a long les? That is what happens to; no appetite for me it m diff t to a lot of people. Annette Kellermann, in The So for an hour be the ne Daughter of the Gods,” now being was staged those « ted a : “ : : " shown at the Moore theatre regular banquet, #0 that when Our passing bart Just om episode in the life and “The Datives assured us.” seys' was flopped into their midst may | th of a magnificent city. No flowers, please; | Annette, “that the crocodiles Sere gaped drowsily at me for all the f} re not in order. n pleas, even if their gaping jaws world like a company of sles . and shining re of sharp teeth t ueters§ regarding the last omforttable look ker of theh even he change, —— See eeN- sid d have week of our existence. , “" spend look like pinmoney. | Lramp, Poet, Dramatist, | delsheimer’s Chas. Ashleigh Now Is Writing of Tracy Trial First Avenue and Columbia | | omesigars Just make what you spend 7 Re Fre Atal A poet, a tramp, a newspaper te tent They were all rioting ; man and an |, W. W. sit each ‘ound, so it was hard to tell any hy should Stone be - etd! TRAOTION PROBLEM | day at the press table in Judge = thing about it, and the authorities The kaiser hasn't asked Ronaid’s courtroom, where a got hold of me, as being the hand! great class struggle is being est person, I suppose, and put me in jail, until the British consul came UP TO CONFERENCE. fought around the stocky figure w | of Tom Tracy, | and cleared things up.” | They are Charies As! lahleigh. Atter the construction gang ep’ A general conference between! | gang epi councilmen and the Puget Sound| ,. "1 |e in charge of pubilelty | sode and an interlude of cow-punch- |] for the Everett Prisoners’ De- ing on one of the huge Argentine | Traction Light and Power Cc., for | fense league, and he isaradical [ranches, Ashleigh returned to leu thag st suas “it "ae a be of the radicals; so revolutionary | Huenos Alres and “did society” and f) ler a 1 oon that he even dares to defy the | hote! news for a dally paper. Then, |held. This plan was decided upon lutionist one day b = Saal ei mianheting of the-asilitinn com | wedition that a reve one day belng too much Ik fittes Tharedas shall be a sinister and mysteri- [in this occupation, he ¢ : : , | euslooking person. He Is young, | walk across South Americ Among the problems that must) gmaij, mild-mannered, and With one companion, at be settled are: The extension of the one-man car service; the mat-! crossed the cont nt to Valparaiso ing wherever there was a civ } speaks literary English with a | fine British accent. ects ter of the rentals on the canal ined. Con bridges; the running of the muni Got Early Training ized community large tnough to pal care down the traction com-|. He was boén in London. As aj furmish an audience, stopping at the boy he was for a time an assistant |/native houses along the road to pany’s Third ave. tracks; the city's suit to compel payment of the trac. tion company’s gross income tax, and the company’s seeking to do away with the franchise obligation of paving its right-of-way. KAISER'S NEAR A BREAKDOWN | secretary in the Fabian society of laliste and free-thinkers,and saw H #806 fand heard Bernard Shaw Wolls and other famous mem A little later he tramped thru F » crowds and Last wooden sleeping cars South Wales hound for the junkpile. But ore miners of it's stirring the to organization STAR—FRIDAY, MARCIT 23, 1917. PAGE 11 §100,000,000 Government of the French Republic Two-Year 5%% Secured Loan Convertible Gold Notes Dated April 1, 1917 Interest Payable April and October 1 Due April 1, 1919. Principal and Interest Payable at the Office of J. P. Morgan & Co. Coupon Notes in Denominations of $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000. into Twenty-Year 54% 937, Convertible at par, upon notice, at the option of the holder, at any time before maturity Bonds of the Government of the French Kepublic, payable April 1, 1 and not subject to prior redemption Principal and interest of the Notes, and of the Bonds inte which they may be converted, are ti payable without deduction for French taxes, present or future, in New York Cuy, in United States Gold Coin. Principal and interest of the Notes are also to be payable, at the opt on of the holder, in Faris tn france at the fixed exchange rate of ‘cs. | 5.75 to the dollar, without deduction for French taxes. be noted that this feature amounts to a call on French exchange for two 5.18%. at or near which figure exchange ruled prior to the disorganiza- ollection in francs, it may cent. below mint parity, fes Such additional profit from the exchange feature as may accrue to the holders of these notes will ge conditions as may occur during In connection with the provision for optional years at a rate of fea. 5.75; this being about ten per tion of foreign markets brought about by the war involve no increased interest cost fo the promissor, but will be consequent upon such improvement in trade and exchan the coming two years The notes are to be secured by pledge with Central Trust Company of New York, of securities approved by J. P. Morgan & Co,, valued in the aggregate at not less than $120,000,000, of which approximately $20,000,000 in value is to consist of securities of American corporations and mu- nicipalities (including securities of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company), and the remainder is to consist of obligations (either direct or through guar- anty) of the following governments; Argentine, Uruguay, Brasil (funding loan), Switzerland, Holland, Spain, Egypt, Province of Quebec, Denmark, Norway and Sweden (including certain bonds of mortgage banks in the last three countries, operated under government supervision, and quoted custom- arily on @ parity with the obligations of their respective governments); also bonds of the state of Berne, Switzerland, bonds of the city of Stockholm, Swe- den, and bonds and shares of Spanish railway companies and of the Sues Canal Company Provision is to be made in the pledge agreement for the maintenance of the 20% margin; for temporary lodgment of cash pending the arrival and deporit of all the collateral; for the holding by depositaries in France of such coupons from the pledged securities ae matnre prior to April 1, 1919; for the sale of collateral and purchase of notes with the proceeds; for proportionate withdrawal of collateral as notes are converted; and for substitutions of Morgan & Co., however, not to be reduced through any such substitution collateral approved by J. P. the amount of American collateral, This Offering Is Made Subject to the Approval by Our Counsel of the Necessary Formalities, ABOVE NOTES FOR SUBSCRIPTION AT 99 AND INTEREST, YIELDING SLIGHTLY OVER 6+ WE OFFER THE Subscription books will be opened at the office of J. P. Morgan & Co. at 10 o'clock A. M., Thursday, March 22, 1917, and will be closed at 10 o'clock A. M., Wednesday, March 28, 1917, or earlier in their discretion The right is reserved to reject any and all applications, and also, in any event, to award a smaller amount than applied for. in New York funds, to their order, and the date of payment will be Amounts due on allotments will be payable at the office of J. P, Morgan & Co., fiven in the notices of allotment Temporary certificates will be delivered pending the engraving of the definitive notes. Application will be made to list the above Notes n the New York Stock Exchange. J P. MORGAN & CO. BROWN BROS. & CO. FIRST NATIONAL BANK, New York City NATIONAL CITY COMPANY, New York City HARRIS TRUST & SAVINGS BANK, Chicago KIDDER, PEABODY & CO. LEE, HIGGINSON & CO. J. & W. SELIGMAN & CO. WM. A. KEAD & CO. ‘ LAZARD FRERES W. P. BONBRIGAT & CO, INC. KISSEL, KINNICUTT & CO. WHITE, WELD & C2. SPENCER, TRASK & CO. CHASE NATIONAL BANK, New York City NATIONAL BANK OF COMMERCE, New York Citg GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK BANKERS TRUST COMPANY, New York City CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY OF NEW YORK FARMERS LOAN & TRUST COMPANY, New York City UNION TRUST COMPANY, New York City " EQUITABLE TRUST CO., New York Citg COMMERCIAL TRUST COMPANY, Philadelphia UNION TRUST COMPANY, Pittsburgh MELLON NATIONAL BANK, Pittsburgh FIRST NATIONAL BANK, Cleveland FIRST & OLD DETROIT NATIONAL BANK, Detroit MARINE NATIONAL BANE, Buffalo CONTINENTAL AND COMMERCIAL TRUST & SAVINGS BANK, Chicago CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, Chicago HALSEY, STUART & CO, Chicago FIRST NATIONAL BANK, St. Paul MERCANTILE TRUST COMPANY, St. Louis Dated March 19, 1917. just as hard to sleep in the steel nturally Dr. J. R. Binyon — at to| THE HAGUE, March 23.—Kaiser nes. went to : ee ere coumuing with rhe muchtesred OMEGKEN FIGHTING SUICIDE CHANGES FREE esl iad ui wed toe wate © read and hax departed for and chun ming with the muc Examination rere $}ment of a railway; then he took a aKes re ot ed here Avoids Monotony BEST $2.50 GLASSES | Sicg;t case toveran teva. comtract to string. tloes int age, Chaneelor| Ther never once tried (0, steal| Jamies Batkwel, epecial devaty| PORTLAND, aterch 2m] SIL ATER ON EARTH tion of the sealp, the hair roots) slong the rigit-of way: tie stead of German grand headquar-|them I was poor myself, and bellev warden, Was arrested in a/Perley B. Lent, a bride of four is. dive che Gf the few teat | Shrink, bg aay gga ee it dono, but he hired a foreman who | te! ed int ise of the poor, and they | (rere eee gst son ‘ months, found the body of her hus- Demonstrations of ci ut fast, stop f a oh wy apne ya ae fn th ua cease te" Ferm hair at once and rid the scalp of did know how, assembled a gang of me cig rettes and invited me rick’. day, and will be tried April|2#"4, shot thru the head, when she 7 one in ie every particle of dandruff, get a| Guarani Indians, ar SLAVS BEAT TURKS °° 280 ei tree | 19 on a charge of keeping birds for| Went home last night. ‘The police SPIRI I Muate opto od 26cent bottle of Danderiue at any! Ashleigh Was the Goat Pre alparaiso he t ed tig Ay that Lent, brooding over ill Baad apis Bahr sh em at of Dn oa : gti and rat RI soe ae aya nae Sek one La] RETURN ry. hand and rub it into the scalp. Aft-| bad| PETROGRAD. After|and st pfore the mast on a! gray that abo ») men| spent th rnoon entertaining a (e) OPTICAL co. er a few applications, the hatr|sort at all, you know,” Ashleigh ex-|16 hours of despe R ailing vessel were gathere m all s of the| Party of men friends. He was a K. P. HALL, First and Pike, FIRST AVE. stops coming out and you can’t find | plains, “but they do drink. One/slan forces dislor o That wae it e then be Northwest at Balkwell's e, and|t nent real estate and insurance Sunday, 8 P, M. . Phos Main 1650! any dandruff. night the cook shot his brother in| pying Aliabad, and ha anaged monotony that a lor rd of fig was | lorced them to retre " P airly well. He ha ed in many t } f on naan —— “ayphcd r tates, studying the vagrancy prob nt The officers f 1 and +, c statement declared ates, studying the vagrancy prov-| photographe1 dozens of pens of len ‘ NP " h fowls trainin, it i be ed in the first place © | where the birds ed " at it was a result of the ec 4.) QUALITY Is the First Consideration in Our TWO YEARS | th |Could Do No Work. Now Strong as a Man For from Chicago, jvears I suffered about two a female in trouble so I was} | unable walk | or do any of my to WOMAN SICK onomic system, and I haven't chang ed my hips and a tramp in America fust for the fun of England how treat a comes into a town with no money and looking for work Ne Corn Right Off WHY DO GIRLS LEAVE HOME? EVERY MOTHER, FATHER AND DAUGHTER They do it because the If I were to tell in| the American police| simply because her e thing n't help it Shrivels, that's } Loosen: like tak nd It's Gone! man they'd not be-| i; ve me. They'd think I was talk g about Russia.” Lectures on Drama | n he was not tramping, Ash- s lectured on “Tendencies in \l own work I Literature in exclusive KE. Pinkham’s! ments on the Mexican border, stnd Vegetable Com-lieq the new stagecraft and drama pound in thel| with the enthusiasts of the Little newspapers and/iheaire in Chicago and the Boheint determined tolans of Greenwich village, in New try it. thought | york, ridden in freight cars without if ; ; almost immedi-|_ penny in his pocket, worked on ’ ; , s ‘ ® A = ate relief. MY|newspapers in San Franciaco, New| ——————_> eS weakness ha#S|Orleans and elsewh and written a ——— 5 entirely disappeared and I never!poems that have appeared in the} had better health. I weigh 165|1jttle Review,” which proves that| pounds and«am trong as 4 man. |ihey are poetry | I think money is well spent which| Ho gaya he has been’ connected ases Lydia Bi, Pinkham’s Veg! with the I W. W. ever since he| The style must be correct and the workmanship the best that can be SORYAN TiGE wt Mrs, 708. /came to America. And now he is} who tbs turned out in Union shops. Every one of these suits is guaranteed to give ee Beal Gubt te Sinking nutore| pan. t908 ; : ce of Lydia E. Pink Judge Ronald's courtroom thet see > ‘ absolute satisfaction ham's Vegetable Compound, made| “te a very practical pavelie rae oo | a from roota and herbs, is unparallel tionist,” is his description of ed, It may be used with perfect con himself. “I care less even for st fidence by % dre Our new spring shipment of Men’s Dress Shirts has arrived. Prices from $1.00 to $1.50 L. V. WESTERMAN TWO STORES women who suffer trom | displacements, inflammation, ul ceration, irregularities, periodic| pains, backacha, bearing-down feel-| jing, flatulency, Indigestion, dizzi tness, and nervous prostration Lydia FE. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com pound is the standard remedy for female ills Store No. 2 Westlake and Pine Store No. 1 First and Main | Crop shortage in Argentina, Bet tr lot gardens t sad painful ways just Fae ge 2 COMING rom vou ton, and ort! it comes | Ml SUNDAY Bl 2nd. © UNIVERSITY Mamaia progress than for change, think a revolution would be a good thing because we need a change.” Just Printers 1013 THIRD MAIN 1043