The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 13, 1917, Page 3

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STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 13, 1917. PAGE 3 i Lessons in French---No. 14 BIG INDUSTRIES ATISFACTORY TERMS ALWAYS By Mme. Paul Archinard BLAME LABOR | «FOR HIGH COSTS GROTE-RANKIN Cynthia Grey’s LETTERS ( lt ie raining hard, 4 ial | . ; acd i OTTO F. MEGEL, President ‘Bi Dear Minas Grey: | have met | The nevy 139 cropping. WASHINGTON, July 13 18 and one out with diff nt | . ’ 4H} they are delighted to take me Fel + fb' d 1a Flat a bie pal tenieg adit ny t until they find that | be Le son*b duh 14 ob. profits” pronunclamento, coun hid tered today with the plea of Hi | lieve in living right, then that high cost of labo 4} is the last of them, Not many | Rie ut Ges we ae on q weeks ago, | was going out | . 3.01 hese om | { herstie Sea — eo bs Piao Lhave jet received a lebter. committees of the council for | Hi v national defense to be aboveboard in every } - i ie us id Srenident W - at P way, and | learned to think a t nave jusb received a chatterbox aa si blo. ‘pol ah F pot deal : pir aoe we Ne Viens de recevoir une babillarde war and castigated thome I gone out for a few times | | ian % gage ir | he wanted to know when | wa Zhoh vy&n8 davh reohsvhvwah Gn bibeeyard | stimulate” production i going to “step out with him 1} - it -net Gait: Gonieh ot Wie watiC® At this, | told him what my | | (iis “he acid. fee dataw thale et views were, and that ended it | nat. thre shorvitunt ‘yates, f r. hile : a lg. ig Ine 1 The Germans have shelled us. || makes success against Germany al i ce, bu 7 many p | | most impossible others like them | The Boches have 77'd*US (#German gun) || Added ll of which, big bus! Hi The term “step out with me” ‘ acl noss today complained labor is get seems to be the common phrase Les Boches nous ont crapouillotés ting such a tremendous share of D { i | day, for if | have heard it once, | | Lay bdsh noo zon8 cr apooydbay Sa eanTELCy taser that aeain, 4 enp a ps ne , | have heard it a great many — | woll as others - ye 4 times, and if a girl dose net Whe tie bosiinee fotk immed! Regular Price $125.00 y comply with their wishes, they en ‘ , AP’ ately declared that a maximu oe | tell_her there are plenty who | |We have shelled them with the 120'S (mountain gun) | price for labor must be set up ifif| are typical examples of the fine Living-Room f i, and | f . the price of other commodities t+ 3 iture j “| DIAM With and It te goodnight to | We have sent them little wafers. ae ie or ounes Corned ee. Furniture offered in the : | to be arbitrarily fixed, as Presiden wy 1, for one, am a girl who be 1O. : vitae ae te wien Wilson warned they would be. | ie reer one am a girl whe be | On leur envoie des petits pains % cacheter. | JUI Y A t time ane lil te fave men | (On® Or aenwwah dey pibtee pan & cBshetay. SEATTLE TO EXHIBIT | Ht riends, but still believe in tiv y P # ; Concerns “Silver Jim" Farrel, gentle- ing right. Now, Miss Grey, do | Ne ~— a - ~ -- Seattle will t 4 at th a ‘ c si C ily think v Seattle will be represented a € a ng, Been retired, and his comeback tails Pe ke hettouas 4 In these lessons the English sentence appears in the first line, the third annual chemical industrial ex F URNI I URI y ’ Al I ¥ i in whic ¢ takes his final fling and havin right kind of a qood | French equivalent in the second, and the pronunciation in the third line. position, in York, in Septem } stakes his freedom and a fortune for | amar” itt rsa pirt sail ry n In the pronunciation key, straight linestover the letters A and U |) The industrial committee of} th! | r hin i id tiv y* 4 PA A r | , : : . v d a friend. a pure life, for come time ane | denote the long sound, as in “hAte” and “dUde"; curved lines over nber of Cor voted to| The style illustrated is only one of the many hi i | fae Geen te home of these letters denote the short sound In “hAt” and “bUt"; two dots a Pacific Northwest exhibit. | I be el Pet aan i C : a 4 Beaond | nay VAR to save a home of | over the U indicate a sound somewhat like the German “ue.” which es || that can be purchased at a great saving. Others it ; Wm. m Hi . tight oe pes : aA Pop | Americans may approach by pronouncing long U and long E at the! Police protection for his property are priced as follows: Hi ¥ s | eame time was asked Thursday by J. M. Mat si : Mildred Harris that home. A good girl's high eet Ut these lessons and paste them in your notebook ae enee cHotor of the Weat Seat-|f, $100.00 Tapestry Davenport, 80 | $165.00 Mulberry Velour Daven- i K Robert McKim est amb itlon & @ nice ome tle jaund Mittuines save t |] inches long, very comfortable, | port, 3 loose 119 50 Pit : | BERLIN ANNOUNCES strong offensives by the Russiane in pave made to blow * special 6 5 cushions..... . ot | | Margaret Thompson appreciates her. |Galicia. When Berlin does this you can bet that the neat little scheme) piant unless he signed for at th 0 Z | ‘ | | hope to some day meet a [for a separate peace has fizzled. ' closed shop. | 15.00 Brown and Black Tap- $125.00 Blue Velour Davenport, - true minded man, who will re . a il estry Davenport "3 loose cu 4 piporeveslianne: $87 50 | : Harry McCoy in “The Toy of Fate” spect a jolly, good girl | preset aira 7 3 cushions..... ° ii i} aay DISAPPOINTED. rape 7 50 # ‘ some comedy. $8 e $69.50 Rose and Green Tapest- | Terry's Human Interest Pictures Ie “A, L.’ wi ose stamped , i $97.50 Verdure Tapestry Daven- 'Y Davenport, $ (character reading in the face), self-addressed envelope, I w t | 3 3 cushions...... 47.50 j , port, 3 loose and the Katzenjammer Kids— glad to send the recipes for rhubarb |] cushions $67.50 $175.00 Kidney Tapestry Up- | “The Captain Discovers the North poten Margue ~ el “ wf ~s | | $92.50 Mulberry Velour Daven oaseesiops Davenport, very com- | Pole.” MA CRE } port loose $ ‘ortable, $ ar, Poe" $67.50 2" $125.00, ves, were MARRIED UPHOLSTERED First at Pike | hard to obtain Wallace Rei Continuous 11 to 11 | address, until | thought of you. azine wall ek cree a At Great Reductions | and Dorothy Davenport ts hi 50.00 Tapestry Chair, loose | $62.50 Tapestry Rocker, loose oe ee vm $29.75 sat... $37.80 | 00 Tapestry Chair, with | $62.50 Mulberry Velour Chair, | IBELIEF NOT KNOWLEDGE |Mr. H. M. Rogers, Who Secured the Great B. Schneider and Em-|| *°") 7 $39.50 "$35.00 sceeseee ° seat.. eee e Dear Miss Grey: Minnie B.| ; . * ; o frame tnd et eGo te dace| oven Stocks, Grabs Entire Larsen-Mueller Shoe Co. Stock of Tee. ss Sea aden, | taht tenons: GE : ~ 20 with this sophistry,” and then in| Portland, Oregon. Hundreds of Pairs of Walk-Over Shoes Just || vers $29.75 2 $37.50 duiges in soph herself, large é | ’ . . : i M A RKET R EPO RT | [nacrnysically ft” muet, moan te Unpacked and Thrown on Sale Saturday at Rock Bottom Prices. $100.00 Mulberry Velour Chair, | #250 Brown Velour Rocker, | Sse ey toes comin" $57.50 | russ”...... $21.75 | Doe! w anything of “phys. Men’s Walk-Over Shoes, broken lines, worth to Ek Boy Mody ot plisieni sattaret Dees $4.00; Walk-Over stamped on every pair; go at $1.98. seoke Gastba $33.50 she ignore the apiritual beauty of Men’s Walk-Over Shoes, $4.50, $5.00 and $6.00 ROBE. sseesseee ° @ the symmetrically developed human Prtees, Feld Producers for BO™ | lform, resulting from. exerc cleanliness of body (inside and out), values; Walk-Over name and price stamped on every |!’ es _ pair, go at $2.85. Men’s Fine Dress Shoes, worth to $5.00, go at Requisites $2.48. Buy two peirs at the price of one. La inningstead ‘ 3 4 js \and the study of food chemistry, a * “sig ‘u[ science more important than the ie ts\chemistry of the stars? ste thes. checionl abe: mentions s’ and Misses’ White Canvas Shoes and For Preserving and Canning i Nesb—Fener, $4 to 16-pound Emerson, “that golden name in Pumps at 98c and up. The best of the gray enameled lipped | ¥ America,” quoting her own phrase, Ladies’ Walk-Over Shoes, broken lines, $1.89. loners aS eae A ge 8-qt. ri Pork—Good biock bogs wut “gland then uses the adjective “pan. Gelling Prices to Retailer foe | |theistic” in a slighting manner Ke hanna The great Emerson was too well balanced to try to separate the Washington creamery, cute. 31 natural (physical) from the spirit $7.00 Ladies’ Shoes, celebrated Red Cross make, $1.00, 18-4t. $1.45. 20-at. $2.20. 12-inch and 16-inch tops, go at $3.45. pieh Pane ee 110s eat She. a at. Oe, ae 81,20. * rainers, fine and coarse wire, in and enameled, oO Men’s Florsheim Shoes, worth to $7.00, go at Measuring Cups, glass, aluminum, tin and enamel 4 Weshtngven creamery, brick ae ual, and what is that, if not pan- $3.48 a pair. Colanders, tin, blue and white, and gray enamel : theism? , Basting Spoons, tin, enamel and granite, Se to 25¢, Regs Select ranch We have extremes of thought—| Men’s Heavy Work Shoes, for wet weather wear, | Fruit Jar Funnels, granite, at 15¢, Tin , et 9 EE: by ee Sesallons \atleh, Seetrsee (at Slt 16) worth to $6.00, go at $2.85. and Strainers at 25¢, Limb spirit; and materialiem, which de-| A ° 7 Pav Oregon tr clares that all is matter. Why not| Boys’ Shoes, all solid leather, go at $1.95. Girls’ travel the broad midway between! these two extremes, where one may | Sandals and Mary Janes at 98c. Grote-Rankin—PIKE AT FIFTH—Grote-Rankin If you are in need of Shoes, come to this sale. Never t see both sides and get a better per.) "| 1 = 5 spective? It is Anil Extremes! H. M. ROGERS again will high-grade Shoes, such as Walk-Overs, Flor sae : - = f Tematone— lead up to a stone wall, and get US| proprietor of the Red Front Cloth. sheims, Red Cross, etc, be offered for so little money onde nowhere. Great minds never have) oe another Here's your last chance. Come ole FESTIVAL are rin ~ ve epereoreen 1 y | pega parle Bross ede Set aad oe x bd Every article in this great $30,000 stock has been | ” t : — . pe eee ne” rae ee the’ taviclbla abal Great Stock to Seattle marked down to rock bottom sale prices. Come—take | United Swedish Singers Yakima LF ichie Ads rink ode the visible. No one can prove that advantage of them. } ‘ =. Rolled or Ground Barley . : one may exist without the other. |] of Pacific Const (250 Male Voices) x : : ? Not the smailest particle of matter I | Swedish Nig! ne oy foreanut, Meal been found that does not vibrate ’ 9 Marie Sundelius Sol Alfaifa Meal .. ith life, the action of energy. P : ‘ L - | kerchiefs at S¢; $1.50 Cluett Shirts at 6S¢ ’ a, * Reet seraps Se 4 9Y:| Rogers just grabbed this great Larsen € s at 3¢; c s at Gf ; Day ort, ppt ne ae tad es ppb or energy! wrueller Portland stock and will throw it all | Men's Wool Sox go at 13¢; Men's Cotton} | “Y F. Abie ol thal ose of the Metropolitan Opera Ce. ft ew | is formless. jor does any one ; rigs” , Aaah nited Press Staff Corresponde — Altaife May - oiows that the phenomenon ef mat.jon sale tomorrow. It’s a huge undertaking— | Sox at 5¢; Men’s Wool Underwear, worth LONDON, June 30—(By || Hattie Edenbolm Claude Madden Semeherriee— "May ter is anything but spirit in con-|a stupendous sale—and in these days of soar- | to $2.00, goes at 68¢ Men's Flannel Shirts,| mail.j.—“Why is it after Brit- Percent vie Wheat t ' ia a - |crete, visible form. When matter|ing prices it will be a godsend to the eco- | worth to $3.50, at $1. 38: Men's $1.50 Union| ish forces have broken the Ger- site frsined, 2 | Have you ever read the “Pick-| dissolves and passes off in vapor,| © . Suits at @8e; Men's B. V. D.’s, all sizes, go| man lines, as at Bullecourt, AREN a... $ 100 l wit & Papers"? or gas, who can prove that it may nomical shoppers of Seattle. at 39e ¢ & Messines or Vimy Ridge, they University st. Oranges — arma! . +00 /not become what we call mind, or) cas " 7 mre . don't push on thru?” . z —— —____—_—__— ERE coer ae gaaeayte Ih shots, one | i255 Ae COLLARS go at TWO FOR These are just a few items picked at ran-| Gre cf Ensland’s foremost strat Tonight, 8:15 P. M. 7 knows that mind and matter, the| 15¢. A large lot of Overalls go at ABC. | dom from these great stocks. As long as ogists was asked this question to- |] 5,000 seats 50c. 1,000 reserved, $1 a) invisible and the visible, are not one| Men's Pants that sold to $3.00 at D8¢. Boys’ | we can pick up stocks of Shoes and Clothing | | Here is his answer | Asis bebe ead b PUGET S UND NAVIGAT ON 8) and the same always? Is not all| Suits, worth to $6.00, at $2.85. Dress | at about one-half original cost we'll do so—|_ “The whole process of this year |] 0 Rue : my that is divine, whether seen or un.) q 5. Black B Overalls, Work Gloves. B jis a matter of lines of communica- |} Tickets at Johnson-Doner Piano seen, whether good or evil? We|snirts, Black Bear Overalls, * | because the crowds that pack our store from] (io. "rye reason the British of Co. 1529 Third Ave, | may humbly confess that we do|Mackinaws, Logger Shoes, Slicker Coats, etc. | morn till night attest Seattle's appreciation seems to nibble a bit of the | N not know, hoping that in the future in fact, everything for Man’s Dress or Work oF the supreme values that Rogers offers. lenburg line in the north and we may solve the riddle | Wear, included in this sale, and going at And MEN'S CLOTHING MUST MOVE|then strike a few days later far a When we read in Henri Bergson’s , la vorld’ south, is the vital necessity es rices ever placed on world’s’) gaty : cats ith, ; “Creative Evolution” his amazing| the lowest Pi ae I SATURDAY. In order to move this great , tatiiakink eeciawanieaeiin 4 ideas on time, space, matter, etc,,| Standard merchandise. Clothing stock, we've assorted it into two]\jnes and of consolidating positions we feel that we may not wait 80! Saturday we will sell MEN'S 50c PRESI- | huge lots and with each lot we will make| “When the British move for- many ages for other master minds| . Sa urCe . moe at ont 5 Mant» | xceptional Free Offer Saturday: ward after a terrific artillery prep- Hoop sll deh hae deb |DENT SUSPENDERS at 25¢; 10¢ Hand: ' this excsptions ration, which has left little of the | The writer has her beliefs, rea-| enemy trenches but powder and soning from what she sees and ex orpses, they don’t find many Ger- |) Sunday, July 15th periences, but pellet is not know! solu ee tao te case ee 3 MRS. AGNOSTIC. The Germans know a day or so] edge S. S. POTLATCH epi . @F am 3 in advance when a big push is| Leaves Colman Dock at 9:30 a. m. Sunday for a cruise BERS NOT MARRIED. _ |MEN’S SUITS THAT SOLD TO $20.00 ORDERED SOLD AT $7.85. Over 300 Suits |ooming. ‘They can't help it. They up the Hood Canal as far as Brinnon, returning to Ban toe esis .yeu anewer quite: | to select from—many in all-wool fabrics—new Spring styles and patterns, $7 85 1 back to thelr -reserve lines in alana | Rcpen rer or Aes ea aie Mi | and all go tomorrow at this rock bottom price 4 ‘ e r and consolidate ine ir] t ; : . |guns and men, ready for a counter. BIG PICNIC AND DANCE Can you answer mine? Is Ann | And to force these Suits to be sold before the close of business Saturday night, we) stack. men, | Leaving Bangor at 6:00 p. m. and arriving in Seattle Pennington married, how old is |make this FREE OFFER: Any $2.50 Hat in the house—and there's over 300 to select | “The way to stop this counter-at- | at about $:30 p, m | she, and what is her address? | from, in all shapes and styles—will be given ABSOLUTELY FREE with every Suit sold.|tack and hold the advantage we ; : per pence EECen! Er arn A RRADER. ' 3 Jhave won is to rush up our heavy i ae BOATING AND BATHING FACILITIES! | realname? A READER. | And here's Lot 2—Men’s beautifully tailored Suits, late Summer styles, in 1 1 85 ane aha ke vane io ous Chek 4 . 1 ho Seagal las 's not biues, blacks, grays and browns, that sold up to $30.00, priced tomorrow at eOd J pieces when they try to ‘come} id aida sy 3h ha 1896. Ann Pennington is her. And with each of these Suits you get, ABSOLUTELY FREE, your selection of any|#k I; 4 ——- RETURN~ 6. Ann Ponnington is her right pa , . 7S—A HAT FREE I have seen 45 miles of railway | j Children 5 to 12 yrs. 5O¢ e ne and she can be reached at Hat in the house. Think of it—UNHEARD-OF VALUES— ND A. P. LE aligidcin dives Akak UL. SLaine® Bee SHER Men's Overcoats and Raincoats at these same prices—$7.85 and $14.85—if you wish.) the tront work night and day,| DR. J. R. BINYON : is | PLEASE NOTE—These Free Offers are good SATURDAY ONLY Fees ih leteely Wy NOOR Gee FREE eee eae teeutd the | People, we believe this will be your last chance to buy standard high-grade merchan- |‘ Mi get Role of se niac at tae at ] } i i y y « ourg line, we hold o! . blood pressure of a man 35 |dise at such low prices as these. Just Ss these values—now is the time to know how and fog tenacity, the papers call it, Examination | + years old be? where to save money. Come, grasp thiS opportunity. Our five large display windows are ))¢ jv’, military knowledge and} BEST $2.50 GLASSES How much should a man 35 |; P vh-g i ri ridiculously low. If you want to foresight just as much , ale B teat, 7 peuken tals, | Just stacked with high-grade merchandise, and all priced I y Tf yor 0 | for elgh iu ct SHUG. ails ON EARTH | Teich th lar cloth | |save—be here with the crowds Saturday. Sale starts promptly Saturday morning at 9 sharp Furthermore aul the Germans) i auel Cr ike tee eae j weigh with regular clothes on? | SURE YOU COME TO THE RIGHT PLACE—NOTE ADDRESS CAREFULLY. | a certain sbol 8 Worthivee Chae Fenty ‘ “ .. | oO n , A—The blood-pressure of a hketaige YE helt Gitano finish, reserves and guns oxamination free, tometrist. Glasses not bed unless absolutely neces- ft" Me Red Front Clothing Co. °°: weight 152 Ibs ecto Opposite the Public Market |strike somewhere else, while they] BINYON OPTICAL CO, ‘ravi pena vow wm], 508-1510 First Avenue Serica pit seks: (SSSR soe We OO eens to make people smile. ee

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