The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 20, 1917, Page 5

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Blankets and Rew lines of Hlankets and Bed Our new line of Heaters Ging of all descriptions. Flan large size, regular price $2 HOW TO JUDGE A WOMAN ‘There is a real common sense [n| just noticing whether the hair is which was formerly thrown away,/ along, with some of me remaining well kept to judge of a woman's or used as fertilizer. neatness or good taste. If you are! Dr. CW. Johnson, state chemiat,| [ut We parted very friendly one of the few who try to make of the University of Washington, ix the most of your hair, remember | making extensive investigation iato |" that it is not advisable to wash the | ¢y, ; the food value of the fish hair with any cleanser made for all | ——__ . ls s AT, 3 a an expressly ; 5 for shampooing. You can enjoy the BISU RAT D very best by getting some canthrox from your druggist, dissolve a tea 0 spoonful in a cup of hot water. And somehow, even ‘This makes a ‘full cup of shampoo lmemory of those dear. enough so it is easy to apply F Dy a I alfekins, and the protestations of ft to all the hair, instead of just} For ‘spepsia. ndigesti my ligaments, I feel that my next the top of the head. Dandruff. ex! “i prs cess of] and dirt are dissolved and | st: entirely disappear. Your hair will be so fluffy that it will look much heavier than it is. Its luster and) je softness will also delight you, while | ret! the stimulated scalp gains the) |t¥ "nd sweete health which insures hair growth. | tess Sold by druggist “ Woodhouse-Grunbaum Furniture Co., Inc: 416-424 Pike Street | WE'LL TRUST YOU | extra charges! ao worp THAT of the little Qui omefurnishings 10.00 wefurnishings 15.00 listen! Those shoes joalfakin fore we begin well, something ix the what | mean But, say, was it worth every dance a “mi ery man a Willing rf He was a satlor t Bedding AM ready for you with brand Heating Stoves line ce comprises all styles and sites | Sleeping Blanket, extra z a0 | in both Coal and Wood Hurn ing things Special for = | ers, Bullt epecially for local Sim BREAKFASTS. STARTING, ee et een ELUB BREAKFASTS, STARTING ;,. nT HOG). bes To anit your taste and pocketbook. | 3 ae geal rage. Sarees ; HOTEL BUTLER.— Advertisement. | Leavings of Fish %)! 3s." p. and a mess Biologists are working on a new consequence ing and canning of spawned-out During fish, which aggregates thousands of | Ft, cone pounds, at the 32 hatcheries, and ish sensation of being ‘over there r that first dance, more cleverly. I use some yweman's instep Sour al P in a half glass eating. Is safe, pleasant and harm ° t instant |aa a f h acid-| door, pa’ The wel It neut #0 that digestion is eas New Gas Rate Schedule: - Filed . The Gas Company is compelled to file a new schedule of rates because the rapid and steady increase in cost of operation «has reached a point that renders a substantial addition to its revenues imperatively necessary. Notice of the filing of the new schedule has appeared in the news columns of the city papers. For more than a dozen years the price of gas In Seattle has remained stationary (except for a reduction on large quantities made a few years ago). During all this time the prices of nearly all other commodities of every day life have made large advances, and ft has been only by the most strenuous business methods and the investment of large sums of additional capital that the Gas Com- pany has been able to meet the gradual upward tendency in price of everything except its own product. Three years ago, in an official investigation by the Public Ser- vice Commission, it was found that the Gas Company had been earning less than three per cent on the actual value of its property. That condition has not been improved, and as a matter of fact, distasteful though it be, the Company is today confronted with an increase in cost of operation over one year ago of more than $20,- 000 per month. This increase comes from the higher price of manufacturing materials and labor, taxes and a few minor items. We cannot control the price of coal and oil nor fix the amount of our taxes. Our employes are entitled to the same hours and condition of labor as employes of other public utilities and corporations. It is just and fair that the people whom we serve should pay a sufficient amount for such service to enable us to maintain it at a high stand- ard under reasonable and accepted business principles. Conceding the urgent necessity, we have filed a rate schedule that we believe will increase our revenues by approximately the amount mentioned above, and will impose the least burden upon the Individual consumer. The effort of the company is to avoid a radi- cal increase in the price of gas per thousand cubic feet. The new schedule abolishes the old minimum charge of 25 cents per month and substitutes therefor a readiness-to-serve charge of 25 cents per month, which each consumer will pay, regardless of how much or how little gas he uses. The discount of 25 cents per thous- and on the first 5,000 cubic feet has been reduced to 10 cents per thousand cubic feet, the basic prices of the old schedule remaining unchanged. It is estimated that these two changes will give the necessary additions to revenue, and that a small part of the sum will be paid by every consumer. The readiness-to-serve charge is based, like the old minimum charge, on the fair and just principle that every consumer entails an absolute and continuous monthly expense upon the company, independent of the amount of gas he uses. We sincerely hope each of our customers will accept this rela- tively small monthly increase in the ungrudging spirit that must animate Americans everywhere if the service of the Public Utilities Companies, the credit of American se urities, and the industrial en- ergies of the country are to be maintained. Seattle Lighting Company iatrfet*No, 4, Qu 48 men who left Thursday from | high school, where the sf district for American Lake. shed for your conventence-— | gin, let ue all bow our heads Fee oe aN iit |p| in memory of those nine-and-e half-buck Shoes that have gone to the cobbier's as the result n Anne soiree for the honor men held on the pavement in front of the Qu Anne high school last night, calfskin! ‘The calfieat of calfskin! Hut three hours’ close communion sith asphalt is not conducive to the longevity of even the allunighty And just another lgtle thing be. All those little cords that Nature so kindly placed in anatomy to hitch and heels together They don't feel just right are doing a mighty lot of protest ing for this early hour Every Dance “Moonlight” alieht T admit my first victim oy, and 1 chose him hap-hazardly from the with me,” said I * sald he, as tho not ac to this new way We xped off to “Where go from here? (There a ne sometimes waits hour were of slight step in food conservation, the say Sings to Pavement first lap, my ed somehow jady'’s high heel, and I had a Ford trategic. I planned my cam thru the black hu mass, then After pivoting 1 watched her gap—and so the even-| sneaked on to midnight S new ether com poetic surging shall be dedicated to the bumantzing impetus of pave ean hilarity wheel of coopera: ! Ieion put over big the farewell c and erful! Try it! men should keep freezone STAR—THURSDAY,. SEPT, 20, 1917. PAGE 5 ° Studies Bird Life With Movie Camera Norman McClintock, famous n. uralist and student of birds, is here shown with his movie camera ready to snap movements of birds near-by McClintock sheltered by bird arrives. regular ticking mechanism drowns out the click of th. Tefa, so the birds are not » it tent, until er and + Not a Corn or i Callus on Feet Apply few drops, then lift them off without pain. - A noted Cininna thority discov and called it ¢ and it now can nts from are, then you will find corn or callus so fingers plying freezone afterwards. and the skin or corns between toes also tough off so easy. It is nelr dressers and never let @ corn | . twas The Coming Most Popular Theatre in Seattle TIVOLI GRAN) OPENING Sui., Sept. 23 Reasons nm Anne hill, to; T @ started, and crowds were ‘ed. bottles for a y apply drops of frees on a tender corn or callus, and stantly the soreness you can lft it off » pain, not « bit of nees, either when foesn't even irritate Hard corn, soft corns Office It ts 1 ned | Whe calluses, just shr works like a chart PAVEMENT HARD ON CALFSKINS On Calves, Too, But Fine, Patriotic Time Was Had on Queen Anne By Echo June Zahl Dear friends, before we be auditorium of Queen Anne and muste were held, was filled long before the entertainment warm ing continually in the corridors and outside, awaiting the openalr dance which followed Follow Star Editorial Following the editorial gestion yesterday of The Star, each person was given a card as he entered. On the card was @ pledge to act aa sponsor for K«¢ resident from District No. 4, who t# in mili of the United States tary Kervice of Ame suppl books or ful artic) and home Thousands of pled turned in on elgned cards at the end of the program The speakers of the evening, an nounced by Daniel B. Trefethen chairman of the district, were Rev Van Der Las, of the Bethany Pres byterian church Jud: ree Donworth and former Se uel H. Piles “No Pacifist Prayer’ and to see that he | each week with letter tobacco, use agai w “Washi did hymfs at Valley Forge Fort Sumter was erumbll beatitudes did not save Rey, Van Der Las It wa steel and guns that did the wor “We want no pacifist's pr now to’ interfere with our for berty. Every so-called pacifist should be intérned until the end of the war.” The crowd grew wildly enthus fastic when Senator Piles drew fn vivid colors the help that France gave An ans when, half-naked and starved, America was fighting for hi rty The inside music was furn by the Knickerbocker qu et which sang “The Old Brigade.” a cornet solo by Albert Cleveland, and a song by Mary Louise Roch CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE ° WOMAN MUST HELP HER SELF WHEN WRONG e o It is ovt, Mee these years, the Harry and Elle beew guarding #0 carefully is com mon property. We rece book! After all rible secret that this morning which te story ° Such a Harry heads t m (God say ¢ voted on at $the election + Tuesda Then follows ¢ whole story was, The 1 the atory to Dick, and he I told bin self, 1 could “But, Margie,” he sald m and ade every repara Every are It was not possible ssible to & © faith and tr sible to give lou with th great wa liene made to help him Eliene.” said Dick, “it d on her but I think » Har riday Hour Sales telephone or ( 11 to 12 Cotton Dress Crepe 10 toll Women's Serge Dresses Fancy Mesh Veiling Copenhagen blue, trimmed with bone tons and patent | velt and are for W Long Crepe Kimonos— $1.50 i", Curtain Scrim Crepe de Chine Tles— cream and ecru 1 Cotton Petticoats, Reduced for Friday to 50c Upper Main Floor Tub Silk Waists—The | this sale 20 Tub Sit) Checked Nainsook—250 yards from the regular stock. This fabric i Madras Waisting — one have | The Rhodes Co. a yard.......% DROPS * TREATED ONE WEEK breathing relieved in = few on't know about that me ago a congress mparison Will Show That These You Are Simply Incomparable $8.50 Sweater know, Di mu er r most women will stand by a and, und few men st. You remember | was at the time Presenting those well twine known Eastern writers Do you for and producers of musical Harry would comedy and comic opera, children if E was not their ther Rothermel and had been born to her? It ts MacCullough ee ee ah hls tar offering their All-Star Eastern Company in their own ortair ya, ward oT robe and The trattors ruled the army, And brought It to defeats And they eros In every flahting may be a ane ° To make the final stand. Furnished by the v Kellie Burns \wies right as might, we, too, have Association much more Pacific Coast Representa tives of the World's Larg est Vaudeville Circuits AND UNION This Frees Your Skin From Hair or Fuzz 3 The method he quick and cer growth is extreme stubbor application doe 10c Eves. and Sun. 10c 15c latone and water to the hairy surface and minutes rub it off. skin and the hairs are To avoid disappointment, be your dru | Advertisement, the same circumstar Men’s Linen Handkerchiefs Special $2.40 and $2.85 the Dozen Handkerchiefs dozen $2.40, 's Handkerchiefs, Initials in nearly all letters dozen $2.85, with handsome in has Internal strife, Specially Priced Friday Men’s $3.50 Fine Woolen Union Suits Specially Priced Friday I wear the double- Pajamas , COAT, DRESS RENCE UPSTAIRS Suits $4.00 MATINEES the removal of paperrits u shalt ‘ Nightshirts $1.25 Friday is the last day of the Annual September Tie Sale MacDougall-Southwick Men's Shop, Just Inside the Door, sist sells you deleatone 1 to2 Coates and Dreeses—15 nents from the Obie tion, inelud- Black Satin n wiz age 9, regu $ 4 one White Ire size 14 yearn, ree ce $12.50; two 6 Rep Dresses, size ears, regular $3.60; Dress, alae gular $6.50; Gingham “ ize 6 and 10 cular $4.96; cham Dress, Sea vizo 12 years, regular 49 one Apricot Dre size 10 years, regular $4.95; one Tam siz6 12 YTB 95; four a Dresses, size 14 years, regular $2.50, and one White Galatea Dress, size 38, ling, have Rose, They an trimming. 5 to 5:30 t Section have for Waists in flat collar that are convert ese are in light and may be had zes 36 and 38 only, marked at $1.95, his half hour, your | desirable for ume derwear, pajamas and Once jren's wear, arked at 20c. For this half hou: ————==_ LZ Seg ee. = CRE RIRRRYE eeRenE Nee heey p ih)

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