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TO GO OVER TOP WAR CROSS AND FORW.S.S.HERE KISS FOR BOLD ON WEDNESDAY U.S, SOLDIERS ARMY |Big Shoe Sale Wednesday Children’s Shoes, Tomorrow 1,000 Pairs AMIGRICAD pair, or om Page One. A } ” Child Vont Posters tr Raby Sh | Misses’ Gunmetal Knglish Last ° ' merioan wollen . aed cna ve hi ore “agin len Bras tag i Talk on Thrite . Fe, ‘ poe — a. tones or Be | vv sumone sn ene Sig is a eal en "$3. 49 Cale Dongola Kid Button tty ft ‘ vm . ; i on — tom + Knglish Walking Last ; : ve 1 prenumed the man Bases $1.25 [fessor tnt aia a $2.98) or 2e. ee eee soar are, oma pa . elhamashed ahe f 1 Men's Shoes nt patent nauad of mounted police Will Gunningham received thelr desora = $2.25 |: caine toe fe oy "ant s! dre eo] Ladies’ Gunmetal Calf, Button ? » ee ser ae: Sis! $3 4G $3.49 - pt er Hu aah e. 7 tack i . ling; snedical corps a3 Fwood, comammandine EXPECT MORE ARRESTS $198 Hemstitched Mercerized Woolfilled Comforts, size 34x48 aval training station at the TQ FOLLOW SEIZURE OF mer “agreed “ogee at roa, and four ai-| FOUR AS SPY SUSPECTS —_ $150), =, $2.98 |S mew TOM, Mare 19-—Mere Me Bleache rd Crash Toweling, 18} $2.00 Woolnap Blankets, aan trecoacargpetny hr Bo An = 19¢ oe $5.98 | ‘~ cog Ag he } $2.35 Comforts, sizo 69x75 inch i es, filled wi new oe The Feather Pillows, ize 1 tral Lae nell and the ¢ , ancy « t 7 . the 'w th t backs . . her 38 when they atte = “go. 50 6Be | ee by rn are $15 30 Nottingham Lace Curtains, | 35¢ pa ‘ wo large | Pre Scotch Curtain Madras, « $1.25] sone size 4 Whit haga divorced from her hus! pai a French army officer. Code mes| ~.|magen and other papers have been seized from a safety vault rented by Mme. Storch. Officials are inclined to believe! o\that the claims of the quartet to| French citizenship are bogus. | : AMERICANS NAMED IN CANADIAN CASUALTIES YTTAWA, Ont, March 19.—The ) wa ioley 4 ) V , AH T/i/i : Second Ave. AT UAMES a GIN IN THE STOMACH are eee “ ~_G DANGEROUS * Recommends Daily Use of Magnesia to Overcome Trouble Caused by Fermenting Food and Acid Indigestion. arke number of soct-| 4 formed that the com Gasned—J, Smith, St. Louls, Me; 0. C. Hicks, Eveleth, Minn; H. 8 | HOUSTON, Tex 19.—At af ern of these are urged to report to| A#hbough, Moxahala, O. Nelson, Carrelton, trial by court bs Mane — recently, | COX. no that the work of the societien Sergt. Claude E. Mason and Private| may be uniform. 1 Re ja) efforts will be made te. on whe other oresntzasion—the)| TEUTON PRISONERS ARE | ‘iat, ROUNDED UP BY BRITISH Died—H. G Gas and wind in | Peompanied by that ‘ing after eating. @vidence of the Rive hydrochloric wise Feri stomachs uae too much lieate lining Heading to gastri Serious stomach ulcers Mente and sours. creat) Earessing fas which 4 c and Bots pringing back a| Field Marshal | 1 today opm conducted a © Chapelle, captur two machine guna. chborhood of Fleur Lats | er © atternpted en | ignature in b> Monday noon. Tobacco Halit COMMUNITY SING Se Easily Overcome IS TUESDAY EVE) eee qi THEATRES } ee eg HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD Says Cream Applied in Nostrils Opens Air Panages Right Up. Adit aia ed Instant relief-—-no wait + Your clogged Lodge Cafe! Fourth—W estiake—Pine Cabaret—Dancing World's Largest Dry Cabaret S Feaeeesees Suecess Breeds Success manner. FREE DOCTOR Kx-Geverament hystetan 1111 FIRST AVE. or 109 WASHINGTON #T> RIGHT DRUG Co, FrORKS Look for the Free Daeter Sign. Wisconsin Voting n “War Election” to Deci I { I a, Wis. inflamed brane and re! ite fc It's jus up with a ° People Notice It. ll Them Off with Dr. Edwards’ | Olive Tablets | FIR ST A pimply face will not embarrass you | much jonger if you get a package of | + Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. The skin ti NATIONAL should begin to clear after you have Beton 12 Yee the or | taken the tablets a few nights. BANK. ct. Republicang| Cleanse the blood, bowels and liver inated ar yp | with os ‘ya echo tive Tablet the You don't have to wait “Now, While You Earn, rq Successful substitute for calomel; there's wae vd no sickness or pain after taking them. morrow to invest in War to Saving Turn. L Dr, Edwards’ Olive Tablets do that running on a Fon ot which calomel does, and just as effec- itor La tively, but their action is gentle and safe instead of severe and irritating. Thompson is running on a| No one who takes Olive Tablets is irking “vigorous prosecu- | ever cursed with “a dark brown taste,” war #0 long as it shall be | # bad breath, a dull, listless, "no good” "his indorsement by La| feeling, constipation, torpid liver, bad te maken it an tase etween | Tn eee Tablets are a and on thi ; by’ the eden ae purely vegetable compound mixed with | olive oil; you will know them by their o will muha. ,,Dt. Edwards spent years among pa- : : 3 ant*® tients afflicted with liver and bowel rest '0” complaints, and Olive Tablets are the immensely effective result. | x». Take one or two nightly for a week, | uy ao War Savings Stamp to. See how much better you feel and look. | day Lee 1c and 25c per box. All druggists Stamps. Do it today platform tion of t Out of the High-Rent District NO WAR PRIC H Reading or Distan Gla AMINATIC in gold-filled $2.50 short notice SID ONMEAE ER OPTICAL CO. 1428 First Avenue. Main 6 One Block South of : oo Marke STAR—TUESDAY, MARCH 19, 19182,\AGE 4 CROWDS FLOCK TO SEE A FORTUNE IN A WINDOW! Moreover, many who come to see remain to buy, for the sale of Leudan’s Bank- rupt Stock of Diamonds and Jewelry affords an opportunity to own gems and jewelry that have heretofore been regarded as within reach of only the very rich! particulars: 6“ HAT’S the finest single diamond in the store worth?” said a friendly visitor this morning. ’“Twenty-five hundred came the answer. “Is there a sale price on that one, too?” asked the friendly visitor. , “Twenty-one hundred and fifty dol- ars.” * “Wouldn't two thousand dollars even money buy it?” “No, sir! Twenty-one hundred and fifty is the price.” “You really wouldn't take less?” “No, sir! Why should we? Dia- monds are growing in value, year by year. They have doubled—yes, more than doubled in the past ten years. The increase will continue. Nothing is surer except death and taxes. That diamond makes money for us every day. Why worry about it? It’s as good an invest- ment for anybody—including ourselves —as we know of!” dollars,” HE north window of the Friedlander store shows each day during the bus- iness hours diamonels and diamond jewelry valued at over one hundred thou- sand dollars. It is the largest single ex- hibition of precious stones Seattle has ever seen. In fact, it is one of the largest dis- plays ever made on the coast. Every diamond in the stock is in the sale. On the solitaires there’s a reduction of ten per cent. On the cluster rings and fancy dia- mond pieces there’s a reduction of twenty-five per cent. This is not to raise money. It is not because Friedlanders are retiring from business. But because they bought the Leudan Bankrupt Stock from the store on the corner below, for seventy cents on the dollar. And they can afford to sell dia- monds for less than has heretofore been regarded as possible. THis is being written Monday night— and the store is just closing. Hundreds of dollars’ worth of dia- monds have been sold today. And the folks who buy have the com- forting knowledge that they own gems that are good collateral at any point in the civilized world, and any time of the day or night. For, diamonds are diamonds the world over! Here’s a sketch of the way the prices run, picked up from the win- dow show. Not all, of course, but enough to judge by: $200.00 Diamond Horseshoe Scarf Pin is $174.00. A $100.00 Diamond- set Stag, mounted as a scarf pin, is $75.00. A $75.00 Diamond and Pearl Scarf Pin is $59.50. A Ring, containing a group of dia- monds and a sapphire, is $92.50 instead of $110.00. A Ruby and Diamond Ring is $115.00 instead of $150.00. A fine Diamond, set in Black Onyx, is $76.00 instead of $85.00. A group of small Diamonds in Tiffany mountings are $15.00 each instead of $17.50. HERE'S a Sunburst—a glittering blaze of diamonds—now $390.00 instead of $475.00. A big Cameo Brooch, en- circled by diamonds, is $350.00 instead of $450.00. A Wrist Watch of platinum -diamond mounted, of course—is $550.00 instead of $675.00. A magnifi- cent Solitaire, valued at $315.00, can be bought for $285.00. Another, smaller stone, that was $155.00, is now $137.50. A distinguished Marquise Ring, covered with blue white diamonds of the first quality, is $295.00 instead of $375.00. A More platinum La Valliere, its pendant con- taining many fine diamonds, is $697.00 instead of $775.00. HERE are many groups of less ex- pensive rings, of course. The Leu- dan hundred-dollar engagement rings can be bought for $87.50. The $75.00 ones for $49.00, and a whole tray of cluster rings from the Leudan stock are $87.50 instead of $125.00 and $150.00. (It is only fair to say, however, that the hundred and twenty-five dollar rings are in the majority.) ATCHES are going up everywhere save here! That saying is almost worn threadbare. Unfortunately, it is true. All manufacturers in America will advance prices another twenty-five per cent inside of ninety days. Fried- landers and all other jewelers know it. Meantime you can buy from the Leudan Bankrupt. Stock at a fifth less than last year’s*prices. Here are some watches for men: AHUNDRED dollar Howard Watch is now $75.00. A $37.50 square, new style, 15-jeweled watch is $29.50. A solid gold Elgin that was $55.00 is now $43.75. A whole group of the $25.00 Elgins are offered at $18.75, either round or octagon shapes. An eighty- dollar Elgin is $62.50 (solid gold 14- karat case, too). A group of $31.50 Del Mar watches is offered at $19.50 for choice. And a group of seven-jeweled Elgins, in 20-year gold-filled cases, are selling at $9.85 instead of $15.00 and $12.50. Soldiers’ wrist watches, with Radiolite dial, are offered at the same price. And men’s forty-dollar Waltham watches are $29.50. BRACELET WATCHES are shown by the hundreds. The lowest priced bracelet watch is $11.85, for Leudan’s $15.00 watch. Of course, you can buy a wrist watch for less, and you can buy a horse for twenty dollars and nobody will deny it’s a horse! We have some of Leu- dan’s $8.50 watches here, but they’re not for sale. They can’t be depended on. The smallest wrist watch made, worth $37.50, is offered at $29.50. The conventional size, valued at $17.50, and a good timekeeper, is $13.50. A $40. 00 solid gold wrist watch, with a luminous dial, is $29.50. A $27.50 octagon-shaped wrist watch is $19.50. Also there are plenty of tiny square watches on black ribbon straps, which are very fashion- able. These, too, are reduced twenty to twenty-five per cent. ILVERWARE—both Sterling and Plated—can be bought to advantage right now. Every piece of solid silver is reduced twenty per cent excepting the flat ware, which is reduced 10 per cent. The vee silverware is reduced a fourth, and, in many more. For instance: .50 Breakfast Cruets are § $3.75 Baskets are $ 0 Baskets are § $2.50 Domino Sugs $ that were $1.25 are 75c. Fifteen-dollar Tea Sets, four pieces, are Tea Sets (Sheffield reproduction) are $% on, up to $135.00 Tea Sets, with tray, for $8s. 50— very striking in design and the next best thing to solid silver. Sandwich Trays that were $3.75 are now $15.00 Baking Dishe: 00. $5.00 Casserole: glass-lined Casseroles are $3.95. are $4.50. UT GLASS of the highest quality is also reduced. C $12.50 Water Sets are $9.50. Dollar baskets are $10.00 Lamps of cut gla are $5.50. $6.25 se Bowls are $4.75. $2.75 Sugar Bowl aan $4.50 Nut or Berry Bowls that were $3.00 are $2.00. are $5.00. Square Nap- And $4.50 Celery a ones, larger size, ® Creame re $1.75 a pair. are $3.00. Tall Compot Tall Vases that were $7. pies. that were $1.50 are $1.15, Boats are $3.25. You can buy Spoons, Knives and Forks, and all the necessary tableware, for less than you're likely to hear about for many years to come. A whole chest of silverware, containing 26 pieces, can be bought for $9.85 instead of $15.00. The two Japanese gentlemen who act as shipping clerks have wrapped up so many of these chests today that one of them said: “People this city eat a lot—buy plenty knife and fork!” I thank you. GEORGE F. ROWE. FRIEDLANDER & SON Jewelers and Silversmiths. 1300 SECOND AVE., COR. UNIVERSITY ST. Copyright, March 19, 1918 By George F, Rowe \ ——