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STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 29, 1918, | } ’ .: eenow how your clothes are made. Take that suit you are wearing. Has it got the essential points ry good suit of clothes? know good tailoring is absolutely lothes, and while good fabric is necessary, the two quali- plete satisfaction. In order to develop a price appeal there is a great I times for dealers to overlook to a great extent the tailoring of clothes, to sell their merchandise. ' know that no matter what the con- policy of this upstairs store to maintain the standard nds and thousands of satisfied customers, and to sell only clothes that ized leaders in clothes making. ‘know that clothes cost more to make ‘and hence necessarily a suit purchased at the same ‘less in quality. We want to say this: IT IS ONLY BECAUSE AT WE ARE STILL ABLE TO SELL YOU A SUIT AT FIFTEEN manufacturers to sell at that price. Protected ave exercised every atom of our purchasing power and ince of rising prices from America’s best makers, therefore our value er price that necessarily would be demanded if bought on present market. ou get the combination of high-class tailoring with quality um of service at the minimum in price Stamps OVERCOATS [= i upstairs? Absolutely. Figure it out for yourself. With we—with our small investment in fixtures—with our cash selling plan and jion—you will be convinced in five minutes if you will let us prove it to Spring Suits. You will be glad you came, and will be well repaid for the Buy War Savings , 9 TO 6, INCLUDING SATURDAYS ‘HOT WORDS FLY IN WISCONSIN March 29 With | left be election Tuesday | MILWAUKEE |but three campaigning da }fore the ndidates for Wisconsin's senator hip and their b ro engaged today in the most bitter pa din thin wt of them are may | war ever stu Here's what ing | “If before the war I was disloyal then Pre Irvine L. Why 4id Congressman Ler fail to vote for the soldiers’ ve FeALED COLLAR nallors’ insurance bill? Wher he whgn the espionage bill w fore the Attorney Gi Timothy Horan, Ohio, democrat nt Wilkon was disloyal” Lenroot, republican nom “What will Wisconsin do? In this | 4 political issue when civilization in rocking in the balance? If it in a po litical insue, then God help our coun Josep! 6, Davies, democratic andidate | Kvery man in the socialist p |nhould be made to present hin |before our fing, and, unless |mwears his allegiance, he should be nent to the country he loves more |than our own."—Gov, Jas, H. Cox Ohio. ‘YOUR ‘SICK CHILD IS CONSTIPATED! Hurry, Mother! Remove poi- sons from little stomach, liver, bowels. Figs” if cross, bilious or feverish. matter What ails your child, a axative should al ways be the first treatment given. if your | one is out of sorts, isn't resting, ing and acting naturally—look, Mother! see if tongue is coated. This is a sure sign that the little stomach, », thoror half-sick and bowels are cloggell with waste. When cross, irritable, feverish, stomach sour, breath bad or has stomach-ache, diarrhoea, — sore throat, full of cold, give a teaspoon- ful of “California Syrup of Figs,” jand in a few hours all the consti-| ated polson, undigested food and| r bile gently moves out of the| ttle bowels without griping, and ou have a well, playful child again Mothers can rest easy after giv armless “fruit laxative,” r fails to cleanse the er and bowels and i stomach, and they arly love its pleasant taste. Full directions for babies, children of all ges and for grown-ups printed on ch bottle. t Beware of counterfeit fig syrups | Ask your druggist for a bottle of “California Syrup of Figs”; then| see that it is made by the nia Fig Syrup Company.” NEURALGIC.PAING Give Way to Soothing Hamlin's Wizard Ot ‘alifor- effective treatment for headache and | neuralgia. Rubbed in where the pain is, it acts tortured nerves, and brings quick relief. Its healing, can always be ré Infection ious results, from sp burns, and stings. ust as good, too, for sore feet, stiff neck, frost bites, | cold sores and ¢ anker sor Get it from druggists for 30 cents. If not satisfied, turn the bottle and get your money back Ever constipated or have sick headache? Just try Wizard Liver Whips, pleasant little pink pills, 30 cents, Guaranteed —Advertise:nent AVE DARK lh AND LOOK YOUNG Don't stay gray! Nobody can tell when you darken gray, faded hair with Sage Tea and Sulphur | Grandmother kept her hair beau- tifally darkened, glossy dat tractive with a brew of Sa and Sulphur. ever her hair |took on tha ded or streak Jed appe: », this simple mixture , Was applied with wonderful effect. |By asking at any drug store for “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com- pound,” you will get a large bottle of this old-time recipe, improved by the addition of other ingredi- ents, all ready to use, at very little wt. This simple mixture can be pended upon to restore natural jcolor and beauty to the hair, | A well-known downtown drug gist says everybody uses Wyeth’s 8 » and Sulphur Compound now be use it darkens so naturally and | evenly that nobody can tell it has |been applied—it's so easy to use, too, You simply dampen a comb or soft brush and draw it thru your hair, taking one strand at a time. |By morning the gray hair disap- pears; after another application or |two, it is restored to its natural color and looks glossy, soft and |beautiful, This preparation is a |delightful toilet requisite, It is not |intended for the cure, mitigation or | Prevention of disease. LOOK AT TONGUE! of| Hamlin‘'s Wizard O11 is a safe and|* Say: s Photoplay Stock Caan’ With Dizzy | Millions Is “Inspired” | | G. W. Grammer BY NORMA E. ABRAMS Wheeler Wilcox film, ‘Where Is G. W. Grammer is promoting a|My Baby” and expect to secure 7] motion picture Corporation. the rights for Oregon, Idaho and — You don't know Grammer? W Montana.” j maybe not by name. But you hav Then followed figures flung out ery one in Seattle by the bearded philosopher witht n him. He is that barefooted, | the rapidity of gn adding machine, | white-garbed old gentlenan with the | Profits mount into incredible flowing hair and beard, who is figures in the space of a minute |” known to some as a “divine healer “We will’ make ot the others as the leader of some re-| conservative, very Poca “We will count the wi income from the picture at each week. That will mean $5,208 | gious cult. naid. Yes, patriarchal Grammer is now |in the movie business, and enthusi | astically so. He even wanted to sell me shares | “ich year and by operating f0ms films in the state we can make n the corporation he is organizing be Be when < enlad'te ais Riek: that $20,800 each year. With state's rights in three other states the When I introduced myself as a : : "t thal possible investor, Mr. Grammer daid | ™OneY climbs to $82,400. | Ian't wonderful? It can't fail.” © else aside and settled right down | ¥ an apparent basis of “Life is real,| Just then a woman entered his of” life is earnest,” and began to explain | fice, at'218 Seneca st uld become wealthy thru his cor-| terested in she corporation, and aa sured me tft it was wonlderful. She How It Started j beamed delightedly when Grammer “TT tell you all about it,” he said. | added that $10,000 had already been “I don't do that often, but I'll teil | invested, in shares at $1 each, Gram 7] you the whole thing—if you are not|mer is not interested in the very in a hurry,” he added; “I can't do/| small investor, however. He said anything in @ hurry.” that they were selling stock in blocks I mentally registered right there ; of $100 or more. Before I left his $ Bye that he certainly had never been in/fice he asked me how much 4 movie studio on a sunshiny day, or | thought that I would be able to im he would have lost at least a portion | vest of his exuberance. With the lady as an interested ate You see.” he continued, “it all | dience, Grammer went back to come started when Dobell, the film direct-| puting profits. With the “fairy” pie or who is producing children’s films}ture mentally upon the market, @ at the old studio near Madison park, | huge success and the orignial profits discovered my life story. ‘Why,| doubled, the promoter busily complet Grammer,’ he told me, ‘that would | ed calculations upon his life film, make a play that will equal “The| His production is going to be @ Birth of a Nation,” “Intolerance,” or | World-beater, he modestly claimed. It any of the other big features, but we | Will be instructive, entertaining and will have to have money to produce | orally uplifting. But it won't eon tt” sciously uplift. The audience will — Right there I had a vision of| only absorb subconsciously its phil- three-block-long walls of Babylon and | osophy, to be used later, when need: other elaborations of a $1,000,000/ed. At least, that is what Grammer || production, constructed at the Madi- | says. I son park studio. But that was a| In addition to all its other virtues, ~ dream from which I was awakened |!t is going to net the corporation just — rudely when Grammer continued | $2,000,000 each 12 months, he calgu- with his narrative. lated. It all works out nicely under _ “Dobell says that it will cost at/the corporation head's computation. least $5,000, and maybe $10,000, to; Hach film will bring in $250 a night put the picture over in big shape as|in each theatre, That is very com: ~ a spec lar production.” servative. Grammer claims the film “We had no money, s0 I devised| will be so large that it will only go the plan of beginning thru the| to the largest theatres, but he counts production of other pictures, the earning capacity on theatres ag Forms Children’s Company commodating 500 guests. ‘We organized a children's com-| With no difficulty at all he specu. | pan Each parent whose child|!ated on the number of reproduc appears in the film has paid $10/ tions possible, and the films which as an entrance fee to insure the| could be released at $250 each night child's training for a movie career. until an earning of $2,000,000 mate: “But that was not enough money, | Talized before me. We had all the children we could| After explaining that I wished use in the first children’s film|/ time to reflect upon the wisdom of sed, a fairy play, and stil}|the investment, I left his office. nous <nena Dazed by the vision of wealth pie ‘ ‘another $10 available, and| tred for me as I was, the lack of not even enough money to complete | XPense was marvelous to me. the teat: AinL I am still stunned by the figures, “Then this idea came to me, and I am sure I was inspired. I am jorgantzing a stock corporation to bey state's rights on films and!” panqruft causes a feverish irritas show them. Toole | “The movie business is one of| {vine teeen and then the hair the four big business ventures -of| comes out fast. To stop falling — the age, Millions have been mado! hair at once and rid the scalp of em in it. y pS “Why, listen! One hundred and bette ot Dantentin ata drug seventy-elght thousand dollars were | store for a few cents, pour a little, paid by the Australian government] in your hand and rub well into the _ jalone for the right to show one] scalp. After several applications, Charite Chaplin picture, I have| dandruff disappears and the secured state's rights on the Ella stops coming out. poration, PORE TE. | WHY HAIR FALLS OUT tna