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30 SOLDIERS CAMP LEWIS With minent local ville show of the Lewh jod here lant week in its the military and in addi elude thre entirety in se m the program numbers by clev ft dintinetion of firat prize Jtition with all Int div entire 7 mal dir na , potion f ur ra’ experience in ste Thursday night is to be yt atthe . which tn to Hon Marche park for the re of the week and Sunday makers continue to find the a jolly place to spend an two, and meanwhile the sick fund grows. Friday celebrate at the carnival. Boys Broadway high thru the medium of a questi do. Hundreds of high sche will spend their vacations cultural and industrial work SECOND AT SENBCA—CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11 ADMISSION 2¢e-—CHILDREN 1¢c . WARNS AGAINST BOOZE | Liquor brought into the state in| M. Fukuda, Japanese must pay wer small quantities will be con. | $25 because he turned out his horse , Be OF re MOREE | sired 0 Vielation of aw cabanas a to starve last fall. He was convict. in small quantities into the a jed of cruelty to animals before Jus from British Columbia, has|>y strict penalty, in order to safe | ce MW, Lawrence, Auburn, Wed: | ee ee per vecepde, |” uniformed men, Saunders! nesday on charges preferred by King attorney. if ¢ | County Humane society. Promises for the Day To give all I can to the Red Cross. To buy as many Liberty Bonds as possible. To buy and encourage others in the purchase of Thrift Stamps. To be thoughtful of others. To encourage and help all. To remove the stones from my brother’s path. To help all to help themselves. TO HELP TAKE THE GUN FROM THE HUN To put the punch behind Hoover’s request. To help our boys “Over the Top” To bring them back to their loved ones. Food Must Win the War—Don’t Waste Chauncey Wright Restaurants Co. HAZEN J. T:TUS, Pres. S| Peete te eeeetse +oeee er eet ee ttt +t + APPEAR AT MET than 50 soldier-actora Lewis and a seore of Headquarters yaude ith infantry will At the Liberty theatre, Camp | It will be repeat thespians are concerned of the bands in the | midst this Kathleen Shows Moore Audiences | Quick Dres. ng | OF 10 girls in > far an will in. er Sea rom the aduction | —and compe Seattle has, right in her very week, one of the best] known photoplay stars on the screen der the |—-no less personage than captivating | of tucks, has subscribed to the Red Cross Second be «tl politan theatre . Jon Saturday evening, June 1, for the War Fund Drive—a day’s pay or more. ee benefit of the Overseas fund of the men who are preparing to leave for | the front ™ — woduction was seen by 2,000 To Facilitate the Fashioning of Graduation Frocks make them ty ceiluicl on (eh: eats area dainty and fluffy as they | ville and includes dancing, singing should be, here are Picot- | tauee. ‘Sitiied -oennioalie tae al edged Nets and Organ- number by the famo us 364t th ary ot | Kathleen Clifford dies, designed with va- rious pretty combinations | ruffling shirrings — running from Every member of this organization as Summer Floor Coverings HE very ground work for summer comfort in the | home is the cool-looking, sanitary floor covering, | and it means quite a saving in wear on the finer rugs when it replaces them for the season. and \Newsboys’ Carnival Will Ran All Week night the teamsters SIGN FOR WAR WORK are signifying the share of Uncle mirreront Sam's summer war work they will ope. tom t Both tm the wreag and auth That eotherhooe” bern in mest ett tt et tt tt + + 12 to 18 inches deep on Ray Kathleen Clifford, the 90-pound Para ; | mount Pietures s She is one of} a total depth of forty GRASS RUGS are woven of the headline attractions on the Or-| ; inn oO ough prairie pheum circuit bill at the Moore, in inches. Prices are $2.00, SS ee and | dered effects, with plain ah allover-tigured centers. 4-6x7-6, $4.75. | jher first appearance here in vaude | ville } $2.50, $2.75, | Kathleen was the star the ||| $8.75 yard. pyre yt MUCH IN VOGUE ARE $3.50 One At the Moore this Mine Cut: | iry|ford plays the role of a boy. Bhe neTD ” 7 x’ changes from girl's drees to her boy | THESE SHADES IN oxi2, $12.50. inue in clothes in view of the audience and }EORGETTE oREPE: fF | mainder shows that a girl can dress in a GEOR! sETTE CREPE: COCOA FIBER PORCH RUGS Merry. sitty, “ ‘ artillery red, cavalry yel- hour or PALACE HIP low, infantry blue, serv- benefit] ‘The headline feature 6f the new| ice corps green, khaki, show opening Thursday at the Pal| will ace Hip is Bob Ladue's ‘seven Kaa. |f| burnt orange, terra-cotta ding Kids,” a school, singing, dane and duck-blue; offered in JAPANESE RAG RUGS ing and comedy act, in which Ladue . i itv. y r « noot,| ct A modern “Huckleberry Finn"|f] ® Superior quality, 40 WOOL AND FIBER RUGS otchool.| character | inches wide, at $2.25 Eddie Clayton offers “Something | d. in songs, The Hoosier! yard, —First Floor. a have a harmony feature | Fulton, Mack and Fulton are! one _—— in ad § “Twentieth Century comedy gym-| haste.” Miller and Rainey present jan act called | “Comic Oddities Daly and Berlew have a sensation al dancing number. THEO KARLE TO SING FAREWELL FOR RED CROSS| | By permiasion of Maj. Gen. Greene, Seattle and Olympia, who has joined! the national army, will give a fare- well concert for the benefit of the Ned Cross at First Presbyterian church Monday night Tuesday he will return to Camp Lewis and take up training for over. seas service with the national army. Karle's career reads like a fiction jtale. Only a few years ago he was |a strapping school boy—but be had an angelic voice, He was taken to New York. Since then he has tour ed from one end of the country to janother, winning the admiration of music lovers. He returned to Seattle and married his high school sweet: heart. Now he is going off to fight. | + Ae Important Offering of New Silk Suits at $22.50 OTE the exceptionally good quality of the silk in these Suits, and their very attractive styles (four as sketched) and you will decide that they are a good in- vestment toward summer smartness. They are tailored from Crepe Poplin Plain Poplin Faille Taffeta with many originalities in collar- designing, belt and pocket effects. Sizes for women and misses. Exceptional values at $22.50. Black Velveteen Jackets (Some in Sleeveless Style) $15.00 —they provide an admirable foil for summer dresses and skirts and are gaining new adherents daily. Reg- ulation and sleeveless styles, with roll lapels and coliar of self material or faced with white serge and trim- med with the same material on patch pockets, Lined throughout with gold or white satin. Price $15.00, --Basement Salesroom. National | papas eooceoooces Hi News by Te Telegraph and Telephone ; SPOOHOSO ECOSOC COCCOOOOEEE and body bruises, when a motor | truek driven by her husband collided with a street car Wednesday. Minute Men of Precinct 88 will hold a meeting at the Queen Anne| |branch library Thursday at 8 p. m.| Lumber Manufacturers’ association | at Chicago convention, which orl Wednesday. OLYMPIA—D. C. Griswold, Kirk. | county fire warden 14 years old, accidentally shot by’| brother, at Chinook, Wash., died here Wednesday. | The Danish Sisterhood and Danish | Brotherhood will dance and enter. tain in) Washingto hall, 14th ave. The Commonwealth club meets |Monday at 6:30 p. m. at the Good Eats cafeteria, 815 Second ave. The Council of Patriotic Service Division No, 10 will stage a vaude- | ville program May 31 in the Frank Rey, E. B, Sutton will speak on ‘The General Judgment” Sunday at |6 p. m, in the open alr corner of | Washington and Occidental. At 8:30 Thursday morning funeral services were held for Mrs. Mary : sioner, has been commended by Commonwealth club for refusal to grant fishing licenses to Austrians. Funeral services for Mrs. Mary Weaver Holcomb were held Thurs day at 11 a. m. at Home Undertaking chapel The Standard Ice Co, will build a new concrete structure on Railroad SUMMER RUGS _ Of Other Favored Types: JAPANESE RICE STRAW RUGS in natural color, with end bor- ders. 4x7, $7.50. 6x9, $12.00. JAPANESE RUSH RUGB, braided effects in oblong and especially sult use Ee oval shapes, able for porch 16.50, $19.00. _ fp CRETONNE RAG RUGS ~ FIBER RUGS —Second Floor. Women’s Oxfords $4.50 $5.00 $5.50 HE Basement Sales room features at these | moderate prices, Oxfords of Patent Leather Vici Kid Tan Calf Chocolate Kid White Kid White Buckskin in several smart patterns, | with leather Louis heel | or medium military heel. Priced at $4.50, oe and $5.50 pair. —Basement ocsianal Hot Wa Water Bottles $1.00 WO-QUART Hot Water Bottles of chocolate color rubbz, low-priced at $1.00, —Basement Salesroom, Bathing Caps 25c ATHING CAPS of gum rubber in red, blue or black, with shir- red or plain edge, 25¢. —Basement Salesroom. TWO Y. M. MEN STICK TO POST _}him iro DURING FIGHT 25 oie wpe tres WITH THE AMERICANS IN/|that he was thrown against the side PICARDY, May — (Night.)—In | of a dugout the midst of an enemy bombardment |from shell shock, av ear the present location, to cost ,000, OREGON GIRL MARRIED TO AVIATION OFFICER) HOOD RIVER, Ore,, May 23.—Rel atives of Miss Dorothy Epping re- had been gassed. him to go to the rear, Helen M. Aronson, wife of M. : | CHICAGO—J. H. Bledel, elected |] land, appointed King and Fir st., une 1 for the benefit lin high school auditorium to assist Kennedy aa His condition Aronson, suffered severe head cffts second vice president of the i | ASTORIA, Ore.—Elizabeth of the Red Cross, their war fund L. H. Darwin, state fish commis- ceived a telegram stating that Miss|of a certain point near the front, Senne: rams ica ea Epping had been married to Lieut.' with high explosives, shrapnel and | Frank T. Hiliott at Fort Worth, ‘Tex re shells, two ¥. M.C._A. men| FRANCHISE PETITION Eliott is in the jation corps. gtuck to their aiding the | FINALLY DISMISSED The two are graduates of the Uni versity of California took bigh honors. Ey A KATHERINE STINSON ON CHICAGO-N. Y. FLIGHT CHICAGO, May 23,—-Miss Kath erine Stinson left today on a pro posed non-stop flight to New York the others. | ank West of Nearly two years after being filed a. A. Starks, of | by the Puget Sound action, Light M rN. J |& Power Co., the petition involving When the bombardment was at its | relief from franch obligations height with shells whistling over- | dismissed by th ate public service head and bursting everywhere, they | commission, We The com carried a phonograph into a dugout | mission dismi: the case as having and started up Harry Lauder's| been adjudicated as to points of law “Beautiful Sunday.” Everybody ig-|in the city, She carried 67 pleces of mail, nored the shelis and joined in sing. | by the supreme court. Motion to dis including a letter from Postmaster ing, “It’s nice to get up in the morn-| miss was entered by Corporation had B. Carlyle of Chicago to the ing, but it's nicer to stay in bed.” Caldwell, following the decision in postmaster of New York city, West worked tirelessly day and|the Tacoma case. where the girl | ae +: oma case decided April 2 | night untit the officers discovered he hel Then they forced | Ho is suffering slightly | y, as Seattle Women to Drive Motor — Ambulance Cars A campaign for recruits for the yvomen's Red Cross motor corps in” | Seattle, will be launched next week order to fill the unit to full n k rigid military basis. mechanical work will begin the of June. Members of the corps |be placed in public garages, gag tions, battery stations and shops in order to get at first the knowledge their service req At the end of a six-week course, women will be obliged to pass ¢ examination given by the police partment to licensed chauffeurs. |