The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 9, 1919, Page 3

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$e | Capt LDIRECTION JENSEN & VON HERBERG Friday Night—Then Gone for Keeps ETHEL CLAYTON, in “VICKY VAN” Saturday BILL HART kia ois Wallace at the Wurlitzer Pathe Ne News All at the Home of 100% Pictures who died at his home Wednesday, will be held Friday at 10 a m at | Kent. YEP! TWIN GIRLS J. Howard Payne, chief of | the Northwest division of the asa service bureau of the United Atates only Rex conceive. LITERARY }ehipping board, was passing the }clgars out Thursday. Two new | daughters arrived in his family | Thursday morning TODAY LAST TIMES Rex Beach’s e Brand As big as the great out- doors with a climax that Beach could | GUTERSON’S ORCHESTRA COMING SATURDAY TOM MOORE —IN— “A MAN AND HIS MONEY” THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY. en ‘AWAIT FIGURES Diablo Borings wings will b continued at Gorge creek, on the Skagit river, if | the council approves the recommend ation of the utilities committee for a $20,000 appropriation to carry on thin we however, In tts deferred action ppropriation of at Ruby and on cost enti ved from City mock, D. ©. Henny 1. F. Unden, hydro-elec tric experts, Counciiman Oliver T ci nded that the oe r these reports be for ne to Rpend money for in veatigation of ment Counciiman Eriekson also declared engineer had raid wufficient to com the Erickson, $20,000 a LUMBERMAN BACK HOME Max J man of & Finch, prominent lumber. muth Park, was one of the soldiers of the 316th ammunition train who returned to Seattle from overseas Thursda ‘DANDERINE” FOR FALLING HAIR Stop dandruff and double beauty of your hair for few cents. Dandruff caures a feverish irrita tlon of the sealp, the shrink, loosen and ther comes out fast hair the hair every particle of dandruff, get a small bot-| drug | tle of “Danderine” at store for a few cents, pour a little in your hand and rub it into the jrealp. After several applications the halr stops coming out and you jean't find any dandruff. Your hair appears soft, ick and sbundant any ‘Try i! FROM DIMOCK - ~~ | Action Deferred on Ruby and upper develop: | "Says Chauffeur Hubby Is Cruel | MRSSACK GERAGHT Y~ Before she married her father's chauffeur, Mra, Geraghty Julia Extelle Frenc | port, RT. Geraghty of a live el to wed. vores pr hearing. He Talks Robbers Out of Their Haul Held up by twe ¢. lean, hungry bandits who fi d him for mateh and th ed him to reach high, meanw of a huge ol plexus, H ener, 172 2ist ave talked the footpads out of it, he re ported to the police Thursday night | Lerner explained that he used to be a salesman, The highwaymen did ven get the mat Motorcycle nm wearched inity of up, but fow ce of the no t Use Judge’s Home for Girls’ School The home of Judge Everett Smith. at Holly st. and 47th ave. &. in Rainier valley, recently purchased by the school board, will be con | verted into a girls’ parental school, | residents of the valley have been informed. The present location of | trict. « AT ONCE FOR WHAT IT WILL BRING $2.25 Union-made Overalls, eee ee 50¢ President Suspenders 27 c .98c $1.23 .98c SHOES ordered sold at... 91,95 $4.50 Heavy Work $2.45 $3.48 $2.00 Arrow Dress Shirts cut to $3.00 Sweater Coats ordered sold at..... $2.00 Heavy Wool Underwear cut to.... Shoes cut to...... ‘ $6.00 and $7.00 Fine Dress Shoes cut to. . $9.85 Men’s $25.00 Suits Ordered Sold at $12.85 $3.00 Fine Dress Hats Ordered Sold at $1.38 Ordered Men’s $2.50 Men’s $30.00 Suits $14.85 $5.00 Boys’ Worsted Suits Ordered Sold at $2.85 Ordered Sold at 98c $12.00 Boys’ Corduroy Suits, Sizes 14 to 17, Cut to $4.98 209 Highest Grade Tailor- made Suits Cut to $17.65 This great $60, 000 Red Front stock has been moved to the large double storeroom at corner First Avenue and Pine Street, and here at First Avenue and Pine Street it will be thrown on sale tomorrow (Saturday). save—follow the crowds tomorrow to First Avenue and Pine Street. Come early. u.|RED FRONT CLOTHING CO. COME EARLY EARLY UNION STORE— 1601-1603 First Ave., Comer Pine Street-— UNION STORE Sold at cut to meet cut Khaki Pants |“? Men's TADOPT PLAN TO [—scuscamy tom Aicay REMODEL JAIL| me GROTE-RA Committee “Approves Course t to Improve Conditions The ret floor of the old court ubmitted Charles W inders has comple Japanese in Auto f his automobt ontr zig apeeding of Forty-two bottles AYLMORE NOW HEADS noon. chairman on COUNTY ORGANIZATION to members mimittes Grant, who was made lant usinesn reasons. Police to Arrest ORDERED SOLD! ————Great $60,000 Stock of Men’s and Boys’ New Spring Clothing, Shoes, Hats and Furnishings Ordered / oS SACRIFICED Served with legal notice and FORCED OUT of our old location has necessitated this entire stock to be ordered sold —the most drastic slaughter of seasonable merchandise ever announced—the most sensational sale of the year. Cost entirely forgotten in this Great Sacrifice. This entire stock has been Ordered Sold, and sold it will be, no matter how great the loss entailed thereby. Price no object. This entire stock has been marked down and will be thrown on sale tomorrow. These Sacrifice Prices Go Saturday, May 10, 9 A. M. Men’s $4.00 Dress Pants Ordered Sold at $1.98 Men’s $15.00 Suits Ordered Sold at $5.85 Men’s $22.50 Overcoats Ordered Sold at SHOES $3.00 Boys’ Shoes $5.00 Men’s Dress Shoes cut to $6.00 Girls’ Tan Eng- lish-last Shoes cut to $5.00 Ladies’ Dress Shoes, latest Misses" White Pumps Handkerchiefs ordered sold at the thefts of flowers, $1.65 $2.85 $3.48 $2.98 $1.85 5c Men’s Silk Sox, seconds, cut to. Men’s $1.25 Work Shirts. ordered sold at. Men’s Ribbed Under.” wear cut to rot 1c .. 69c 9c 15¢ Canvas Sane knit wrist, cut to. If you want to Men’s Flannel Shirts, a large lot, at.......... Sale Starts Saturday at 9 A. M. COME EARLY at a spec Butler hotel Friday county year, resigned for Runs Down Woman | e et the survivors the of 11 * ret ba He ‘Thursday night slightly hurt r city hoxpital f, in her report A rm mire then struck Old Bonded Whisky | Taken by Officers ; Bold Posie Thugs! hile peaceful householders slum. ber, posies in the front yard are be ered each night, and Seattle policemen have been ordered to keep on the alert for the biossom raiders. An increase in the number of reports | that filter in to police headquarters, charging depredations against the garéens, has necessitated the order. glorsy and twice as the school is in the Ravenna dis-|Barly-morning autoists are blamed (Yeu PAGE 3 ANNI OTTO F KEGEL, P Store Hours From 9 A. M. to 5 P. M._ Victory | LIBERTY | BONDS’ | Complete the Task HE BOYS are coming back from “over there.” |T Some of them are maimed or blinded permanent | ly, debarred from all normal joys of life. Some of them will never come back. It’s up to you to give” sort of welcome they deserve. And that’s the thrilling joy of knowledge that you are still with them and the Victory Loan has gone over big. Complete Their Task—Invest in the Victory Liberty Loan Today | The May Mid-Month List of New | Columbia Records — includes many popular hits, among which are Rag Song “Chong” Has Come Along “Chong” is here—the Chinese rag! It’s very queer—a Chinese jag! Chong’s girl in Hong Kong got a shock! The music makes you fairly eM On the back, “One and Two and Three, Rock. Now start rocking your baby! cere “On a Little Farm-in Norm A sony pisiatenmaticns! sentimentaoAn e doughboy finds ‘his f@éal “On a little farm’ in” mandie.” He'll surely settle there if she'll say “ Coupled with “Little Old Lady o’ Mine.” A- 271 U.S. ‘Navy Officer to Join — Little Chinese Wife Soo , for hanjad Francisco. SAN FRANCISCO, May 9.—Com-, bining the mystic roma with the vigorous up of the West Cc. Dron parenta, rrived on the anking yester- ay to Brook- where she will join her husband, ut. Com, Dronberger of the Unit ed States navy. As soon as the lat ter is released from his martial obli gations to Uncle Sam the couple, long separated by war exigencies, will journey to China, where Mrs Dronberger has prepared a home for her sailor. A romance of international inter. est centers in the marriage of this pretty d brilliantly cultured Chi nese maiden to an American naval officer. She arrived in San Fran cisco during the year of the great fire, coming to America to learn Wostern ways and to acquire West ern learning. In Philadelphia, spent four years at a fashionable, | finishing school for young ladies and then returned to Shanghai, | where she met Dronberger, an offi-| cer attached to the Asiatic squadron. The attraction was mutual and in-| stant. And when Dronberger left ‘Asie eas the gay Chinese port he carried with | "@ete- te him an Oriental gitt's promise tol —It Ends Corns Quickly, marry him in Philadelphia the fol-| ver pack up lowing spring, a pledge which was/|traptions” and carried out tly as arranged. . Dronberger was retired from serv ice before America entered the war, but was recalled just as he and his | wife were preparing to leave fo China, where they planned to reside. So the little Chinese-American bride took the long journ she has been ee which would r nd to her, When th was signed she immediately began jthe preparation of their future home in Shanghaf and as soon as she | b& learned that her husband had return: | i. ed to America she took the first boat \Boys and Girls to Convene at Church More than 600 delegates are ex- Every Woman Need pected to attend the annual confer- IRON at Times ences of the Older Girls and Older Boys of Western Washington, Fri- 6 day evening, at 7:30 o'clock, in the first Baptist church, under the aus: | J pices of the Western Washington} Sunday-School association, Some of the leading church and Sunday-school workers and speakers in the country will address the con- ferenc © your toe . get rid of ac and snip off orn too close to the a TT wry nr use sticky tape h ull eaceful, dead~ tter and suf ith It’ y si tt ik with corns, Tf women would only take Nu: eye Tron when the: I SLEBRATION “Frontier Days," the annual. cele- bration of the Nonpareil club, of Georgetown, will be held on May 24 and , The strongest propensity of a woman's nature is to want to know everything that is going on, and the second is to the Job, aay!

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