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(ME Spring - Summer 1010 SNE f Turn Soles, light welght, extremely stylish, $4.95 With buckles $5.95 Patent and Dull Kid Pamps, with full breasted Louis mar ?"...... $4.95 Many styles of Steel Buckles at $1.00. Attached without extra charge. : BOSTO tal Be conte ot Pumps of less qual- ity are selling in many other stores at $6.00 per pair, Why pay that extra dol- lar? \ i Ui ~ASKU, HELP |Wants $2,500,000 Appro- priated for Housing | Members of the citizens’ mittee of Bremerton are out to get a eX of the program h that reason Ir ol A worth of the of Commerce, editor of the light, are on their way ington representing the committee to urge that be appropriated According to these delegates 6,000 workers at the }1,800 more commute jthe government is advertising |380 more men, During the houses wene bullt at Bremer ton for workers and a hotel and apartment house structed The whole program cont $10,000,000, but the hotel has [never been opened for lack of main |tenance fund, | If the plans the Mremerton com- mittee has evolved go thru, a model felty will be built on 175 acres of land adjoining the yard. It would |contain from 750 to 1,000 homes, which were planned when the jarmisticn was signed FE. H. STYER NOT GUILTY FB. H. Styer, 22, was acquitted tn [Superior Judge Grimshaw's cour Thureday of charges of receiving « stolen automobile. The car was stolen from A. M. Duncan, March 4 Styer claimed, and his assertion was loorroborated, that he received the machine in good faith from a third | party. com government Wor Went Chamber ntinuation for and Bremerton to Wash citizens’ $2,500,000 | there are yar daily for war ‘SMITH. SAYS THE . RESULTS HE GOT | | ARE WONDERFUL: | |He Knows at Least Fifty | People Who Took Tanlac } After Seeing Good It Did Him “I tried most everything under the sun for my trouble but nothing ever did me any good till I took Taniac.” said M. 8. Smith, of 7009 59th ave, southeast, Portland to a Tanlac representative er day. Mr. Smith came to P land in January front Denver. For forty-two years.he was in the gen- era) mercantile business at Bussey lowa. He was postmaster at La vilia, Iowa, from 1885 to 1989, and again from 1892 to 1497 “I had been bothered with my kidneys for the past #lx years,” continued Mr. Smith, “but thin kept getting worse all the time, and, while my appetite and digestion had always been good, yet about @ year ago my appetite began to fail me and I got to where 1 didn't relish a thing. I simply had to force down every bit I did eat and titis didn’t seem to do me any down this |from 145 pounds tto pounds and by time my strength and enercy Just abo jleft me. 1 was in an awfol run- down sta’ and lots of times, after my day's work, I'd feel just like giving up, but I wouldn't even let cause I knew if I did give up that would be the last of me “My kidneys bothered me so much at nights that I couldn't get any sleep or rest and I'd get up jin the mornings feeling just as |tired and worn out as when I went to bed, and I'd also feel sore and stiff. My beck pained me most all the time and I could hardly get up out of my chair after sitting down for a while, and I had blind, dizzy spelis. “I was in* Denver when 1 read about Tanlac doing #0 much good s2 industrial *) Bird's cafeteria Thursday noon. good, because I fell off in welght! |myself think of such a thing, be-| THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 28, 1919. ‘BREMERTON TO ‘ASKS $500,000 | _ FOR CAR LINES Murphine Reports Revenues| $87,000 Over Expense * | | In @ report showing the revenues Jor the muni to be $87,000 more than the expend) tures, Supt. Thomas F, Murphine has |drawn up his request for apy tion for operating expe |systerm in June. More than $500,000 | pal street railway line | will be required | For the paymont of salaries and] wages in all departinents of the} jatroet railway, $284,586.99 will be la About $200,000 more than was/ Jappropriated for this purpose for May, Suppties and miscellaneous ex: | pennes, | ing the purchase of new epulpment eall for $217,618, which brings the total proposed exjenditure | to $602,204 Included in the expense account |for June Purchase of six new freight cara, $12,600; moving dis! |patcher’s telephone from | electric bullding at Meventh and Olive st, to elty-county building, $1,500. general supplies, $40,000; storeroom wtock, $50,000; new cable, to arrive 914,000; new cable, to arrive $7,0 common user on tracks of Seattle & Rainier line on Fourth ave., $400; re pairing trainmen's quarters, $600 stationery, $3,000; transfers, $8,000; Publication of Seattle Municipal Rall way } telephone re maintenance, $ nee . medical wer, $65,000; furni ture, $1,000; installing new sprinkler kystem in carpenter shop at George town shops, $5,000, system in June in Ne right valle aber ews, automot ina $7,600; trotley 1 Says Prosperity Depends on Labor’s Contentment That President Wilson's recent message, urging cooperation be-| tween capital and labor, the factiiué tion of American trade by opportune legislation, and the building up of the merchant marine, reads like a republican party platform, was the asvertion made by Perry F. Powers, prominent politician and newspaper man of Mu ulgan in @ speech before |the Young Men's Republican club in| TALKS TO CLUB | “The prosperity of the country depends on the contentment of, ta jbor,” Powers said, “and « day’s ta bor, when once lost, can never be) regained. It is labor that makes the| homes of real Americans. The re publican party has always advocat Jed improved labor conditions, and| ‘republican states have always led in labor legistation.” Powers is visiting with his son, Warren Powers, 1208 Tenth ave. W., of the Acme Motor Truck Sales com: pany Tiny Girl Tackles Tuskers in Barnes’ Wild Animal Show) Tackling a tuskef seems like a |mansized job, and few men have choven this work as a profession, yet} a tiny girl, who hax had three years’ | xperien: | brutes, | jeclares she can and will] make @ mark for herself as an ex pert educator of elephants. . Mamie Thornton is a California girl. For threo yearn she has been putting a herd of elephants thru thelr paces in the Al G. Barnes cir |cu#, where she made her debut in the white tops. : Mamie Thornton delights in being tomed about by the tuskers, and wil permit them to wrap their trunks jaround her and whisk her into place | upon their head or outstretched foot. | She does not in the Jeast mind lying | across the tusks of a huge pachy-| in handling the monster | — Why Pay War Prices ? BUY D BAKIN POWDE Ounces for for over 25 Years Millions of pounds of K © Baking Powder were bought by: the Gov- ernment for our troops overseas— more than Of all other brands combined. Why? Because the price was right and the Government officials recog- nized its quality. The K C label is your guarantee that you are getting the same quality baking powder used by the Army --Navy -- Marine Corps and Government Hospitals. Then— y Pay War Prices? Ask Your Grocer JAQUES MFG. CO., CHICAGO ‘They call him the bond sleuth. His name is James EB. Maroney, onetime major in the Chinese army, veteran of the Spanish-American war, and hero of @ little Indian fighting on,the side. But of the excitement of yes- teryear, “Jim” Maroney says bond sleuthing is the most interesting. Bond sleuthing? le’s a Bond Sleuth; Runs Down Missing U. S. Paper ywere lost in the shuffle, much to of hard-working bank the bond Jim came in, with his bloodhound instincts. He's still at it, despite the fact that the Victory Loan is a thing of the past, the despair clerks, and That is where Bee Line for Banks owners. | to look in “File C"—-and the missing bond comes to earth. The bank clerk gaspe in astonishment. Jim says he does not know how he knows where the bond fs hibernat- ing, but he has a knack of running the missing paper to its lair. Locales 400 Bonds More than 400 missing bonds have been excavated by Jim when every- body, from the cashier Gown, thought they were lost and gone forever. “I don't know ust how I do it, but I_can emell a missing bond from Yesler way to Pike st.” Jim will tell you, if you ask him. And so, that is why they are keeping Jim on the job at Victory Lean headquarters. No telling when a bond buyer will turn up who is shy a bond which ought not to be missing. One druggist doesn't make a mer, but his soda fountain |him to turn out a good many lows. | As soon as Jim acquifes an audi tory-organful of walls from bond) buyers who have lost their bonds, |he makes a bee-line for the bank. | busy| “Where's this man's bond?" de| mands Jim, derm, bht ask her to so much as| stroke the nose of the most docile| Well, Jim was a mighty busy horse, and you have a limp, fainting|man around Victory Liberty Loan form on hand, for she will faint dead| headquarters when the drive was away at the thought of touching alon, and today he's just as horse. In going to and from the|as ever for othebs, so I got a bottle and} | before I had finished half of it my! appetite began to come back to me and I wasn't troubled so much with my kidneys. Well, by the Z PHONOCRAPHS —it plays ALL records —wonderful tone; —superior construc- tion; —artistic models; —guaranteed by a world-famous man- ufacturer whose guaranty means more than a “scrap of paper.” Avenue—Between University and Seneca. Phone Main 3139, time I had taken four bottles of }Tanlac I was feeling just like a new man; I was eating like a growing child—bungry through. My strenffth came back to mo, bec gained thirty-two pound and this alone ought to convince yono of the amount of good that I have had from lt. Before I left Denver, I knew of lt least fifty people that were taking Tan lac on my gecommendation, I nev- jer lowe a chance to speak a good word in its favor and I'm going to |take a few more bottles of {t for a | tonic.” | Tanlac ts sold in Seattle by Rartell Drug Stores under the personal di rection of a special Tanlac represen | tative.-Advertisement and energ e 1 be in weight when deposited in this bank are invested in the very best securities attain- able—in accordance with the terms of o scientific Savings Bank law. Open“ an account today with the “Oldest and Lar, est Strictly Savings Insti- tution in Washington,” namely Washington Mutual Savings Bank 810 Second Avenue Established | Assets 30 years, $9,600,000 MN the time! and was sleeping the whole night| *|may not know, but it is a fact that dressing rooms, she will give the| horses a wide berth, even at the « }of precious moments. Her latest jand accomplishment — ix |teaching elephants recently arrived! |from the jungles to trumpet, Many greatest jelephants do not trumpet in this | manner in their original state, and the art of teaching them this trick |tho simple, is not a very desirable one, and is a risky one for the inex pertenced Miss Thornton will be “seen put ting a herd of elephants thru intri cate posing feats Jn the Al G, Barnes wild animal circus when it comes to Seattle for three days, beginning |May 29, giving afternoon and night | performances Noted Composer Is id in Seattle Madame Signe Lund, -Scandi navian composer, is @ visitor In Se- uttle Friday. Mme, Lund, who has rehestral works of note to d who, in 1917, won the offered by the National Arts Club of America for th best war song, "The Road to France,” stopping at the home of her Mrs, Johanne Lund Utne, d ave. ame Lund wrote an overture Jin honor of King Oscar IL, when he celebrated his 25th anniversary a reigning monarch, in 1897, and |was awarded a gold medal by King Haakon, of Norway, in 1914, for dis tinctive work cn Big Rose Show Is Scheduled in June The Pacific Northwest Rose 40 clety will hold its annual show in the Forestry bujlding at the Uni- | veralty of Washington, June 11 and 112. According to plans, ft is pre | dicted that the show will be the most Pt us ever staged by the so judges this year will be rbrooke, of Seattle, a | Dont’ think that becanse a Judge is small he fan't a fine imposing man. If some men were to accuse them- selves of being liars, lots of their ac: guAintances would believe them. Here's the trouble: A lot of peo t|ple popped into Seattle banks, paid down on Victory Bonds and left with the happy conviction that all they the coupons to breathe terest. began ine had to do was to wait until|Victory Loan headquarters “Not here; ters,” replies ent to loan headquar the bank clerk, “Not much," responds ‘Jim, know: | ing that a bond cannot be lost at ‘Then, metaphorically sniffing the alr and getting the scent of the missing Not #0. More than 400 such bonds|bond, Jim requests the bank clerk Lift Corns Out! Doesn’t Hurt! Dom’t let corns ache twice! Lift any corn or callus off with fingers—Here’s magic! For a few cents you can get a email bottle of the magic freezone discovered by a Cincinnati chemist. Just ask at.any drug store for a small bottle of freezone, Apply a few drops upon a tender, aching corn and in- stantly that old bothersome corn stops hurting, shortly you can lift it out, Just think! ‘Not one bit of pAin before applying freezone or afterwards, It doesn’s even frritate the surround- ing skin, Hard corns, sofe corns, or corns between the toes, also hardened calluses on bottom of feet shrivel up and fall off without hurting a particle. Ladies! Keep freezone handy then Agabh and all, with the fipgers.on your dreseer, Wonderfuls | wearing Rengo Belt Reducing Corsets since last Autumn, will discard them nowonly because the Spring Season presents allure ingnew“Rengo” styles to conform to a decid- edly different sil- houette. Strong Rengo Belt, Double Watch-Spring Steels, Steelas- tic Webbing are exclusive “Rengo” features that contri- bute to the lasting grace and comfor: of these wonderful core . sets—earning for them RENGO the enviable reputa- FEATURE ELASTIC WEBBING Model No. 320 Rengo Belt BELT _ tionof “the most econo- mical reducing corsets ever devised for wo- men of stout and medium build.” Reducing’ | —Corset has a tamous, eleven years’ reputation for long service and hard wearing qualities, They retain their original beauty in a manner truly unusual in the experience of the stout woman who is proverbially ‘ “hard on corsets.” Prices of Rengo Belt Corsets range from $2 to $10 Crown Corsst Co., 170 Fifth Ave., New York