The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 30, 1919, Page 7

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ougall-/outhwick bi | MeD ———-=———— THE MEN’S SHOP, JUST INSIDE THE DOOR A Great Clearance of Men’s Fine Shirts = eee ee - Lot 1— 2,176 Crepe and Oxford Cloth Shirts at $1.65 This assortment represents the most superlative values in cotton fabric Shirts. It is composed of 243 fine Crepe Shirts, 176 Oxford Shirts in white and of exceptional quality, 1,174 Corded Madras Shirts, 271 Rep Cloth Shirts, 212 Silk Stripe Shirts of madras cloths, and 100 Percale Shirts. Fifty-seven distinct patterns are offered for your selection in a most pleasing variety of colors and patterns. If your size is from 14 to 1814, you will find it here, and the sleeve lengths are 33, 34, 35. ot 2— 86 Madras, Fiber Silk and Russian Cord Shirts at $2.95 This group offers a wonderful selection in color and in the variety of stripes which it contains. The values are unusual in the extreme. You will find for your choosing 234 Fiber Silk Shirts, 382 Madras with silk stripes, 123 Russian Cords, 147 fiber silk and madras mixed. Again there are sizes from 141% to 1714, and sleeve lengths from 33 to 35 inches. _ th Heavy Silks at $7.95 There are just 247 of these Shirts, but the assortment offers an unusual opportunity for choosing the exquisite patterns and col- q orings of these rich, soft, lustrous, heavy silks. The sizes.are lim- |. ited, ranging from 14 to 1614; the sleeve lengths from 33 to 36. 2 Empire, La Jerz and Heavy pe Silks at $8.95 This is the big value group of the silk offering in this sale. It contains values such as have made MacDougall’s Silk Shirts fa- mous. You will find the assortment wonderfully complete in color and in patterns and, besides, there are plain whites from which to choose. Sizes from 14 to 17, and sleeve lengths from 33 to 36. < jor bottles would cost you several/victed drunkards, the family re Optical @mpany 325 PIKE ST. lt Is Cheaper by Far lone vitality sight production, or eyestrain or other ills. " Shouldn’t Make ’Em FIGHT for It. Buy ’Em ENOUGH! _ Mik contains growth-promoting, strength-breed- substances not found in ANY OTHER food. Milk contains certain chemical elements which hasn’t yet been able to define, but the of which in pure cow’s milk has been by many TESTS. These elements are called “accessories,” or “vit- n ” and are richly charged with health-pro- 0 qualities for BABY. MORE milk to baby—BETTER milk to baby!. It will work for the IMPROVEMENT of the race! * Mayflower Dairy Milk, highest government test for years, in sterilized bottles, 18c the quart. At your grocery or phone for the wagon to stop! * to have your eyes are found to be defective he Just Honest Milk. Elliott 4431 *COR.UNIVERSIT ¥: ——to buy good glasses than to through poor eye Vital energy i9 valuable; your system stores up just so many units daily—to be used in wasted through The only sure way to stgp this drain upon your vital energy te examined and glasses fitted—it your eyes ) BEST $2.50 GLASSES |»: d Ave. “Friendship Bond” Drive Is Lagging in Seattle | ‘The first cash returns from the ru ral schools of Kin, county In the jeampaign for the American Commit |tee for Devastated France will be credited to Selleck schools, althe t district worked under some dis antage, Th. st cohsignment of committee is that the children go to work with enthusiasm and vigor and put the campaign over, At | that Is what they did at Selleck That Is what they have done in many rural schools in Skamania and Walla Walla counties, and schools report having sold thelr full quota! and asking for more from Snohom nd King counties, and other | thruout the state. waa lont. wet In startin put the cam This gave them but they | evident rapidly when once they campaign in the city of Seat It is a amall district, with only 02| tle fs lagging. ‘The teams will work pupils enrolled, but the total returns | Saturday and Monday, and on those were $40.50, which Principal C. ¢ at’ two days are expected to show a Collins mailed to the committee on} excellent results. The announce No Admission Charge. May 2 |ment of Mr, Ft. W. Moore, who ts ° | me of the schools have not been | director of the high school studenta' | | sale# teams, that t Seattle school cipal at Woodinville retu board will give a gold medal to the bonds without making @ sing’ sale, | individual turning in the largest saying the people in that dintrict had | number of sales in the city, and al exhausted their resources buying nee «omedal to the student who! Victory Bonds, “Victory Bonds,” min individual sales in each however, are an investment, good, | school, has encouraged effort in the | interest-paying investment. “Friend-| canvass. The teams have invaded | ship Bonde” are an investment, also, | the downtown districts and will con- but the dividends are not payable in| tinue to work in them until Satur- money. They are “Payable in affec: | day night tion and gratitude” of the hundreds | Word came to state headquarters | of thousands of children who have|today that Burlington, in Skagit been deprived of their echooling for | county, had made a substantial con- | four and @ half years, Where the|tibution thru the National League | |for Women's Service, of which or teachers in the schools point this out} ganightion there is a live branch in| to thelr pupils, the experience of the! that city, | #0 muccessful, however, as t JUNIORS HOLD SEND THUG TO LAKE CARNIVAL, LEAVENWORTH | | | Aquatic Sports Feature Big)Man Who Shot at Marshal | “Homecoming” Program to Be Well Guarded | Telegraphic instrus Aquatic sports and the traditional attorney general's na from the ee Thursday rney of Wil Ham Tilghman, jr, alias F, B. Wib |water carnival of Junior day com prised the program at the University | afternoon halted the § Friday for the old grads who re turned for “homecoming week.” son, on his way to McNells island to Canoe races, log roiling contests, | serve 10 years for attacking Deputy fancy diving and a big naval battle! Marshal Albert Rooks Saturday, | between two raftdone loaded with | May 10. freshmen and the other manned) Wilson, in custody of Deputy Mar- | by @ sophomore crew, were the main/shals A. Rooks and E. Tobey, had} features planned for the program. A reached Tacoma when word came| canoe parade, led by the most beau: that Wilson's place of imprisonment ul girl in college, will start at 10/ had been changed to the federal pen-| o'clock Friday night, while a big itentiary at Fort Leavenworth, Kan-| bonfire and wienle roast ts being held sas. The party stopped in Tacoma| jon shore. After the parade, dancing| overnight. The two deputy marshals will prevail on rafts moored in the |to take Wilson to Leavenworth have| canal and in Lake Union | not yet been selected. | All the water sports will be held at| “It's harder to break jail at Leary the foot of the old “Puy Streak,” and | enworth,” deciared a local federal of. will be open to the public. | ficial, explaining the action of the! Saturday will be the last day of the | attorney general. | j | | homecoming celebration | A baseball game in the morning sol iwhich Washington's undefeated champe will take part and the Pw | [etfic coast championship track meet | IS NOT DESERT! | jin the afternoon will comprise the | Free Booze and Two Souses | |final day's athletic program, Col-| | lege night, to which all college gradu- a Year, Offered WASHINGTON, May 2. (Unit. | ates, both men and women, in Seat | tle are invited, will start at 30 Sat Preas)—The first candidate to announce himself for the prent- | jurday night dency in 1920 in “wet.” He he-| | Pqwers will deliver the memorial ad-|iieves in free beer and other tn- drbas, toxicante—and would permit two} nomen |*sOuseN @ year under the law, | | His name te “Captain Sir Mark }Golein, Kt. M. M."7—whatever all| || A Home Made that may be—and/he halla from Cream |New Jersey, which already boaste| 4 president. | A faco or tollet cream to alter in hea j roughness of the skin, prevent and w Party jeure chapped | Memorial services by the Home | Camp of the Woodmen of the World at thetr hall, Fourth ave. and Marion st, Wednesday evening, | ed June 4. A program of sacred mus | will be arranged and Rev. J. D. 0. low prices on coats so desirable for sum wear. They are very att what he terms the allows that his| the Union.” He's} nd everything. And| ming, from hands, and cracked| party “will lps, can be easily made at home, at| got a platfor } little cont. his wife, “Lady Golein,” who ap-| | It will improve the complexion.| parently is getting her husband's |remove as well as prevent tan and| boom under way, says he's fighting | j sunburn in summer, and soften the party because there is “somdé| skin, Men will find it excellent to 4 and some bad In all of them.” Japply to the face after shaving dropped into the United | To make it, merely get one ounce|Preas office here and submitted Jot glycerine, and 250 worth of pow-| her husband's name as @ candidate, | | dered grexite at any drug store. Dis | adding privately that she really! \solve the grexite in the glycerine, | had hoped he wouldn't win the! |add a pint of water, and pour into/election, but someone had to be bottles. elected so she had become resigned | This makes more than a pint of|to help out. | thick antiseptic, greascless cream or| Then she sprung bis platform,| lotion very healing and soothing,| which has a “wet” plank as a and perfectly harmless. It is enough | headliner. Golein would have “free | to last you for months, and costs| manufacture and sale of beer, you only a few cents. The same|whisky and other liquors; aix| amount of cream purchased in tubes | months on the chain gang for con Ic Checked and Plaid Coatings in plain rose, brown, tan Copenhagen, also black white combinations. P Such drunkards runk twice a Christmas. uld only get} year—July 4 and Golein says he stands for “ihe liberty of the people,” “reduction of taxation and trade protection,” | |“conatruction of a merchant ma-| rine on @ sure and safe basis,” “ro- | ligious, political, medical and bt a ness free m with a minimum ; wage for workers and equal suf-| to! o has unearthed “five| tual, fp which om Sizes 11 | eubstitute fe j jhe will explain “if invited b jations, societies and organiza- As a solution of the immigration problem, the new party leader pro- 111% to 2, $2.25. pores that foreign labor coming °© “for th first two years’ resi- in our country shall at leas 200 miles in t interior from Golein'’s idea o the lanc tenements pen and free educa nm and homes for the afflicted 1 poor constitute another plat- | plank DR. J. KR. BINYON Free Examination Irish, the Germans, the | the Slavs, the Italians | ff] untries beyond | kaisers and | re and helped tained our on Earth (rhe We are one of tno fow optioal | ind oth stores in the Northwest that really grind lenses from start to finish, | the and we are only one in h SEATTLE, ON FIRST AVE, Examination free, by graduate op- | ¢ triat lasses not prescribed « absolutely necessary. m and inde nd their desce |battles in our past wars most} BINYON OPTICAL CO. |faithfully and honorably and it 1s| 1116 FWINST AVE. jour absolute duty to protect ther Hetween Spring end Sencen Phone Main 1650 {and honor and help them in their|[} — endeavors In every way,” reads an | other plank, | No entangling lances with for elgn nations, 1s eighth plank, U. & BR. BR, ADMINISTRATION Director Genera! of Railroads ffective Sunday, June 1, the International Limited Wil Leave Seattle 5 P. Instead of 6:15 p. m., for Mount Vernon, Burlington, § neh, Bellingham, New West uinster and Vancouver, |publie’s surplus caplial,” the plat- | |form concludes, | WASHINGTON, May 30.-(United story of adventure and romance, | Star Monday EDERICK & FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE tively styled, with shirrings, buttons and contrasting trim- and carefully made Mercerized Poplin and CHILDREN’S BAREFOOT SANDALS | of tan calf, with heavy soles, sizes 5 to &, $1.75; 814 to 11, $2.00; A New Shipment of Men’s Negligee Shirts $2 FRAME SHIPPING ACT | | | “The Day of Days,” a rapic-action | Press.)—President P. A. 8. Franklin jof the International Mercantile Ma- |packed with humor, begins in The|rine corporation was named chair A Purchase of Saturday Moving Picture Hours for Children BABY MARIE OSBORNE In a Highly Entertaining Picture At 9:30, 10:30 and 11:30 Auditorium, Fifth Floor. 100 New Dolman Coats $15.75 and $19.50 EVERAL clever variations yoke, Featured for Saturday: mer rac- anda and Sizes 2 to 14 years, $3.95, $5.00 and $6.50. These Rubber-soled of the Dolman mode are featured in this new ship- ment — exceptional every one. tailored from Wool Velours values They are well- Tweeds Burella Coatings Silvertones —some shirred to a deep Broadcloth others with fullness —THE BASEMENT STORE. laid in box plaits and many with button trimming. Choice of French-blue, Wis- taria, Reindeer, Taupe, Co- penhagen, Rose, Henna, Mahogany and Gray Mix- tures. An opportunity to purchase a modish summer coat at a distinct saving. $15.75 and $19.50. ° —THE BASEMENT Priced at STORE. | Children’s New Summer Coats $3.95, $5.00 and $6.50 FORTUNATE purchase is responsible for these light-weight. White Canvas Sports Shoes for Boys are reinforced with leather at points of strain, as r shown in the sketch—making the most practical and comfortable of sports footwear. to 2, $2.25 pair; 2% to 6, $2.50 pair. BOYS’ HYKSHUS of tan canvas, with heavy rubber soles, sizes 11 to 2, $2.50; 2% to 6, $2.75. BOYS’ TAN SCOUT SHOES, sizes 1 to 2, $3.00; 21%4 to 6, $3.50. .00 ELL-CUT, care- fully tailored Shirts of a fine soft- finish madras cloth, in plain pink, blue and lavender, also a wide assortment of novelty stripe patterns. Sizes 14 to 1614; ONE-STRAP PUMPS for misses and children—of patent leather and gun- metal calf, sizes 814 to 11, $2.50; 1114 to 2, $3.00 pair. —THE BASEMENT STORE. 80 Wash Suits For Little Fellows Reduced to 75c IDDY, Norfolk and one-piece models in practical Tub Suits, white, blue and-tan, with contrasting trimming. Sizes 3 to 8 years. Reduced to in STORE, ommendation for revision of Ameri can navigation laws to be forwarded to congress, H. tle shipowner, member. WASHING *, Alexander, Seat-|S¥ffrage will be called up in the wesc psf ight sleeve lengths, 83, 34 75¢ with etric adherence to ® Mon- : . R R roe doctrine and the Bharnian trast} and 35. Priced at $2.00. _ nun {MENT STORE gene “ Great or ern = act. “The new party will not have| % - “ government ownership of public Oe Se See — CHANGE OF TIME seal Aaya BE hes hg 7 the Shipping board to frame a rec| SUFFR: SEATTLE MAN HELPS 7 ene TUESDAY » May 30.—Woman senate next Tuesday and pressed to a vote, Senator Watson, suffrage If you like rapid action fiction,|committee chairman, announced to man of a committee appointed by|watch for “The Day of Days

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