The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 5, 1919, Page 7

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The Last | 10 USE YANKEE of the | |Baby Week Lectures Will be given Friday, |[} nery ana American brains, d¢ in the Auditorium, Fifth Floor, at 2 o'clock. Dr. Charles Mann will lecture on | Crude Methods Now in Use, Says Engineer ng to de flelds of India, with lares » Burma Ot » says that many wel company in. the gion are already proc 3 5,000 barrel “The Importance of the Teeth in the Very Young” Every mother of | young children should profit by this oppor- tunity to gain helpful | instruction in the care } of her little ones. materia the Unite just signed a three and m ntract as chief engineer after finishing my work there intend to take a trip thru Europe The natives of India dig for oll which they strike at from 60 feet, and for cerituries past have able to obtain of! by this methe for their use, The oil of India has a eo base, and will b tngland great industrial plants of the In dian empire, There are many large refineries In Burma and the other Indian off regions, and they will be the principal sources of China's sup- ply The quality of the ofl is excellent, he says. mar and also used Governor Lister Is Better Today ' Gov, Lister has slightly improved Thursday, according to announce: ment of his physician, Dr. Edward P. Fick. The governor began to im prove late Wednesday over hin condi tion earlier in the day, which was very bad,” according to the doctor ~:¥ TRUSS TORTURE inated by wearing the Rupture Support. We trial to prove its superiere “Live and let live” is a good mot. to for all men ‘undertakers and butchers. & LUNDBERG Co. en Thire Ave Senttin, “Surest Thing You Know,” says the Good Judge It’sa cinch to get areal Di csliy chew and save part of your tobacco money at tne same time. A small chew of this good tobacco _ gives real lasting satisfaction. i + ‘THE REAL TOBACCO CHEW ay put up in two styles RIGHT CUT is a short-cut tobacco W-B CUT is a long fine-cut tobacco PLAN IN INDIA with the exception of | From Adenau, Ge plend run thru and night Adia is former sporting the Omaha News, but for the last ur years has been spending most nt in the martial occupation on the Mext border er in France and Germar his mind morning, time of soldier n His journalistic te altogether d itor of the nilenctes Doughboy geventh Infantry e arrived ir mn after the armistice was signe of the town the ploration, got the An a soon ap Some of the Headlines A few of the headlines appearing across the top of the paper, follow It took the Yanks about a year to whip the Huns, but ft may take 20 more to wind up the barb wire.” |“The only thing more destructive than an invading Heinle, is a re treating one. ‘The Hun was forced to drop tep for the Foch trot. Henry Ford can get us out rmany by Christmas.” ently all the pan-Germans become pan-handlern and the goosestep are the koo8e n characteristion mania is about out of Ger mia Germany doesn’t go quite so far as | na to may the Belgian babes committed suicide. “Troops may come and troops may go, but we chatter on forever Here ia one of the doughboy” poems ‘The whole world hates the lazy mutt Who hates to work, says Rice. The Lord will freese the water, but You must cut your own ice. editor of | THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 5, 1919 “It Took a Year to Whip the Huns, It'll Take 20 Years to Wind Up the Barbed Wire,” Says Doughboy Sergt. Ivan L. Gaddis American trenches, when, from the rear, came an order for the Germans to retreat The Hun officers gener ally led thefr men from behind, and | the Huns broke and| jran for their own lines. The ven | triloquist then declared he thrown his voice out Into No. Man's! Land, and had given the order which had stopped the attack | Remodels Hats | The ads in the paper are sure to get re ' One blacksmith shop advertises Un | hata will be reblocked. Another advertises a sale conduct | ed by Willam Hol whet in confusion enzollern and a} blacking the | cooties, the edi of the paper says that s who are going home and they haven't received a h are all wrong | In his letter to his sister, Gaddis | says that the only consolation he! Kets for staying in Ger In a month he will get a vice stripe, He also be fact that there be t when he gets back no on his way over he had aix| » the ‘One item, originating at Sunwhare. of a Yankee ventrilo pelled a Ger a, in their France tells quist who, unaided man attack. The arge, came within leet of the ut them, « partial offense to ning “Home Sweet ' Home.” to Make Home in Seattle Seventeen of the best pigeons the A. BE. F. had in its aertal mossage | bearing service are to live in Seattle With a German “carrier,” they | have been forwarded from the East jto Dr. C. L. Norbom, 427 Leary |butiding, by Sergt. Ralph H. Nor }hom, his son. Sergt. Norbom ex pects his discharge in a few day#, and will return immediately to Se | atte. | The German pigeon was captured by the sergeant during the, St Mi hiel drive last fall. The other birds | nave seen long service at the front | where Sergt. Norbom spent 16 months het the 2 was in the ser Dentistry I Give the Highest Class Work Placed and Advertise My Prices You Know What Your Work Costs THE BEST CROWNS $5.00 Guaranteed best class of in writing to contain the material and workman- ship. The claims of this office are ful- filled and lived up to to the letter. know how to give good work, have thousands of satisfied throughout Washington as The Demand of the Day Is Sanitation. quality. BEST BRIDGEWORK $5. White or gold, it is all the same price. I wish some will say it can’t be done, admitted to be Washington’s leading dentist, is back BEST PLATES $10.00 It has been common practice for some to advertise a price in dentistry and not live up to it, using different colored rubber and name of materials, but you will find as I always say, I live up to my claims and prices. Mothers Should Send Their Children and send them at once. through and how injurious decayed teeth are. appreciate the care of children’s teeth. My only ad PLEASE REMEMBER My system gives me a cost price to work upon. I do or have cheap equipment. A visit to this office wil high aims in the management of my office—it is a patients are the best advertising, and I guarantee to ever insistent impulse and visit Dr. Wilson today. DR. J. T. WILSO COLMAN BUILDING —LADY ATTENDANTS AT ALL TIMES— EXAMINATION OPPOSITE FREE ELLIOTT 1883 but the name and r We and I patients proof of 00 to warn you. Possibly eputation of Dr. Wilson, of this work. I know by experience what suffering children pass I have seven children and can vice is, come early. not advertise cheap prices + 1 satisfy you as to my known fact that satisfied satisfy you. Obey that 810} First Avenue Feathered F Siavans of War fl \ vice. Corporal Roy 1. Norbom, brother | of Sergt. Ralph, who was reported missing in action for five weeks, also! has just landed in New York. He} was a member of the 36tst infantry Cher Ami, one of the pigeonm| which will now know Seattle asx its| home, was recommended by Gen. | Pershing for the distinguished serv: | | lee creas. This bird was twioe/ wounded by shrapnel; the second | Unie it nade home after being severe-| ly wounded, collapsed and was be-| | Heved dead, but it had brought back | the mensage telling of an ammuni-| tion train coming to the aid of the enemy, and giving the location so ac j curately that a few minutes of bom: | bardment wiped it out When Cher Ami dies, a special lace has been reserved for him, and will be stuffed as one of the real oes of the war. he Narboms, father and son, ave been pigeon fanciers for years. | ays Australians Slow Up Industry L. W. Rogers, of Loa Angeles, well known traveler and lecturer, | addrensed the Rotary club's lunch- | eon at the Masonic temple Wednes- |day noon. Rogers spoke of labor | conditions in Australia, He declared | that radicals were slowing up pro- | duction of necessities to force the government to take over the plants. He declared labor there is narrow- minded and sightiens "It's keynote of ‘go slow, '* he raid, means that all shall make indus- |tries so unprofitable that the com- paps will be forced to take them over, ‘Thi« is revolution, not evolution ‘There are many things }but will it pay to burn the ship to get rid of the barnacles?’’ | |PIONEERS ASSEMBLE FOR ANNUAL REUNION With an ‘old-time’ of fried chicken, and dinner mince nington held its 46th annual reunion in the tion hall on Laurelshade « " served Auxiliary and Da #° association, A usiness meeting was held in the morning. At business meeting | held Tuesday afternoon, James Mc Naught was elected president for the ensuing year BRAZIL WOULD RETAIN | SEIZED GERMAN SHIPS LONDON, June 5.—"I will stand nly of Prazil retaining the H seized, if the United 1 to keep| the tonna in that} manner . president said in an interview | today mn of the Pacifi ion will I More y by train, and many : aking the trip by auto mobile. All other bay district cities are ding de tions Stockton ta vending a large representation and will fight for the 1920 convention Hotels in Portland will be crowded during Rose Buy a Fischer Auto Bed and sleep in your car. Guarantee fit any car, 1312 Fifth » | had |i) wrong in our present civilization, || |AD MEN IN SOUTH ‘WILL! ne | ATTEND PORTLAND MEET | \ ~ FREDERICK HE A New Showing of prices. fringe-ends and enhanced by the patterns. mands of many Popular Styles in Neckwear 25c to $2.00 Those sketched on right are of pink Windsor crepe with Delft-blue but- terfly and bluebird pat- terns and are trimmed with fancy blue stitching. This one-piece style is $2.95. The Two-piece Pajamas shown on left are of plain pink crepe trimmed with hand embroidered French knots and two rows of narrow shirring stitched with light blue. Price $3.50 pair. WHITE COLLARS in or- gandie, Georgette crepe and satin, in roll and sailor shapes, trimmed with Filet pattern lace, 25 each. WHITE VESTEES in pique, organdie or can- vas cloth, with and with- out collars, 50c and $1.00 each. DAINTY COLLARS of organdie, cross - barred Swiss or pique, some- with cuffs to match, in flat, roll or sailor shape, 50c. FINE, WELL-MADE COL- LARS of plaited organ- die, white satin or Georg- ette crepe, featured in roll or sailor style to complement the round neck, $1.00 to $2.00 each. FRILLINGS of _ plaited Valenciennes lace, two inches wide, in dainty pattern, for fluffy neck and sleeve finish, 10c yard. —THE signs in pink, blue and neck lines. BASEMENT STORE. The June White Displays Offer Exceptional Values in Household Linens | [gg 2 Resreretetas Cotton Damask Table Cloths in a variety inches, $1.00; size 72x72 inches, $2.00, COTTON DAMASK PATTERN CLOTHS in size 72x90 inches, at $2.65; size 64x72 inches, $2.20. SHEETS of firm muslin, size 81x90 inches, $1.30 and $1.40; 81x99 inches, $1.50. Light weight, 72x90 inches, $1.25. PILLOW CASES, 42x3814 inches, 33¢; 45x3814 inches, 35¢. $2.00, $2 45¢. Plaid and Striped Silk Skirts $6.50 $10.00 AFFETAS, Messalines and Satin- striped Taffetas are fashioned into Skirts of unusual smartness, particularly good With tasseled sashes, riety to styles that are all the more nations in their plaid, check and stripe Skirts that fashionably meet the de- Women’s Pajamas of Pink Crepe, $2.95 and $3.50 YPICALLY interesting values from the Base- ment Store’s June Displays of Lingerie are these daintily-fashioned Pajamas in one- and two- piece styles, with elastic shirring at ankles. HAND-EMBROIDERED ENVELOPE CHEMISES of pink crepe have French knots and wreath de- PINK SILK CAMISOLES are fashioned of satin or crepe de Chine combined with Filet pattern or Valenciennes pattern lace insertion and edge. They may be had with either round or pointed Price $1.25, OTHER ATTRACTIVE CAMISOLES of satin or crepe de Chine combined with lace and embroid- ered Georgette, or entirely of Georgette, $1.35, $1.50, $1.75 to $2.50. (Sizes mentioned for sheets and pillow cases are before hemming). CROCHET BEDSPREADS, at $1.75, .65, $3.00 and $3.25. BATH TOWELS, 18¢, 20¢, 35¢ and HUCK TOWELS, 15¢, 18¢ and 25¢. TOWELING, 121%¢¢ and 18¢ yard. & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE ASEMENT STORE New Silk Petticoats $5.95 N this new collection there are All-jersey Pet- ticoats with accordion plaited flounces stitched with ribbon — Jersey-top Petticoats with flounces of soft taffeta, and Pongee Petticoats for wear under summer sports skirts. Colors—Gold, Light and Dark-gray, Tan, Navy, Cerise, Copenhagen, Pur- ple, Pink and various changeable and plaid ef- fects. Lengths, 34 to 42 inches, $5.95. -—THE BASEMENT STORE. offering values at these shirrings, buttons they lend va- beautiful color-combi- summer occasions. Typical values at each price are sketched—$5.75, Attractive Values in Laces and Embroideries fill the many sum- mer sewing require- ments, from the Filet-pat- tern lace yoke for the new chemises to the daintiest flouncing to frill wee baby’s sheer frock, you will | find adequate selections here at modest prices. ~ $6.50 and $10.00. —THE BASEMENT STORE. FILET-PATTERN LACES an@ Insertions, for trimming under wear, 4% inches wide, 25¢ yard. VALENCIENNES, Duchess - pat- tern and Filet-pattern Laces in widths from 4 to 6 inches, with beading at top for ribbon, with straight edge, 35¢ yard; potnt- ed effect, 25¢ yard. | CROCHET - EFFECT FILET- PATTERN LACES, Insertions and Edgings, 2 inches wide, es- pecially effective for trimming pillow cases, bedspreads, and for chemises and camisole if yokes. Price 25¢ yard. : COTTON WASH LACES in Filet- }f pattern, 4-inch width, for trim- _ ming cretonne sprends and cotton underwear, 10@ yard. BABY FLOUNCING finished with fine Swiss embroidery in dainty, small pattern. four-inch width, 75¢ yard. : HEMSTITCHING and narrow edges for finishing baby dresses, 10¢ yard. EMBROIDERY in attractive pat- terns with strongly worked | edges, on cambric, Nine-inch | width, 35¢ yard. BEADING in cambric and Swiss, to take narrow and up to one inch ribbon, 10¢ and 15¢ yard. EMBROIDERIES in orchid. Price $1.45. NARROW eambric and Swiss muslin, es pecially useful for children’s knickerbockers and underwear, Price 10¢ and 12%¢@ yard. FOUR - INCH EMBROIDERIES worked on good strong cambrie with buttonholed edge and small design. Splendid for pet ticoat ruffles, 15¢ yard. TORCHON COTTON LACE in one-inch width, excellent value, 5¢ yard. —THE BASEMENT STORE, —THE BASEMENT STORE. White Cottons in the June Displays WHITE PAJAMA CHECKS desirable for making athletic union suits and other summer undergarments, 27 inches wide, 15¢ yard. BLEACHED MUSLIN in 86-inch width, 20c yard. ~THE BASEMENT STORE. of patterns, size 54x56 —THE BASEMENT STORE. | Arrest Waiter ¢ as Salt Lake Suspect Held on suspic Frank Kirsch ter » city jail wht » his activitie 1017, He v ny afternoon — bec ription is said to tally with the description of one of two men | pected of robbing a Salt Lake City | department store two years ago. The lake police wired Seattle to 19, and Salt look for Robert Dwiggins, - | Johnson. use ‘There is nothing on earth that can get so badly stuck on itself as a| |sheet of postage stamps. | Safe Tébk \NFANTS wAINVALIS The Original Nourtehing Digestible Ne Cooking William Johnson, 19, and Kirschner | is said to answer the description of | Fortatume tavuisidsieCiventig ChDCeNI Rich Milk, Matted Qraln Extract in Powder ‘The Original Food-Drink For All Ages. OTHERS are IMITATIONS REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest and strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth you can bite corn off the cob; guaram teed 15 years. EXAMINATION FREE An wets See for bo years. Have impression taken in the © mornt me Examination and advice free. * Ci 7 Our "imate and Hridge Work. We Stand present patronage ls recommended work te still giving good wath Hn ARK hen coming to his ad with you. for Werking OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS. Os UNIVBRATX St Gapecita Wraser-Patersea:

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