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ing, Tender, Calloused Feet and Corns Pennsylvania, the son of a Methodist | clergyman, He was sent to the Unt : versity of Pennsylvania, and took the ’ neering course. When he was ; You're footsick! Your feet feel aduated the untversity offered a tired, puffed chafed, aching,| berth to him, and for two years he! } ey need “Tis aght there, Then he went out to ‘ feet remarkably | make a living. He got a job as } fresh and sore-proof. Tis" takes | draughtsman with the Cambria Steel the pain and burn right out of/Co. Ima few years he was chief en- 7 corns, callouses and buntons. “Tiz"|gineer. He wanted a broader field, ever known. ent box of world ha: Get a Tt whole hing, year. sweaty, smelly feet; wish you had tried “Tix” Accept no substitute @ereecrte® DR. J. BR. BINYON Free Examination eerTe We are one lenses from start t we are the only one in SEATTLE. ON FIRST renew son tometrist. Glasses not unless absolutely necessary. 1116 al ~ Pheas Mais 4550, find butter horns. 913 Second ave. or 310 Pike Instant Relief for Sore, Ach-| is the grandest foot-gladdener the at any drug store and end foot torture for Never have tired, your | shoes wil! fit fine and you'll only pean BEST $2.50 GLAssEs| on Earth of the few opticary stores in the Northwest that really finish, v= Examination free, by graduate op- Prescribed BINYON OPTICAL CO. Sencen —— Let's go buy Boldt’s French pastry 1414 Third ave. “TI” FOR TIRED |Spillane on the Light of PUFFED-UP FEET America;the Demand for | ef fo Autos;Focha Figurehead? | BY RICHARD SPILLANE Writer In Keonomics Most Noted Financial America, and Contributor to There sailed away from New York the other rday art MeCul loch Marsh. You probably never heard of him, yet he promises to play onsiderable part in affairs at the r side of the workt, Those who w him say he bs one of the great ineers of today, He in in his 90's | He was bern tn a mining town tn and he opened up an office first in Philadelphia and then in New York ulting engineer. He made nounced succes of hin © war started, and as con such a pt | work that when |the British government needed jthe steel possible to produce, it cx missioned him to build open b steel plants in Canada. Now he has been made consult! ngineer of the British government, and his first Job is to build a $40,000,000 steel plant in India. He also has been engaged as jconsulting engineer by the Chinese government to build steel plants and The jother works in that empire. Alkali in Shampoos Bad for Washing Hi pa and prepared >» moch alkalt, jur as, as it dries the ex the halr brittle. > une ts Mulsified this is sealp and mah The best thing t cocoanut off shamp re and entirely ry cheap » piece wet thin at ew con for family sten with the or and rub it im about a tea t ts required. It imply mm hair » of rich, ereamy . roly, and rinses The hair dries quickly jout easily and is soft, fresh lo ad ling, bright. Muffy, to hand Besides, takes out every particle 4 dandruft Few Eyes Focus Alike and only after a careful examin ation can the mount of error and strain be determined. This must be measured and overcome by suitable lenses before one can see perfectly. Place the care of your eyes with GORHRING OPTICAL Co. 424-5 Joshua Green Bidg. AH AH ARAN A ' AAARAAAAA And then our old doctor said “Let's try Nestlé’s Milk Food, You know that it is made out of milk—it's the nearest thing in the world to mother’s milk. F ‘They add cereal and sugar to it—fast the right amount—and the tough milk curds are broken up and easier to digest." i io. a asturdy, two mae lods gravely up to me an the dreadfal day seems far away —tor my baby is well. Nestlé’ s is very eany to prepare Nestlé’s is pure milk in powder farm ¢ modified and does not require the further SHALL never forget that dreadful day phen I wondered if anything would ever agree with my baby. Of course, I had tried to nurse him, as every mother should. And we had tried almost everything, it seemed—but he wouldn't gain weight ‘or have the pink cheeks I prayed for. —you just add water and boil —it isa powder that comesin an airtight tin—and I hear that for fifty years it has been making babies strong. The Newt Company likes to sa’ bies and put ¢ on the road to health. They gave e free a big Mother's Book baby feeding by special- ists, and enough Nestlé’s for 12 feedings. They will be glad to do this for you, too, if you will send them your name on the coupon below. ready ition of milk. Always pure and safe, always uniform and free from the dangers of home modification, Nestlé's has stood the test of three generations and has teday the largest sale of any baby feed in the world. Nemie’s Pood Company, Inc 207 Call Bidg,, San Francisco, Cal. ] Please send me free your book and trial package FREE! Enough Nestlé’s for 12 feedings. Send the coupon! NESTLE'S MILK. FOOD stool plants are to be in the province of Hanon. Mr. Marvhall ts a nephew of J. C. McCulloch, proaident of the Union National bank, of Philadelphia, | Some of these days Mr, McCulloch | Probably will be known as the uncle of Mr. Marshall Pennsylvania certainly is coming to the front in the engineering world. |'Thornton, of the Pennsylvania rail- | | road, Is head of the Great Beatern railroad, of Great Hritain, Atterbury, of the same company, | had charge of all construction work jof the American Expeditionary Force |in France and a good part of the/ transportation } And now this youngster from a! mining town of the Keystone state! goes to Asia to develop industries | }that will litt the Orient out of the jatoth of ages | Light of Asta? Pahaw! | It's the Nght of Amertoa that ts| pointing the way of the world today. | BOOM IN AUTOMOBILE TRADE | In New York @ would-be purchaser | desired an automobile of a certain |make. He wanted it at once, The sales agency people told him they | were sorry, but the best they could) Promise was delivery tn one month. | iThe man was tnalstent, and was willing to go to any reasonable ox pense to get this particular style sad | car, The salen people got busy. After | | much effort they got hold of « car in the agency at Hammondsport, N. Y., and ft was shipped, at express rates, | to New York. . | This tnetance ts net pecullar. There te not a car of still another prominent type car tn stock in automobile agencte: | stock. Orders are pleatiful—more| plentiful than cars. | In Philadelphia agencies of atx! companion report they cannot guar- antec deliveries in less than 45 days If they had cars in stock, they say, | they would sell hundreds of them. Unquestionably there is a great de-| mand for automobiles, The demand | probably seems bigger than It really | ie becpuse of the Insistence of pur-| chasers, which ts natural at time of | shortage, There ts @ lot of truth In| William Pruette’s song, “I want what! 1 want when I want ft." The man | who t» eager for an auto makes his| | desires known far and wide | The production of cars is not up jto normal as yet. It will be soon. | | All the plants have not “come back” | fully from war work. They will have ump themselves even when they winging at a good speed in order | |to meet the demand. | | Unele Sam's children have money and they like to ride | | And this is the time for dotng it. | | FOCE’S ALTER EGO Raymond G. Carroll, one of the best informed of Amertcan corre spondents in France during the war, and at present the London corre. | spondent of the Philadelphia Public Ledger, says it ts the belief of many | competent military critics that Gen. | Weygand, and not Marshal Foch, ts the great soldier of France. { Foch, he says, haw received all the | Praise and Weygand has done the work. Weygnnd ts Foch’s chief of staff. Foch, it in declared, has tem- | peramental defects that weigh heav- iY against him, while Weygand ts a! |marvel of patience and capability, | devoted to Foch, more devoted to France, and content to let the mar- jshal get all the honor so long as | vietory came to the allies, | Mr. Carroll's report may be cor- rect. There is nothing simular in| the fact that men question Foch's| jabilities, It always has been so. In Napoleon's time there were persons who credited to Bertrand much of the work that Bonaparte did. Ham- jilton even to this day Is believed to have planned the campaigns of | Washington. Certainly Hamilton | jsaved the immortal George from a |horrible blunder when the Father of| His Country had everything arranged jto kidnap Gen. Howe, the British commander at New York, Hamilton did not learn of the plot until the day before it was to be sprung. Howe's headquarters were | in Broadway, near where the Bowl- ing Green buflding now stands It| was his custom to remain at head-| quarters until late in the evening, incidentally indulging Mberally in port Wine, of which he was inor- dinately fond. Then, when sleepy and heavy with liquor, he would walk unattended along a bit of lane to his home, some distance tn the rear, and not far from the river. The plan was to seize, bind and gag him, hustle him to a boat and row in haste to Paulus Hook, now Jersey City, and take him to Wash- ington’s headquarters in Jersey. Hamilton, when he learned of the scheme, protested. “General,” he said to Washington, “Howe is a block- head, We know his mental processes. We know what he will do in every circumstance. If you seize him, the British will put another man in com- mand. He cannot be more stupid. It will take a long time to study him and learn to check his moves, There is @ possibility the British may select & capable officer. That would em- We have nothing to fear while Howe commands and much to lose if he is removed by us.” Washington called off the kidnap-| ors. . Mad Anthony Wayne gets the THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, SUNE 17, 1919. STONE BROS. TAILORS ' 906 Second Ave. Forced to Vacate Second Ave. Store OTICE from our landlord that we must vacate our store at 906 Second Ave- nue, was served upon us suddenly and unexpectedly last week. V ist move out by June 30, as the owners of our building plan to tear it down and replace it with a fin modern structure. We will have our present location again'in the new building, more splendidly arran; and equipped than at present. But in the meantime—for four or five months—we must find temporary quarters. DUBING many years of merchant tailoring, we have built up an efficient or- ganization of faithful employees, some having been with us for 15 years, and it is our desire to retain our force entirely, which we cannot do while we are moving and removing to and fi "ie temporary quarters unless we can now secure enough future orders to keep them continuously em- ployed. From now until we move, we will accept orders for Suits or Overcoats from patterns of any we have in stock, which now include the finest fabrics we have ever shown, eng at cost. The only condi- j tion attached to this offer is that we can not guarantee immediate delivery. Orders taken now, under this oll plan, will keep our force busy while we are unsettled—and this is our object. GREAT REMOVAL SALE NOW ON- Regular $75 to $i10 ‘60 ag ‘65 Suits and Overcoats terns in bendemne golten brown, grays and blues. P And the workmanship will be the same as always pes very best. oe yg to Lo 9 = not . include our workshops in the Epler ‘ Only our sales and cu room is dismebed: And so nothing will interfere with the closest attention to details in the making. And you may not have to wait longer than usual for the finished garment. Present prices for our Suits or Overcoats, tai- lored to your individuality, with the splendid work- manship for which this establishment is known, range from $75.00 to $110. Under the plan now an- nounced, we have segregated our goods into two lots. Suits and Overcoats from one lot we will of- fer at $60.00; those from the other lot, at $65.00. pig | we have in stock is included in these two lots—all staples in serges, and other pat- We are not at present overstocked, but we have already placed orders for our fall goods, and naturally wish to continue the normal reduction from our shelves. In this connection we wish to say that prices this Fall are going to range higher than at present. So it will be sound business judgment for you to take advantage of the offer we can make you 906 Second Ave. Opposite Burke Building Between Madison and Marion W. Rowe, remained at home and honor for the capture of Stony Point, yet the scheme was suggested by Col. Fluery, of the French force in Amer- fea, and, when Wayne was wounded, it was Fluery who took command. a e L If our skin ie & Effort has been made to credit Fluery J {F ¥| with the triumph. pi much credit, but it was Wayne | whose dash and spirit made victory | c. | possible. Nearly every great has had his detractors. Grant had | trt hundreds of them. Possibly Hannibal | soc Alexander Charlemagne and the oth- | an ers were not immune, | | Weygand may be a marvel os a chief of staff, just as was Bertrand, but no one who studies the campaigns of Foch can doubt where the genius ix. | Fe In every move you can see Foch, for | B. Jyears and years before, in his lec itches just use’ ' Resinol Ointment, with Resinol Soap, usually stops itching instantly. Uniess the trouble is due to some serious internal disorder, it quickly down the exact principles that underlay the allies’ movements from May 19, 1918, up to the great day, The commander | Mond Mrs. Mrs, George F’, T Y. W. C. A. GAVE 1,000 MEALS DURING MAY More than 1,000 free meals were given by the Y. month of May to girls and women temporarily Ho is entitled to! the same period, 724 women and girls received othe A ade I lation t ge puthmayd, ree Begley, rril Slamm and Mrs. 1. I W. Cc. A. during the unemployed. During jd from the Y¥. W. of trustees present at meeting were: Mrs, Ger- ley, president of the as ; Miss A. M. Randall, assist ral secretary; Mra. BE. A Mrs. C. H. Black, Mrs. Mrs. W. P. Fisher, | C. H. Oren, Mrs, W. D. Wood, porn, Mra, M. V6. Mrs. Everett Smit Mrs. N urwell, | tures as a military instructor, he laid | HOTEL GUESTS ROBBED BY PROWLERS MONDAY Robbing two rooms in the Hotel and easily heals most cases of ec- November 11, when the Germans] Fenimore, 510 Broadway, prowlers ilar tormenting cried “Halt. Enough. Monday secured $100 cash and a Sema, Tay OF gentle h £ h has one theory in war:|pottle of perfume valued at $25, Yor trial free, write Dept. -R, Ree skin or scalp eruption, even when Sirike, strike hard. Never give rest|irce’ a. Haine reported that 956 other treatments have given little Baltimore, Ma. , ver to the enemy, and never let him 7 relief. Physicians prescribe Resinol —_ | know where you will strike next. 4 extensively. Sold by all druggists. Read his lectures and you will not believe in the Weygand tale. , in bills had been stolen from her trunk, Shortly after Miss A. Larson told the police she missed $50 in cash and the perfume POISON GAS IN SEA INJURES BOY BATHERS LONDON, June 17.--Drums of American poison gas washed up by the sea along the shore near Swan |#ea have resulted in serious burns |for boys in bathing and for fisher men who have attempted to handle them, TRAINING TO SWIM BRITISH CHANNEL (Special to The Star by N, EB. A.) LONDON, June 17.—Jabez Wolff will make his 2ist attempt to swim the English channel in July. His daily training stunt is a swim of five miles, a five-mile hike, five miles on a bicycle and then a five-mile row. ROAD CONTRACT LET ‘Two miles of the J. B. McDougal road, from Lake Burien to 8 y = dale, will be paved with concrete. Work will be done by the Seaboard Construction company, awarded the contract on a $47,904 bid Monday, Every married man Js in favor of a heavy tax on bachelors. WIFE DIVORCES MAN WHO COULDN'T COOK When Mrs, Flora Rowe went to work each day her husband, Ariow BACK LIKE A BOARD? IT’S YOUR KIDNEYS There's no use suffering from the awful agony of lame back. Don't walt tillLit “passes of.” It only comes back. Find the cause and stop it. Diseased conditions of kidneys are usually indicated by stiff lame backs and other wrenching pain which are nature's signals for hel Here's the remedy, When you fe the first twinges of pain or experi- ence any of these symptoms, get busy at once. Go to your druggist and get a box of the pure, original GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Cap- sules, imported fresh every month from’ the laboratories in Haarlem, Holland, Pleasant and easy to take, they instantly attack the poisonous serms clogging your system and quick relief. r over two hundred years they have been helping the sick, Why not try them? Sold everywhere by reliable druggists in sealed pack- ages. Three sizes, Money back If they do not help you, Ask for “GOLD. MEDAL” and be sure the name *GOLD MEDAL" is on the box prepared the meals, according to testimony tn court, But when she criticised his cooking he asserted himself by administering a manly beating to her, she said. The judge, learning that Mrs. Rowe is @ cook by occupation, decided she had a right to pass judgment on her husband's cooking, gave her a divorce and $50 for each of four beatings she received. GAS 5.0 Stomach Sour stomach (heartburn), beleh- ing, swelling and full feeling, so | trea tly complained of after | meal relleved jn two minutes. Almost instant relief from pains in |the stomach caused by undigested ‘00 food. SENT F Send 10¢ for postage and war ta: name and address, and we will sen you, on approval, our stomach prep- aration, Jo-to, for 30 days, at which time you are to send us $1.00 or re- urn the unused portion, if not per- ON 30 Days’ TRIAL ectly satisfied. eo hMrens: 0, Bellingham Chemical Bellingham, Wash. n Seattle by the Bartell ad Swilt & Co, draggiste