The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 25, 1919, Page 17

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$50 SUITS $ MARKED DOWN FOR SUMMER CLEARANCE TO - $45 SUITS | $40 SUITS Marked Down to Marked Down to $33.85 $28.75 Every Man’s and Young Man’s Suit in Our Great Stock RADICALLY REDUCED FOR SUMMER CLEARANCE Not a sale on a few odds and ends marked down simply to attract attention, but a sweeping reduction which takes in even the newest models just unpacked. Clothing prices are going up this fall—it will be prudent for you to lay in-an extra suit or two. Smartly styled waist-seam military fit- ting models for younger men; more con- servative styles for those who desire them. ahs ee re Liberty Bonds accepted at full par value on ail clothing sales Shafer Bros. Seattle’s Largest Clothiers Second and University First and University 4 Exclusive Agents “Stein- @ Bloch” Let's go eat at Boldt’s—uptown, 4 3rd Ave.; downtown, 913 2nd Ave. FRIENDSHIP TAKES MAN EVEN TO CELL! NORTH ADAMS, Mass., July 26.— A modern version of “Damon and | Pythias” was given in this city when Harold W. Weigert, a New York city bank clerk, was arrested |by the local police for the Green- |field police on @ charge of running | into an automobile in that town| and not stopping to report the ac- | cident. When Weigert was arrest- ed a male companion with him in his automobile refused to leave! him and went to the police station, | where he was locked in the same cell with Weigert. Modern Bridge Work For Twenty-Five Years By EDWIN J. BROWN “Now I can see both near and far with ONE pair of glasses.” PHONE MAIN 5721 | Hawaii, od newspaper Hochi that he has been | tho the mountains behind were Mon-! The fall of Nicholas 1s scarcely to But it is far from being | be regretted, in ‘spite of the fact that 38 $30 SUITS Marked Down to $23.75 y Paris, only AUSTRIAN RAPS . JAPANESE SPIES TOKYO, July 25,—Prof. J. F. C. Rock, a native of Austria and pro- has complained to the constantly shadowed by Japanese | ives sinee his arrival a short time ago from Honolulu. He said he came for botanical research. and | that he represents the faculty of | the College of Hawali and the United States department of agri- culture at Honolulu. The Hocht| quotes Mr. Rock as saying | “I cannot stand such treatment For this reason I have decided to give up my trip and I am about to start for the South Seas, I shall never revisit Japan. The at- titude of the police may be caused by my having graduated from the | Vienna university. LEMON JUICE TAKES OFF TAN Girls! Make bleaching lotion if skin is sunburned, tanned or freckled Squeeze the juice of two lemons in- to a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, shake well, and you | have a quarter pint of the best freckle, sunburn and tan lotion, and Seattle’s Leading Dentist 106 Columbia Street 517 PINE STREET Directly Opposite Frederick & Nelson | | I have been studying crown and| bridgework for a quarter of a cen- tury, and have worked faithfully to master a system that is safe, sani- |tary and satisfactory. Other -den- | tists can do it if they will work and learn, Skill and genius are acquired |by experience and arduous labor: |My system of bridgework is simple and inexpensive, made with a view to durability and utility. A toothbrush will easily reach and cleanse every sufrace of my |sanitary bridgework; it is cleaner |than the average natural tooth, | | No chargé for consultation, and| |my work is guaranteed, | | I do not operate on people's pock- | jetbooks, 1 have elevated dentistry | to a professional business standard. | 106 Columbia Street | complexion beautifier, at very, very | small cost. Your grocer has the lemons and |any drug store or tollet counter will supply three ounces of Orchard White for a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, | neck, arns and hands each day and see how freckles, sunburn, windburn and tan disappear, and how clear, soft and white the skin becomes. Yea! It is harmless. Diseased Skin. Freedom at from the agony of skin disease. Tho soothing wash of oils, Try D. D. Dd. it's different. Be, 60 and $1.00. We guarantee the Lotion for Skin Disease , Bartell Drug se once a} This Portable Mode} Victrola with 10 song or dance pieces on 5 double-faced records, all for $29.50, on tie easy terms of 75c A WEEK Seattle’s |ter jealousy THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 25, 1919. % } S 5 4 u— — “LU Lady Norman's runabout It's it takes 200"—that's the known as a motor scooter, but the tag of a motorcycle London never saw anything like it vefore. Sir Henry Norman for a birthday present Lady } 1% push anywhere sl rman turns on the Juice in the p, er gives th rs thing a urd and gets 0 as quick her, and at spoonfuls of e wants A taxicab would take th petr expense of a few € even keeps social engagements on it, which shows that Lady man doesn't care a hang for liveried attendants The motor scooter weighs 120 Ibs and halls from America, tho none of nastorbilts” have yet been otiuting Fifth ave, on one of devices. Nor “Anybody who can ride a bicycle! says Lady} n ride a motor scooter,” ‘orman. COST OF EXECUTING PRISONERS GOES UP OSSING, N, Y,. July cost of executing criminals at Sing prison is increasing, a to the latest report, showing that Executioner Hulbert's fee has been Increased from $50 an execution to $100 Scoot the Scooter! ; Way of Getting About in London number on | for | Norman gave it to Lady | Lady Norman’s Former Executioner Davis holds the record, however. sum collected in or eutions. He 12 hours, for’ the largest day for exe- rned $1,500 in Tiny Mont She Is AM WARFIE patch to N. BE. A. July 26 pirit as she Special Dis faces the crisis of y The tiny Balkan state that was one of, the original allies-—-having clared war on Aystria August 7, ~emerges from war wiped off the map of Europe, swallowed up in the new Jugo-Slavia And now Montenegro doesn’t know | whether shd likes it or not. ‘Torn by dissension at home, shorn of her king who lives in exile in de hammedan subjects, in the territory acquired in the Balkan wars, and on |the verge of hostilities with Italy— Montenegro needs a friend. There is very bad feeling in Monte- negro toward Italy, growing out of {the general Jugo-Slay Montenegro | 1914 at war with her own Mo-| tenegro Talks War; Volcano.of Balkans negro as a federal unit in the contem- plated Jugo-Slav state, The unionists are working for complete union with ‘bia, to the end that all the ortho lox Jugo-Slavs may be together in e unit of the new kingdom of the bs, Croats and Slovenes. Roughly speaking, the people of the old regions around Cettinje— original Montenegro before 1852—are inclined to the federalist party; and the people of the regions acquired in 1878—when the Russo-Turkish war really made a nation out of Monte negro—are unionists. As the royalists are practically all from among the former group, the strongest of the three parties is the unionist. Exact figures are not ob. tainable, because of the general un. | rest, and because of the fact that the antagonism | | aroused by Italy’s aspirations on the! |eastern coast of the Adratic. Prac tically the whole Dalmatian coast is peasant is not very well informed as to the exact issues at stake. The government now in power has a brother of the late queen for its nominal head, Voyveda Voukotitch, occupied by Italian troops, with a/and for its party leader a member of sprinkling of French who alone keep|the strong Radovitch family. This the peace between Italian and Jugo-| government is fast making an accom. fessor of botany at the College of | Slav. There is bad feeling in Cattaro, plished fact of the union with Ser. which was Austrian before the war, bia, tenegrin as i erious as in Antvart, or Bar, orig y a Venetian colony. he did a great deal for his country, | Pressing its claims before the powers, The present government is backed | and developing a splendid system of chiefly by Montenegrin troops, but it has also a much smaller number of Serbs, Ju All of these are considered | been 0-Slavs, since the proclamation of | times. highways without which even the most important towns would have inaccessible as in Turkish The fact is that he did not} the kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and| keep pace with the really astonish- Slovenes. Curiously enough, the only troops I have seen worthy of the JugoSlavs are from Americ speak Ifnglish to a man. The volunteers of Jugo-Slav race, r ed in America, chiefly from the mines | and steel works. Most of them that I talked with were born under the| Austrian flag, a few only were orig-| inally subjects of Nicholag or Peter| lof Serbia. They are unselfish Jugo-Slavs, without regional, tribal or religious | affiiations—are distinctively different | from the old type that cause the bit: | in Balkan affairs and set neighbors to cutting each other's | throats to the joy and profit of the outsider. | These American Jugo-Slavs are the only men who can save Mon- tenegro from herself—the men who must prevent a disastrous | eruption in this voleano of the Balkans, In Montenegro itself there ing progress of civilization in the Balkans during the last quarter of a} century. As he grew older and his countrymen awakened to the possi-| bilities of improving their lot, Nich- | Olas became reactionary, and is large- ly to blame for the fact that the Mon- | tenegrin is far behind the Serb in all forms of education. The chief topic of talk in Mon- tenegro today is of war with Italy over the disposition of the Dalma- tian coast cities, claimed by both sides. The Jugo-Slav is hot blooded and always ready for a fight—witness the unhesitating manner in which Serbia took up the challenge of Austria in 1914, and the rapidity with which Mon- tenegro declared war. % After seven years of war he thinks jof little else; his standards are dif. |ferent from ours, and he must be handled with tact and firmness. His | demands are beyond all reason, and if granted, would only get him into are | trouble, as Montenegro was involved three shades of political opinion, roy-| in endless difficulties by the Albanian alist, federalist and unionist. The roy alist party, desiring the return of King Nicholas to the throne, is a very small minority, but has shown considerable military activity. In centers in Nicholas’ own family, the Petrovitch tribe, with its headquar ters at ush, In December a de. termined attack was made from there on Cettinje, during which American troops were rushed over the Lorchen pass from Cattaro, and did more th any one else to prevent serious loss | » of life. tionary American | down to The remnant of the revolu force surrendered to the! aptain, who took them ‘attaro to unload one of the | | Hoover commission's food ships. | The difference n the feder-| alist and unionist elements is quite appreciated by the mass of the people, and is not important enough to Det Phonograph Headquarters A | justly resent it not|is 170 years. lands ceded to her, in 1913. But it is being widely urged that he be dis- criminated against. And he would at the cost perhaps of further war, now or in the near PAGE 17 0 Foto nlite mining fe Rape cee eg ee Delicate Mechanism Despite its scope, Swift & Company is a business of infinite details, requiring infinite attention. Experienced men must know livestock buying with a knowledge of weight, price, the amount and quality of meat the live animals will yield. Each manufacturing operation must be done with expert skill and scientific precision. A highly perishable product must be handled with speed and care to avoid loss. Chemists, engineers, accountants, and other specialists are required to take care of our intricate problems. Alert wisdom and judgment must be used in getting stocks of goods into the open channels of demand through our four hundred branch houses. Branch house organizations must show activity and energy to sell at the market in the face of acute competition from other large packers, and hundreds of small ones. All these requirements of intelligence, loyalty, devotion to the, task, are met in the personnel of Swift & Company. Yet the profit is only a fraction of a cent per pound, with costs at minimum. How can the workings of this delicate human mechanism be improved upon? Do you believe that Government direction would add to our efficiency or improve the service ren- dered the producer and consumer? Let us send you a Swift “Dollar”. It will interest you. Address Swift & Company, Union Stock Yards, Chicago, Ill. Swift & Company, U.S. A. Seattle Local Branch, 201-11 Jackson St. THIS SHOWS: WHAT BECOME: ‘THE AVERAGE Ss Dou! oF Lar RECEIVED BY SWIET.E COMPANY os cents 1s pup TOR THE ANIMAL 12.98 CENTS FOR Lamon EXPENSES AND PREIenT USE POISON GAS TO |COCOANUTS ARE USED FIGHT FARM’S PESTS} LONDON, July 25.—Chlorine gas supplied by the government is being | used by the West Suffolk agricul NEW YORK, July 25.—An Amer- ican engineer travelling along the | upper reaches of the Amazon river, tural committee in “gassing” rats | reports finding native women play- and rabbits, The operations have| ing “Amazon tennis,” a game re- been successful in ridding farms of | markably like the court sport here, these pests. | They were using fiber for nets and Doesn’t hurt! Lift touchy corns and calluses right off with fingers Apply a few drops of ‘‘Freezone’’ upon that old, | bothersome corn. Instantly that corn stops hurting. Then shortly you lift it right off, root and all, without pain or soreness. Hard corns, soft corns, corns between the toes, and the hard skin calluses on | future, Unquestionably the greatest pacify- | ing and constructive influence in Montenegro today is the American | Red Cross, Its mission is anythin but political, but it is winning the| confidence of the Montenegrins and | tting standards for them in home | and industrial reconstruction. | AGED CHORISTERS LONDON, July ‘The combin: | ed ages of two Reigate choristers, | Mr. G. Marshal and Mr, H. Ayling, The former has not missed a service for 40 years, while Mr. Ayling, who has lived in the use armed revolt. The federalist | same cottage for 80 years, has been ty is in favor of retaining Monte-|a chorister for 60 years. AMBEROLA bottom of feet lift right off—no humbug! op grind shape FOR TENNIS BALLS} sm DR. J. racquets made of bamboo, bent and strung with grape 1 cocoanut served as a b R. BINYON Free Examination BEST $2.50 GLASSES on Earth we @ one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really lenses from start to finish, and we are the only one in toi SEATTLE, ON FIRST AVE, Examination f metrist. Glasses by graduate op- not prescribed unless absolutely necessary, BINYON OPTICAL CO, * 1116 FIRST AVE. Tiny bottles of ‘‘Freezane’? cost but a few cents at drug stores COLUMBIA All the Records— Always genuine Edison Diamond Amberola Model with 10 selections of your own choice will cost’ but $47 on the easy terms of $1.25 A WEEK Outdoor Models of the Three Supreme Phonographs Here only have you the opportunity to choose your Phonograph from the world’s three leading makes, after comparing them side by side, surely a tremendous advantag provide just the instrument you want for the porch, the picnic or camp. the fall full allowance will be made on exchange. e. And these portable models of ea If you wish a larger instrument in ch make / ) A2lT46—"'1 arling Nelly Gray Shorus of Dervish 55094—Dream of Love and Madame Victor Herbert's Orchestra . 74558—"Puritan” (Bellini) UW This sweet-toned Grafonola with you song or dance hits, on 5 double recor on terms of $1 A WEEK let's go eat r choice of 10 rds, for $36.75, Music That'll Liven Up the Whole Party (Alma Gluck) " violin, by Beethoven eyes $1.00 tterfly A2744—"Friends” and Blue Ridge Mountains “Mammy's Lullaby tern” A2742—", and . A2 $1.50 $1.50 ed Say She Does” and “Just As We Us to DO” cecesesseeee oOeee TOT eres ee reer eT reer 8c “I'm Going Bi nd “The at 1550 Boldt's—uptown, 1414 3rd Ave.; downtown, 913 2nd Ave, to Climb the ck to You” .. Lan Yelping Hound Blues” Medley Fox Trots. .85¢

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