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Friday—Step in and See Enid Bennett Step High in “Stepping Out” ' A comedy-drama that will take every one back to his old home town to live over again the joys and sorrows of his youth. You will whoop with laughter over the old _ swimmin’ hole antics and the tender spots will be touched by thoughts of the childish sweet- heart in the little old red schoolhouse. Thrills, too—the grocery boy catches robbers! AMERICAN GANG IS ON TRIAL AT BREST BREST, Oct. 17.—The Dearborn: | O'Malley gang, a band of American | crooks, stole army cars tn Bastern France, drove them into Luxemburg | and sold ther to German criminals. ‘The four gangsters wore the uniform | of the American military police. | They were arrested while living lux- “Boldt’s French pas- Mit 34 Ave.; down Deals the eyes and eyesight quickly, re- in eyes and vision and makes im many tn- q re- if It fafis. . TOKYO, Oct. 17.- prison at Lingny, but were recap- tured. Now they're being court-mar- tlaled. one of the crocodiles shown, | 89c Men’s $3.00 Khaki Pants, sizes to 44, cut to $7.50 Men’s Heavy Work sizes, cut t0.. $3.48 $2.85 $5.00 Boys’ School Shoes. $6.00 Men’s Wool Union Suits go at N WRONG qd Orchestra—Superb Artists Under S. K. Wineland GET MURDERERS OF COUNT TISZA| BUDAPEST, Oct. 17.—Authorities are detaining five persons accused | with being implicated in the murder of Count Tim last November, — AUTOS ARE BURNED; RATTLESNAKES SAVED) uriously at Toul and escaped from | «Very automobile shown at the Home Exhibition here and missed every 300 rattlesnakes and| ™ $6.00 Men’s Extra Heavy Corduroy Pants cut to. $7.00 Ladies’ Dress Shoes, welted soles, cut to... 1PAY CHECKS CASHED a EO a NREL cc TESTES RCN SALE STARTS SATURDAY, 9 A. M.—COME TO THE Red Front Clothing Co. 1601-1603 FIRST AVE., Cor. First Ave. and Piné St. THE SEATTLE STAR ‘BRIDES MOURN _ WAR HUSBANDS FRIT Special Bureau Tries to Solace Forsaken LODON, Oct. 11—A mpecial bu reau in Horseferry rd., We is grappling with one of the moat pathetic of the post-war problems It is called the ’ ° u stminater, soldiers’ wives sec ro were many romances in England while Canadian and Ameri pouring thru on y to the various front f them were ng happine th of the u busy with babies in y day ean troops were their y rash; others rash Young wiv arma call for help numerous from Australia that they War marriages were foolish Sometimes the Australian wives write giving their view of their bus bands’ Briti#h marriage. In cases where the husband ts will ing to receive his wife and she ts willing to go to him, funds are pro vided by the government their letters pleading Men write seo their to leave bands were ord want now is al ny A special divorce law has been drawn up to enable an English wife to obtain freedom from a husband in Australia, WOMAN ORGANIST AT 80 | LONDON, and when their hus woman organist in F brated her 80th birt an organ recital. ay by giving For Those ‘There Are, Mandsome i every woman oth, delicate with pimples, nd other such e: ptions, an evidence Calcium tural constituents of y. . dries up It invigorates the the pimplea, healthy and be- come clear, pinkish anu smooth. Stop using creams, lotiona, powders and bleaches, which merely hide for the t @ 60-cont box of Stu- Wafers at any drug Fire destroyed Caletum $7.50 Men’s patterns, cut to... $2.98 $25.00 Men’s Brand, cut to ..... $2.85 ones |® It is said that many girls refused | * home, What they | | Oct. 17.—Mra, Mary Kemp, organist at Sandy parish | church for 67 years, a\ Pesky Pimples y. Your skin requires | We bought it right and will sell it $14.85 in stripes, serges and suit Union Store | IAY, OCTOBER 17,'1919. URGES BOYCOTT BY CONSUMERS | Food Buyers Need More!]! |Backbone, Says Mrs. Heath yorKt | | | | NEW 17 )-Concerted and continued ox Oct {United hibit of “backbone” by summers, | instead of passing responsibility to dealers, is the only way to bring down living costs That is the opinion of Mra. Julian | president of the, National Heath | junewives’ league. Mre. Ileath Attorney nent that prices b th | war on soaring cont ably true so far as som concerned, yet housewives have noticed any apprec © reduction in prices from day to day “1 n© Mr. Palmer has correct | [| | figures, said Mra. Heath, “but they jare not borne out by facts. Funda | mental necessities have not gone or clothing. { other in some In an interview | asserted that t v Gene r cent sin lower , no ffect folt by the housew ime has come when she to assert the necessary backbene by cutting down consumption and inati- |] tuting an effective boycott of neces | sities.” |Stringer’s Goat | Is Resting on a Mountain Ledge||| Sheriff Jack Stringer leveled his trusty rifle. ‘There was a sharp report and the mighty animal bit the dust | That im to way, it bit the erag, there being no dust handy, rolled and dropped 40 feet down the pice onto @ ledge three feet Jack hurried to the crag and look e4 down. He beheld the limp car cass of the handsomest mountain goat ho had ever seen. He tried to climb down to it. But the rockw were too slippery and a |minstep would have sent the sheriff hurtling into the canyon, 400 feet deep. He cogitated. This ts done by re moving the hat and digging the fingers into the scalp. Then the hunter returned home jempty handed And there are some #0 incredulous as to surmise his story is the bunk. But he insists there is a way to |prove it. ‘This is by climbing up | the 360 feet of sheer wall from the |bottom of the cayon to the ledge where the carcass lies, and fetch-| vouches Springer. Steamer Brings Sugar Shipment With 2,500 sacks of sugar in her hold, the steam schooner Johan Poulson is docked at Pier 4. The shipment is expected to alleviate the existing sugar shortage in Seattle. This shipment will be followed al- most immediately with a larger quantity, which is now on board the steamship Multnomah, which is due here Saturday. The Multnomah is said to have 4,000 sacitx of sugar for Seattle. REAT $60,000 STOCK cISACRIFICED Douglas Shoes, Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothing, Men's Highest Grade Hats, etc., all influded in this great $60,000 stock. much less than its real value. This great $60,000 stock must be sold at once, and the following sacrifice prices will do the work. Come—take advantage of them. | SALE STARTS SATURDAY, OCT. 18, 9 A. M. Tbe Suspenders. . 85 Work Shirts. Furnishings, $1.25 eh Lisle a Suits =o Logger wi , %, cut to oes cut to st so” DOUGLAS SHOES| %"..i=7, Sc: MEN'S SUITS I ¢i'39 | $6.35 $2.39 $10 Douglas Shoes, union — ; $9 85 a $30.00 Men’s Suits, J. Capp i se made, $4 85 <n. ld sei bd & Son and Alco makes, cut to ...... ° cut $4.00 Men’s Men’s Finest Tailor-made § to ........ Heavy Work $8 pom Fine Dress Shoes, og oo $1 7 65 $1 9 5 all sizes, Rete $30.00 and $35.00 Men’s cut to ...... $3.95 nie “ea Suits, Collegian, Hirsch- Men’s Wool Mackinaws Wickwire and others, ss 92.25 M *, 8, = 25 Men’s Shire Arrow and fq $4.00 and $5.00 Men's | Black Bear, union mde A = $11.85 Union-made others, to $2.00, fgg Dress Shoes $2 45 values to $7 85 Overalls cut to cut to cut to ...... . $12.50, cut to e $1.25 Heavy Army Blankets, special at $2.45 Dress Pants, . $3.45 Suits, Society $9.85 | now at $4.85 THE ROTE-RANKINCO. PAGE 3 OTTO F. KEGEL, President OID disappointment later on by order- AY ing a Columbia Grafonola now. Present stocks are complete and all the new models and popular finishes are com- ing down the beautiful hide and curved horns. “It's up in Snoqualmie paas,” | ¥— RAISE FUND HERE ATLANTIC CITY, N, J., Oct. 17,—) Italian churches and societies in At lantic county are collecting money to send to D’'Annunzlo for the pur- pose of “preserving the Italianity of | Fiume.” 25,000 PERMAS LONDON, Oct. 17.—The pensions minister states that approximately 25,000 permanent pensions have been anted for partial disability $1.00 Dress Shirts $1.00 Men's Under- Children’s $3.00 Men’s Fine $10.00 Logger Shirts, buy them Children's Play Suits ..... $2.00 Men's Wool Underwear ...... $2.00 Khaki Panta $1.50 Men's Union Suits Ladies’ all kinds, cut to. pletely represented. have recently heard this wonderful instrument appreciate the latitude of enjoyment and entertai affords. Why wait? ered at once. COLUMBIA GRAFONOLAS ARE New Columbia Records No. 6112—Love’s Old Sweet Song, and $1.50 Kathleen Mavourneen, Barbara Maurel with orchestra. A-6104—I’m Forever Blowing Bubbles, and $1.25 Waltz, Columbia Orchestra. A-6089—-Memories of the Past Waltzes, and $1.25 No, 2743—Beautiful Ohio, and 85e Till We Meet Again, Hawaiian Orchestra. No. 2749—Sweethearts, and 85e The Music of Wedding Chimes. A-6111—Kiss Me Again, and $1.25 Life and Love—Waltz, Columbia Orchestra. COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA The whole family will enjoy its wholesome influence. Select the size Columbia you like best and have it deliv- That Tumble-Down Shack in Athlone—Medley Part 2, Memories of the Past Waltzes, Prince’s. Only those who can comprehend and nment this instrument PRICED $50 to $200. Grote-Rankin——Pike and Fifth———Grote-Rankin TELLS THE TRUTH; FOR D’ANNUNZIO CAN’T BE CITIZEN NEW YORK, Oct. 17.—Because | he was too conscientious to give his} oath that he was not violating fed-| yeral law by selling Nquor, Mangus |Hansen, a bartender, was refused | federal court o! rhe yn. [HOPPERS IN CIGARETS?| VALLADOLID, P. 1, Oct. 17—) There's a grasshopper scourge in Negros Occidentale, and reports are some of the hoppers have been rolied up tn tobacco sent to Manila |cigaret factories. ‘T PENSIONS |(CHARLES SCHWARTZ [his final citizekbip papery in the! Optometrist and Mfg. Optict Eyes Examined nnd Ulnsses Fittea Ss PLAIN OR JEWELED Prices Reaeonables 237 Epice Bik. 813 Second Ave. Phone Main 2551 WRIST WATCHES DIAMOND RINGS AND WATCHES | Beautify $12.00 Men’s Hi- Men’s Suits and OVERCOATS All-wool Suits and Overcoats, stand- ard make, beau- tifully tailored, to $40, cut to $19.85) Children’s Play Suits in khaki, blue and striped, cut to 98c New York—Miss Ethel Clayton, the clever young actreas now suc- cessfully starring under the Para- mount banner, is famous for her beautiful complexion. When her frionds inquired about it she said: “It's all due to a toilet preparation called derwillo which I use twice daily. The experience I have had prompts me to make my secr pub- lic. This wonderful derwillo instant- ly beautified my skin and its con- tinued use has made the restits per- manent.” When Mae Edna Wilder, the well known beauty. specialist, was interviewed in reference to Miss Clayton's remarkable complexion, she stated, “Anyone can have a beauti- ful complexton when they know how. It's a very simple process, I use the same article in my work, and until you try it you have no idea of the marvelous results, The \ very first application will astonish | you. Go to the toilet counter of any drug or department store and get a bottle of derwillo, then make the following test: Examine your akin critically before your mirror, note carefully its appearance, then apply derwillo as directed. “After ‘ou have made the first application ook in your mirror again and note the surprising change. A peach- ‘Famous Actress Tells How She Uses Derwillo To Her Complexion MISS ETHEL CLAYTON like color mounts the cheeks; a baby softness comes to the skin; it makes the skin rosy-white, velvety] and radiantly beautiful. It ts won-| derful for a dark, sallow skin, shiny’ nose, freckles, tan, olly skin, sun spots, coarse pores, pimples, blacks he chapped, rough skin, ruddia ness, wrinkles and many other faa cial blemishes, Derwillo method ist absolutely harmless and will not roduce or stimulate a growth of hair, It is superior to face powder, as perspiration does not affect ity therefore it stays on better, Thous ands who have used it have had the same results as Miss Clayton, and [ an. sure if you will give it'a fain trial you will become just as en- thusiastic as Tam and always use it in preference to any other powder or beautifier.” NOTE—When asked about Derwilia one of our leading druggists sald, “It ia truly a wonderful beautifier, away ahead of anything we have ever sold before, We are authorized by the manufacture ers to refund the money to anyone wha is dissatisfied, and we would not pers mit the use of our name unless the product possessed unusual merit.” It ts sold in this city under an iron-clad back guarantee by all di and up-to-date druggist: tell’s and the Ow! 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