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WW. ASK FOR } J OUTSIDE TRIAL Files Affidavit of “Help ' Sher 22.—ANeged murder in massacre of | . here on} AXA, ask for al r trial in| . of ao with tho war veterans day intend to of venue for county on the ground that| fooarta are prejudiced against | | pecame apparent yesterday | mine of an affidavit ot | Change of venue will be | for next Friday, according to 8. Pierce, defense mee, © Pieren, Gatenael is aopetealesnian fe accused ten pleaded not | brushed me aude - pete Judge G. D. Abel of | erday. They are . Oo Cc, Bland, Bert! Ray Becker, James Mo-| Pimer Smith, Eugene Bar Make Shean, Bert Bland and | — | WAMELEON” SUIT CHANGES ITS COLOR) a a Ct For I've been LOS ANGEL Nov. 22.—Evi |dence that 400,000 sacks of sugar eres the atest Parisian NOV! totaling 40,000,000 pounds, are now 1 women's stylee—-@/ stored in Southern California sugar suit, Chloride of co-/refining centers, has been gathered ip the dye used on the material. |by agents of the Low Angeles Retail ot pesults in a sh { blue in) Grocers’ association, Secretary R. C. te weather; vio predicts al shurtiett declared today | of weath and when it} Despite this stock, he declared. ad the suit is a bright pink grocers cannot buy sugar. an}. CITY MAIL ORDERS RECEIVED NOW = lar eh \ his COMMENCING FOUR NIGHTS Cxcanat NOVEMBER 30 §f' a ICE MATINEE WEDNESDAY of - BY A REPORTER, at ‘OW doth the busy shoe clerk bs ontateemms | 1 BH Nore ach snining hour? to ¥ I don’t guess, reader; I know! ner m Gallery, S00 jdepartment of a |store—and between punching» m i been shoeing the public. < © OHAN }were to be found, and limited an to ng a sales book, I | After a few brief instructions aa to | | where the various styles of “There ore really only two classes of women ~ } im punching a time lock at 8 o'clock in the morning and | Wear those shoes! t 5:30 at night In the women's shoo |1 large downtown | ATTEMPTING MURDER a ared I was|™Y knowledge has not brought me I've} was [maid no more THE SEATTLE STAR handed the shoes to hin wife. But her lips met in a SATURDAY, NOV. mh She another name for disillusion 29 1919 KNOW WOMAN BY THE SHOES SHE WEARS REPORTER PUTS BOOTS ON THE PUBLIC AND PICKS UP A FEW POINTERS A bai ir. with soles thet For after days of waiting on women who straight, uncompromising line, She|didn’t know the sizes of their own Was not vanquished. Unless I do|shoes, the bright thought occurred her wrong, the woman will never/to me, why noW read the numbers in AM ACCUSED OF remolute me, 1 ved her foot into the amed ‘ | | | jleft to © or perish according to he's killing me > > my efforts vd native ability EK “ly in the store heard her : man and his wife, didn’t require /side The manag survéyed the} — ; salesmanship. The Man|scene from his point of vantage in| a ee wefimtific A TED | confronted me thus: re RMAWACITEK COMEDY “A DRINCE THERE WAS From Darragh Aldrich's Story “Enchanted Hearts” With James Gleason and a New York Cast HOW TO SECURE TICKETS BY MAIL ; letters, cheeks and = Sas = ua, snd, money orders payable (o man. |ahe's complained about her thing big enough for once tn lite I've got tender feet, protested, “With me, sine, it's the fit.” AND, WOR'’S ME! I'M IN | MIDST OF FAMILY ROW! it imn't make cont war tax aires. Inclose self-addressed stamped envelope to heip retura. mall jréere will be filled unless accompanied by check oF heated argument, lin to submit a pair of shoes, “Look at the heels, She wants heels.” heels hurt my arches.” “High heels aren't sensible,” announced. “Bring low ones.” I did. woman, “You bet you wouldn't,” band agreed heartily hey're narrow, Bring a wider pair.” } I complied. The them p on. “Now, With aCompany of Notable Artists |hurt your feet. ¥: We'll take that pair.” | “I can turn around tn them,” | tested the woman, angrily Nights and Sat. Mat.. $2.50 to Se Friday Mats. 82.00 to Se se Ran? [that way. Wrap them up.” | The man produced the money | I'm buying shoes for the wife} }Every since we've been married. feet | That's because she buys her shoes to fit her head instead of her fret I'm here to nee that she gets rome the man the balcony “I've got an ingrown toe nail on that foot,” she moaned Immediately one of the senior clerks brushed me aside and hovered | house of + over her, 1 had no chance apologies her) AM THE RECIPIENT OF SOME GOOD ADVICE An noon as the woman left the the | store, ax whe quickly did without buy ing anything, the superintendent f0F | has an its object the ata | my own shoes? in every pair celve myself. 1 did so. I looked I can no longer de 1 know my size, And happinens or peace. The Mour barrel is next in Une for A bill reported fa vorably from the committee on coin Age, weights and measures in the ot dardization i the bulk meal and grit standardization ntatives of congress of the barrel of flour, a packages of hominy Same in Every State When this goes thru, | took me aside and talked to me about | ¢*™ Will be able to buy the same Here the husband and wife had a/ Not wanting to take aides and hop ‘— to stew their words, I hastened “Not those!” the man objected. low | he! her hus too | man ordered The lacings lappéd cried the man fn triumph. | “here's a pair of shoes that won't 4 pan. walk now. pro. the neceasity for tact and gentle nese tn the shoefitting busines standard package of four, from New Jersey to Oregon. Thin does not “You must learn to size up women | mean that they will be unable to at a glance,” he said “There are really only two @aases | wish. buy a half pound or a pound if they The standardization applies of women—thone who dress for style | chiefly to the package sent from and those who dress for comfort. “Now this woman was the com fort type. You should have empha “I don’t,” protested his wife; “low | sized comfort. “If & woman dresses for atyle,” he continued comfortable—doenn't want to be. Never show her anything sensible. “I wouldn't wear those,” began the | Show her pretty things: BUT ADVICE FAILS GRANDMOTHER'S CASI But shoe customers verne, kn You can't always apply your ede, no matter how painfully you learn it So when two girls came in to buy shoes for their grandmother, would dress for comnifort. I noon joined them with a nice soft “sho doesp't expect to be | expense, | sizes in stock manufacturer to grocer At present, manufacturers of flour, and other commercial foods, use different sized packages in vari oun stat Thin means an added keeping the varying in | doing busines in several states, are #0 per-| I told | pound [myself that surely a grandmother | ‘ck | Pair of shoes with cushion soles and| That's right—shoes ought to fititiat heels that simp screamed com- fort. | for and | | AT Sees ean a \ United States Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation Offers For Sale 116 Steamship Hulls 5 Sailing Vessels 61 Converted Barges Wood construction of the following type and tonnage: Steamship Hulls Converted Barges Sailing Vessels 8 Ferris, 8850 t. 55 Ferris, 3550 t. i 2 Kirby, 2000 t. 3 Hough, 4400 t. 2 Allen, 3850 t. 1 Continental, 1600 t. Price Bare Hulls Ferris Type, $75,000, Other Types, $21.40 per D. W. T. Any equipment now on hulls to be paid for in accordance 108 Ferris, 3850 t. 4 Gray's Harbor, 4200 t. 2 Geary, 5000 t. 2 Hough, 4300 t. he with an appraisal under our standard bill of material. le Hulls are moored at: Portamouth, N. H; Wilson’s Point, Conn; Hog Island, Penna. Beaumont, Texas; Lake Union, if Wash; Alameda, Calif; Colymbla’ Slough, Portland, Ore; Coos Bay, Ore. i These hulls are in various stages of completion. Some finished, others on . the ways, at various shipyards in the Atlantic, Gulf and Pacifie Coasts, which permits the purchaser making changes to suit his requirements. * ur Built to requirements of American Bureau of Shipping and British Lloyd's ey 6 Register they represent, at above price, extraordinary value. A temporary e. certificate of classification furnished with each vessel so far as constructed. ‘ id A complete equipment as specified in Bill of Material No. 500 for Ferris h Hulls will be furnished on the basis of $100,000 for each vessel. : a re Further data m be had on application to Supply and Sales Division, Uni ny States! Shipping “Board Emergency Fleet Corporation, 140 N. Broad St., Philadelphia, or at any of the following district sales offices: “ds 129 Centre St, New York City; Custom House, Boston, Mass; 140 N. Broad St, ey Pa; tnia "Bank Bldg, New Orleans, La; 922 Edison Bldg., Chicago, UL; ‘ k, dz, Portland, Ore; Securities Bldg, Seattle, Wash.; 369 Pine St, San Francisco, Callf, Mi : . . e- .- . $. Shipping Board Emergency Fleet Corporation 140 NORTH BROAD ST REET, PHILADELPHIA The girls calmly announced they'd found @ bargain pair for grand mother, They } might break but would never bend. tip. mother “Those aren't exactly suitable*for | last men | an old lady.” “Grandmother dresses very young.” aid the younger, “I know she'll like these. She didn't want to pay much and the price will sult her, anyhow.” | | had selected a pair|of the I j With hich heels and stiff soles that|brothers in the ¢ | They had cloth tops and an ornate |@ I spoke up in behalf of grand-|+ Will Avoid Fractions The new bill will provide that flour and meal be sold in bulk in decimal parts of 200 pounds, which i# the basin of calculation. ‘The kages will be in multiples of 5, 25 and 50-pound All frac weights, such as the 20% wack, and the 48%-pound will be done away with, by his method. 0, 25 unite tional Find Propaganda; Nab Two I. W. W. Two adait alleged members w. have joined their jail Saturday. Peter Etksne. 165 16th ave. 1 Harry Murphy, a negro em the city asphalt plant, liv i 1522 13th ave, are the two rested by Sergt. P. I Keefe and his red squad Elksne’s arrest was broug’ mut by a raid on his rooms se 1 days ago when a large quantity of I. W. ANOTHER ATTEMPT | Nterate AT DIPLOMACY FAILS | mitted n who plainiy had | tt ‘d and was a y, {me W. A large f that |@mou was found tn 00 small, I thought she'd like | bis home, the say, when they the implication. Did she? No jarrested him “I guess you must b ed,” sho said in acid tones, an eight.” near-aight: | “I weer! ANOTHER REFU I was fascinated by one customer she must have been 60 years old. She} was small and daint Her hands} bore evidences of hard work and the wrinkles in her face weren't the re sult of a tranquil life. But she was as proud of her feet as particular in fitting them as a debutante might be expected She had a slim, trim foot. She wore| three me see something In black " sald she. She wasn't satisfied with what T jshowed her, Neither did she care for gray ones I produced later. “Haven't you something in satin nald We had. She or velvet? | | | | he |1 think boy ed at the leather and then at the rivet ones with the high French 8. She really wanted to buy sen sible shoes, but eome little vanity in her wouldn't submit to them he bought the velvet ones, saying, laughter will scold, but I can't Ip it.” y a girl entered who looked a rough, unfinished Pickford. She wore ya like the athlet better than any other, don’t you The greatest bit of knowledge I ch of velvet tam over he jeurls. And her French h run over I unt some low led flat ie announced, “I'm going my type. I'm going to do up m sir and wear sport clothes, | gained wag to read the sizes of shoes. | Women's shoes are secret code, Only the initlated know the hidden and subtle marked by a} meanings of | the numbers that decorate the shoo box and the shoe lining. Our code was easy, once you knew how numerals neatly worked both ways. width were revealed instantly, But knowledge is sometimes only You simply parted the mags of | the middle and} The size and the| GE FOR EX-MONARCHS | | | | | 1 | if a manufacturer is | ai during his absence | w.| | Ex-Emperor Charles of Austria | has evidently chosen Spain as his place of exile, having left Switzer- land for that country. Spain ts about to rival Switzerland as a ref- age for ex-monarehs, Charles is the second to seek its shelter TOBACCO MERCHANT DEFENDS CIGARETS Percival H. Hill, president of the American Tobacco company has made a and detailed answer to cb against tobac co nd a which Missa Lucy P on sent to newspapers He said in part Mies Gaston se ponvey the ide by innuendo that te eign substance is co cigarets which create nit or tendency ays, ‘It t licts of the same atisfacti igurets that they ured out formerly of nd shi r oplurr the imr a habit-forming drug like opium She does not make this statement directly ‘Our war on the cigaret is based on the charge that the clearet is a habit-form. she says ing drug and should be classed with opium, coeaine and othdr habit-forming agencies.’ “She seeks with considerable cleverness to convey a certain idea and at the s@ time hide behind the phraseology in which no specific charge is directly made, Of course there is no gpium, eoeaine or other habit- forming drug in cigarets, as Miss Gaston well knows.” |ARMY OF TRAPPERS | INVADES WILDERNESS| EDMONTON }paid for furs, is the cause, | 40 rs a in ever than many FREDERICK & NELSO FIFTH AVENUE—PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE PAGE 7 | DOWNSTAIRS STORE| 200 Dainty Georgette Waists | A New Shipment of Women’s Extra-Size Coats (Sizes 41 to 50) At $45.00 VERY detail in these Coats has been planned with the needs of the full figure in mind. For instance, they are devoid of trimming, except for the perpendicular rows of buttons on the back panel, and their colorings are unobtrusive—Navy, Brown and Taupe. tinctly slenderizing effect. As pictured, of good Silvertone coating, fully ' Good-looking Blouses at a substantial reduction—$3.85 In lined with sateen. —in Black, White, Gray and Cordovan, also two-tone effects, with double heel and toe. A Monday Offering Pointing the Way to Worth-while Economy. PAIRS OF SHOES with cloth tops, welt soles and low heels, sizes 4 to 7, reduced to $4.85 pair. the be hunters An Exceptional Offering of Men’s Half-Hose “Seconds” At | 25c | and 50c Pair HE Half-hose are of the favorably-known Phoenix make, priced so low because subject to slight imperfections, which have been carefully mended at the factory, however. 1,200 Pairs of Silk-Lisle Half-Hose At 25c Pair —in Gray, Cordovan, Black and White, with reinforced heel and toe. 600 Pairs of Silk Half-Hose — a | $4.85 | Po Nov forests of Important Savings on Shoes For Women and Misses GROWING More} eparing to spend the|o Alberta | her | A spring near Elko, Nev., which |the Indians claimed had wonderful | healing powers, “ehieken e, Discharge of s that children, dogs, cats and} \ ‘ =e from t army,| newlyweds are barred from nis| St. Fault Stove Repair & Plumbing Co, coupled with the unparalleled prices! building. He says it takes a young | Firebacks, Linings |wife five years to learn to keep| and repa'-s for all | Kinds of ae house properly, te Cen eet put A new invention is a clock with a end connected. is now served as| phonograph attachment which an- to tourists by the}nounces the bour “in a pleasant 608 PIKE ST. soup” mere addition of pepper and salt. Reduced to $3.85 BLOUSES of the modish character sug- gested in the sketch, and many | others, comprising an offering that is well worth a special visit to the DOWN- STAIRS STORE Monday. Beading, Embroidery and dainty Laces are cleverly used on these Blouses—and there is choice of White, Flesh-color, League-blue, Peach and Bisque. Sizes 36 to 46. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. outline also, they have a dis- Price $45.00. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. . (Silk-lisle and Silk) ee. At 50c Pair ~-THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. 90 Muslin Petticoats BOUT 65 pairs of Reduced to Women’s Brown Kid Lace Shoes, with match- | 50c ing brown cloth tops, welt ‘ soles and leather Louis DEEP embroidery flounce (634 inches heels. es 2, to 5, reduced to be exact) finishes to $4.85 pair. these Muslin Petticoats The same model, with | for women. Petticoats military feel, as pictured, sizes 214 to 5, reduced to $4.85 pair. GIRLS’ that will be chosen for wear with house dresses and home use, generally, at an interesting price advantage—50¢. THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. TA LACE —THE DOW TAIRS STORE. French engineers have investi- gated three coal deposits in Haiti [NEWLYWEDS BARRED [ated at deposits BY THIS LANDLORD|maa. “Om Hh Be KANSAS CITY, Nov, 22-—The|— ner of a large apartment house) 1444 specifies in his advertise-| "s go eat at Boldt's—uptown, 3a Ave.; downtown, 913 2d Ave.