The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 2, 1920, Page 9

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| DOWNSTAIRS STORE | Boys’ Extra-knickerbocker | Suits, $10.00 ‘VERY mother knows the advantages of the extra ‘ON THE LEAGUE Borah Sends Letter Asking Governor’s View on Pact WASHINGTON, Jan. %—Pftorts| of “irreconcilable” senators to make and keep the league of nations an! insue in the presidential campaten were ler full headway today, Sen ah, Idaho, sent a letter to! Lowden, Iitnote, asking! n to state bin position on the Similar letters will be sent) league J other candidates | “Do you believe,” Borah asked, | “that the time has come when we should abandon the policy of no en- tangling alliances, no partnerships| with European powers, and enter into alliances of understandings with those powers? “It you should be nomtnat:é and/ elected president, would you exert, i influence and the influence of your administration to maintain the forelgn polley which the United » THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JANUARY 2, ~TLOWDEN QUIZZED FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE AND PINE STREET knickerbockers in boys’ suits —how they often prolong the life of a suit several months. These suits are of sturdy wool mixtures in brown, gray and blue, with coats in waist- line models, slash pockets and belts. Trousers are also lined throughout. Sizes 8 to 17 States has hdhered to for a hundred and fifty years, or would you con pone in any way to ite abandon |] | ment or to its substantial modifica | | tient* Rawda Is Cited Rorah cited the killing of Amert can soldiers in Russia as an tn- stance “of what ts to happen should we conclude to abandon our tre. ditional foreign policy and enter into understandin, and combina- years, $10.00. belt ; and Price $2.50. Boys’ ‘ £ pair. BOYS’ CORDUROY SUTTS in medium weight, models, with slash pockets serge Trousers are model, and seams are taped for greater strength. Sizes 7 to 16 years. Price $7.50. waistline in full-cut BOYS’ SCHOOL TROUSERS in wool mixtures, gray, | brown, green and blue, lined throughout and fin- ished with taped seams. Sizes 5 to 17 Sox, 85c ft became extra-heavy Sox appeal to the outdoor man especially. They are in ribbed-top style, with double heel and toe, in gray and white. Price S5¢ MEN’S OUTING FLANNEL PAJAMAS of medium weight, patterned with pink and blue stripes and fastening with frogs. Price $2.50. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE |} years. TAPELESS BLOUSES in blue chambray, striped gingham and percales, with collar attached. Sizes 6 to 16 years. Price $1.00. BOYS’ BLUE CHAMBRAY SHIRTS with collar at- tached, sizes 12 to 14 years. Price $1.25. BOYS’ CLOTH CAPS in blue serge, brown, gray and green mixtures, sizes 64% to 714, $1.00. —THE DOWNSTAIRS STORE. Men’s Woolen Arctic Hy |] | service,” TRY TO BLOW forgotten. gommandant tion, The term OREGON BUILDING AT S. F. TO BE AUCTIONED | SAN FRANCISCO, Jan 2—~The| famous ol4 Oregon building, relic = the 1915 exposition, will soon pass into the class of things gone but not ‘The building has been pronounced too old to be remodeled as @ recren- tion headquarters for soldiers at the | Presidio, by Brig. Gen. Blatchford, | It will be sold at auc NEW YORK, Jan. 2- the was letealing $0 pounds of metal, ful at @ time, said he did it because ements “suffering a bad wooden polities” has|irg’ and wanted money to buy a been traced to Nathanial Hawthorne. | new one. Col. House Going Back to His: Home He has band the Instantly! who discovered freezone. © Tiny bottles of the magic | or afterwards. fluid can now be had atany | even irritate the skin or drug store for a few centa. You simply apply a few drops of this freezohe upon | how get fd of every hard a tender, aching corn or @ | corny soft corn, or corn be tween the toes, as well aa hardened callus. painful gallusea on bottom the soreness disappears and | ‘shortly you will find the | of feet without pain corn or callus #0 loose and Few drops lift out with fingers—No pain! with the fingers. | flesh. Instantly Women! Keep It On Dresser! Never Let Coms Ache Twice | -: { gs stop corn-soreness, } | ;, then corns and calluses shrivel, loosen and ‘The world owes thanks to | shriveled that you lft it off gen tt | Hus in Cincinnatt | it of pain or sorenees is | felt when applying freezone Not a It doesn't For a few cents one can La- dies! Keep it on the dresser, 4 { 5 | the assailant ran away. In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest ard strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaran teed 15 years. Open Sundays From © to 13 for Working People P STS OHIO CUT. RATE DENTI i EXAMINATION FRER tions which woul bret) us to all} | European contfli 4 turmoils.” | Pointing out that “William H. Taft, | jas I understand from his public! | | etatement, is in favor of conscript: |ing our young men for that kind of Borah asked Lowden: i} "Are you in favor of any such policy or of any alliance, league or| partnership which may lead to such | & program? What ts to be your, policy with regard to such affairs?” | Borah said he asked the questions | | because Americans have a right to [know how candidates stand upon such vital tmues He virtually dared Lowden to repty. | POWDER BLOWN UP BY BULLET 'Two Are Killed in Eastern Plant Explosion | eit HERCULES, Cal, Jan. 2-—An ex ploaion of 6,000 pounds of biack pow- der in a magazine of the Hercules Powder company here late yesterday | Was attributed to a stray bullet fired by hunters in the Contra Costa coun ty hills, by officials of the company and police who have been investigat- ing the Diast. New Year's Gay was a holiday for all employes of the powder company. This fet undoubtedly spared the lives of a score of men who worked in the powder plant, according to Superintendent BE. D. Armatrong. The explosion shook the east bay hile and broke windows in surround ing cities, Several thousand dollars’ | @ to the powder com- WILMINGTON, Del, Jan. 2.—Two |men were killed and one waa tn |jured in an explosion of a corning | mill at the Hagley plant of the De Pont company today, The explosion broke windows within a mile radius of the plant. UP BUILDING |Two Men Are Injured in } Bomb Explosion BERKELEY, Cal, Jan. 2—The at- | tempt to blow up the Hast Bay Water Col. E. M-/Company station, here, yesterday House, it was learned today, plans! was today attributed by pollos who to leave within 10 days or two week#| have been investigating the case to for his old home in Texas entirely recovered from the lines which compelied him to lenve Paris for this country several weeks ago. A man in Bt. Lonis, arrested tor attempts on the life of A. C. Reed, shipyard worker, who frequently visits the plant. Reed told the police he bad re- ceived several threatening notes re cently James and Edward Hamilton, who were injured when the bomb ex- ploded while James was in the act of throwing it away, are well on the road to recovery today. Lazzari Concert Seat Sale Begins Carolina Lagzari, former leading contralto of the Chicago Opera cam. , will give her first concert in at the Metropolitan January zaari ia under contract as donfia contralto of the Metro- politan Opera company and will pro- | ceed almost ‘directly fram this city | to make her formal debut at the New York opera house, ‘The reserved seat sale for the Lazaari concert began Friday at 10 a, m. Logger Slashed by Knife in Argument | Matt Barbo, |acrous the back | | a logger, was slashed shortly after he emerged from a cider joint on Wash. ington st., near Second ave. &., late | Thursday evening, The washing was |done by a man with whom he was jengaged in bitter argument, Barbo | told the police Me was not | caught. | NEWS PRINT PAPER IS INCREASING IN PRICE Co, has closed the majority of its contracts for 1920 at 90 for the first NEW YORK, Jan, 2—Newa print featured a high paper market dur. ing the last ten days. Actinl sales +00 | of news print at 10 cents a pound, or 09 | $200 a ton, were made, it was stated +09 | here today. ‘o8 | It is said the International Paper dAnnunzio had offered the post of chiet of his cabinet to former Deputy Deambris, who was consid Pe) After carving Barbo, | A to } | | | i Thieves Have Not Sworn Off Taking Ways for New Year With holdups and safe-cracking oocuring almost daily, Policeman R.| Johnson was new crime he would be galled upon | investigate next—as his work of 1920, He had not long to wonder. “While I was waiting for some- thing to turn wp,” he lamented |S. Bureee's store, 1000 Ninth ave. 8. How to Keep Baby and the stomach bloated. normal habit of children is to be fongve and see if the breath is are the tell-tale symptoms of con- stipation. Tonight give a little of Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin, which you can hyy at any drug store, and it will act in the morn- ing and the troublesome symp- toms promptly disappear. can use it freely it can Sino be to a tin baby with ovr * Thousand of 1920. That's the From A Big Part of My Woolens Must Be Turned Into Cash Bef ore January Tenth HARD BUSINESS RULES Wholesalers Refuse to Listen to Explanations— They Demand Cash _ The fact that I bought a great stock of woolens in expectation of a big fall trade and then had my business paralyzed for three months by the tailors’ strike means nothing to the houses that sold me the goods. They demand cash—nothing else will sat- isfy them—and I am absolutely compelled to sac- rifice my woolens to raise money immediately. UITS'fH) OVERCOATS —MADE TO ORDER— Any Style You Want, for .... You will be lucky, indeed, if you can match these garments in fabric and tailoring in $55 to $65 CLOTHING GOING HIGHER) COMPARE VALUES any other Seattle tailor shop for less than. . All authorities agree that clothing will | Think what it means to get a high- be sky high the coming spring. That/| grade, made-to-measure suit for $35. makes my present position all the more| Look around. See the prices they are discouraging. I hate to sacrifice woolens | charging for ordinary ready-mades. My when I know they are ® froing up in value, | clothes are made as you order. Best of but I can’t pay my th cloth. It| linings and trimmings. Tailoring of the takes real cash. kind that stands up under wear. LIBERTY BONDS (Any Issue or Denomination) FULL PAR VALUE Change paid in cash. For a $50 bond you get a $35 Suit or Over- coat and $15 in cash. TAILORS TO THE MEN OF SEATTLE FOR THEY GIVE ME ONLY TEN DAYS “Pay Us Before the Tenth, Sidelsky, or’ Ultimatum From the Wholesalers a IMPERIAL TAILORING CO. 801 THIRD AVENUE 33. I Have Many Imitators on Third Avenue. Be Sure You Find the Right Number, 801 f To My Old Customers: In this crisis I sincerely hope that my old customers will resporid to my urgent need for ready cash. I have a magnificent stock of fabrics on hand and as woolens are sure to be higher this spring, it is most advisable to order clothes now, especially at this sac- rifice sale. Order two or three suits at the sale price if you can afford it. You will thank me later for giving you the oppor- tunity. —AND DON’T FORGET THAT SIDELSKY SUITS SATISFY They have been proving satisfactory to Seattle men for nearly 30 years. Blue serges, Scotch tweeds, Irish home- spuns, Balmoral mixtures, plain and fancy worsteds, cheviots and a most varied as- sortment of mixtures in the newest shades. OVER QUARTER CENTURY. | Friday, “rome bounder got into my |room and stole my revolver.” Another thief, perhaps to cele- brate the New Year with a bath, nipped a handsome porcelain tub from the University Plumbing com- pany, 3039 University st, together with other bathroom fixtures. And still another yanked a pay telephone off the wall in the Law- ton apartments, 1016 Union st. and robbed the cash box. A fourth footpad apparently did not Intend to swear off smoking jelgarets, Ho stole $18 worth trom wondering what first Smiling and Well See that the daily functions are regular and normal 1U can’t expect the little ‘ones to be ha and play- ful when the head feels dull ted. The “ hay id when tice them cress and fretful you ‘will usually Why lose « good find constipation is . cook ? They are Perhaps they have missed that hard to find daily function so necessary to these days. fort and health. Look at the Watch for belching. “ of without a bottle in the house for the emergency arises almost daily when it is needed. quarter Dr. Caldwell’s S: Pepsin is In spite of the fact that Dr. Cald- jen of © a combination of lo laxative —well’s rap Pepsin isthe Larnest selling Of OUT Present eine ood, satisfaction IABRIELLE OFFERS JC herbs with . Unlike the lauid laxative in the world, there work in still giving good satisfaction. GABRIEL nS JOB b r | ri D ‘who have teated our work. When coming to our office, be eure) = LANDON, January 2A dispateh harsher physics it acts ly an lion you Gre in the right place, Bring this ad with you. from Fiume today said Gabrielle without griping #0 tt while would mot think “Thought you were an advocate of home-baking, “I know that now” was the reply, “but the cook Porter Baking Co. Back to Bread and Reduce the High Cost of Living Many a woman has - had the same experience Mrs. Smith,” said the Grocer as he handed @ customer a loaf of American-Maid Bread. ; I was” she answered, “but I am cured. I have # had a cook for ten years. This morning she left me. Said she didn’t propose to burn her life out when as good bread as this could be had at the nearest Grocer’s.”” This bread really is just as good—maybe even better,” said the Grocer, is gone.”

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