The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 23, 1920, Page 15

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MEN—Buy Clothes Now, While You Can Save Real Money SEMI-ANNUAL CLEARANCE SHAFER BROS. Seattle’s Largest Second and University | Whole Block Clothiers First and University Long Spring prices will be higher, that’s sure. Buy now for less than prevailing prices and for far, far less than coming prices. We offer you a splendid chance to beat the coming advance in clothing prices—an opportunity to buy, at sharp reductions, splen- did, well-made “Shafer Bros.” Suits and Overcoats, of typical Shafer Bros.’ quality—well made, good styles, of splendid cloths—that is a real saving chance. The man is wise who stocks up with several suits. Sample prices—many others—big lots to pick from. Men’s Suits and Overcoats . Regular $40.00 values for $28.85 Regular $50.00 values for $38.75 Regular $75.00 values for $58.75 Boys’ Clothes—They’re Cut in Price, Too Regular $12.00 values for $ 9.85 Regular $15.00 values for $11.85 Regular $18.00 values for $14.65 Boys’ Overcoats are offered at about the same savings. THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1920. She Loved to Be Loved It Landed Her in Jail “Champion Wife” Credited With Four Husbands NEW YORK, Jan. 28.—If Richard ¥. Price, whose wife, Mra. Lrene Price, recently sued for annulment of their marriage on the grounds that Price bad been married four times Previously without the formality of divorce, decides to write a book on matrimony, he is very likely to have a rival in Mra, Edna Leslie. Mra. Leslie, according to charges filed here by ber first husband, Charles Hoffman, has had four hue bandas re and possesses | no doo show that a court granted her the right to be free of any of them! Mra. Loulie’s formula for making men love her, according to her mother, Mrs, John Epple, was simply “living to have a h and loving to be loved.” It was no trouble for her daughter to catch a man once she set her cap for him, according to the girl's mother, All she had to do was to inform them that she loved to be loved and Liked domestic pursutta, “And the chances are that she can win still more if she wants to,” says Mrs. Epple. “She never was the kind to sit around and mope and complain that she did not have a beau.” However, it ts not likely that Mra. Lealie will have a chance to practice her vamping arts further, for she ts in jail here charged with bigamy Her husbands, according to her first husband, Charles Hoffman, who filed the divores, are: Himself, Robert Simmons, George Faucett and John Mra. Leslie apparently 414 not know the seeret of keeping husbands for, according to her story, the first three dixappeared. LANSING ASKS MORE MONEY Wants to Reorganize Whole State Department WASHINGTON, Jan. 23.—“The new position of the United States in world's affairs urgently demands that the agencies thru which the foreign affairs of this government are cow ducted be improved to a degree which shall compare favorably with similar agencies: of other govern ments with which the United States maintains relations.” That is the theory upon which Secretary of State Lansing bases his request to congress for the addition of $1,333,000 to the appropriation for his department, and for permission \to reorganize our entire foreign rela tions service on a basis that would add «till further largo items of ex Acquitted at Trial |1920 Pants to Have by a Mind Miracle) Cutest 1830 Ruffles LOS ANGELES, Cal, Jan. 23—! pants, Franc ‘ Thought transference acroas 9 rtting tro co Myo =. miles of space helped to win! courts will pee raine-gh — acquittal for her brother, Elmer E. of 1920 just as chic and Sues Barose Brown, accused of murdering] doiectablé little alster—if he will Thomas Flood, Mra. A. Riche ot them. esac wear Los Angeles asserted after a verdict) Parisian tailors, al of not guilty in San Bernardino. — | of feminine th! gota hon ene | She also said her friends in Los] back to 1830 peony Kage byw Angeles, who concentrated their! startling new styles now made up in- thoughts on the court, established |to models for exhibition in the such clear connection that they knew | shops for men. nant at the conclusion of each day's pro- ceedings just what had happened without receiving any other informa. tian. The friends in Los Angeles knew of the acquittal at the moment the jury returned its verdict, 60 miles away. Mrs. Richee mt in the courtroom thruout the trial and concentrated her thoughts en the jury. No element of hypnotism entered into her act, she sald. Brown shot and killed Flood in a battle on the desert. Brown claims to be a cousin of Abraham Lincoln. One Room for Maid |; and Man; They Wed are iene. pustorers w their he eato > auc r NEW YORK, Jan. 23—Hotele are|tent that the take oro een ne ex. jammed as the result of the gigantic| plainly audible seven or eight inches inrush of visitors and two servants|4way from either ear. Therefore, if lof P. A. Stovall, returned United] {pu, Know of someone who is tr | States minister to Switzerland, could| deafness, cut out this fo find only one room for both. They|hand it to them, and you |were Fred Harris and Miss Gabrielle | been the means 4 Sandrin, valet and maid. moun,” Dak prone ‘They held a short consultation and then rushed off to the city hall for a marriage license. If all the diamonds mined in hie and existing today as cut and gems were gathered from ends of the earth, they would pile about as large as a 4 of coal dumped on the The pile would contain | Av4 karate, and the gems weigh 10% tons. The titlarks and meadow larks of America are not true larks, but be long to totally distinct families To Relieve Catarrh, Catarrhal Deafness And Head Noises suffering from catarrhal | r who are growing hard | nd have head noise, will afflictio treated relief after other ve failed. Sufferers Optometrist and Mfg. Optician Eyes Examined and Glasses Fitted saving some poor from total deaf n can be pre made as fol Prices Reasonable. 237 Epler Bik. #13 Second Ave. Phone Main 2551. Secure from Parmint (Double § |this home and add to it %- h water Parmint is used in this w Jonly to reduc | inflammat We don’t ask you to speculate in your boys’ cloth- ing. You actually . but cons of secretions and the results it| always quick and person who has eatarrh in orm, or distressing rumbling, | hissing nda in their should | give this recipe a@ trial. |been the fact that the salaries paid ¥ lat the most important posts have j| chief capitals, for instance, with no | Tesidence. pena. $189,000 ASKED AS RAISE FOR AMBASSADORS Leading the lat of increases, pro- posed by Lanaing, ls a sum of $189, 000 for salary raines to ambassadors and ministers at foreign capitals. Fifteen ambassadors tow reeefving $17,500 annually would be rained by Lansing to $26,000 each; three min inters would be raised from $12,000 to $15,000 and 29 ministers from $10,000 to $12,000, Secretaries in the diplomatic ser- vice would be given increases of $84,242; pont allowances to diplomatic and consular agents would be in creased by $200,000, and an additional $50,000 allowed for martes of alien employes in the consular service. The surn of $825,000 also is asked as Uncle Sam's share in the construc tion of @ permanent home for the| international trade mark registration bureau at Havana. DIPLOMATS’ LOW PAY A BIG HANDICAP One of the biggest handicaps to Unele Sam's diplomatic service has been insufficient to enable the am bassador or minister to maintain a standard of living abroad correspond ing to the standards of similar rep- resentatives from other countries. An compared to the mlary of $17,500 allowed ambaseadors at the) official residence provided or allow ances made to cover same, Great Britain pays her ambassador to Italy $26,000, to Japan $26,000 and to France $57,500, and, in each instance. supplies in addition, a welkequipped Frequent Storkly Visits Commended) PHILADELPHIA, Jan. 23.—"Get a| baby {n your home,” the advice given by the Rev. Paul er, pastor | of Moody church, Chicago, to 1,000 men and women at the Victorious Bryan Will Be in Saddle at Demo Confab BY GILSON GARDNER WASHINGTON, D. GC, Jan. 22—)| William J. Bryan wil contro! the next democratic convention, if he re- Peats his performance at Baltimore eight years ago. Ee will also name the next democratic candidate for president. That the above statements are | true is generally conceded in Wash- ington. It in the same old fight in the dem- ocratic party—the fight between the so-called conservative and the so- called madical members of the party In 1896 Bryan wrested the party control from the Grover Cleveland- David F. Hill conservative democrata. In 1913 Bryan threw down the gauntlet to Thos. Fortune Ryan and the Wall st. democrats, and again Won, Today he is defying A. Mitchel! Palmer, Williams Gibbs McAdoo, Os- car W. Underwood and the rest of the Wall st. democracy. F THEY NEEDED A LEADER Bryan may have no desire to be a candidate himself. He has the pur-| Pom, however, to se what kind of a| candidate his party, will nominate, And he intends also to commit the party at its convention to tmues which he regards as forward looking. Ho will insist on domestic issues primarily; and that Is why he ts so| Anxious to have the president's treaty acted on and cleared away He wants the full attention of the) public on domestic problems, such aas| the cost of ving and the relations| between labor and capital. Vatfl Bryan emerged at the Jack- son day twin banquets, the party was drifting. It seemed to find no leader-| ship. President Wilson has been eleminated by his physical condition ; also by his single-track concentration on the one issue of the treaty. A/ few lghtweighta have been playing with ‘presidential candidates, but none | of them was very serious. IN TO WITH PEOPLE Bryan's Jeadership.ts no idle threat. | Since the lapse of President Wilson's leadership, there has been no one who | | | | could speak for a greater following thruout the country than can Wil Ham J. Bryan Bryan tx by popular f ing. Bryan has kept in close touch with the people thru | the Chautauqua circuit and hi sonal organ, the Comm r. y Life Conference in Chambers-Wylie Memorial Presbyterian church. “If you haven't one of your own, beg or borrow one.” he can draw $250 a ni plus half t ate receipts, with eat to cost over 25 cents; and can talk to an audience of 6,000 or 10,000 people in any moderate sized town in the South or West. And he ts doing it It is because he can do this that he can hold a fod over the next con vention, and can again say what kind of © candidate the convention shal! nominate and what kind of a plat-! form the candidate shall stand upon. ly TI mm “onan cence een TTA UU Sarah A. Pettit, 65, wife of Herman elected president of the field repre C. Pettit, will be held Saturday at 2 o'clock in the Bonney Watson under. taking establishment, burial in Mount NWT Is There a Pianist in Your Home? Every family loves the music of the Piano—it is a necessity in the modern home and the only question is, who is to play it. The chil- dren taking music lessons need the finest instrument so their ears will be trained to hearing only the best. But, if you love music yourself, and cannot play, then you should have a player or reproducing piano, There Is No Greater Source of Pleasure for the entire family than the sweet-toned music of a good Piano Grands, Baby Grands or Uprights In Pianos and Reproducing Pianos Including some new model Chickering “Grands” for immediate delivery All These Famous Makes are Represented CHICKERING KIMBALL MEHLIN APOLLO BREWSTER ARDMAN ARTEMIS samen. SGaisnae ee ART APOLLO HINZE AMPICO THE WORLD’S THREE RECOGNIZED BEST MAKES OF PHONOGRAPHS NEW EDISONS VICTROLAS GRAFONOLAS a Ss. Z f All imate Ly @ a Player : Elliott 112 ‘ Records— Rolls 14.21 Third Ave. FUNERAL SERICES for Mra.| A. ¥. BAKER, of Spokane, was sentatives of the Northwestern Mu- tual Fire association Thursday after- | nooh at the largest annual confer-| "easant cemetery ence ever assembled tn the district. Lorw’s ee PALACE HIP INTEREST ALLOWED ‘PURCHASERS ON AUTOMOBILE PAYMENTS! You are contemplating the purchase of a Ford Automobile some time in the near future. Be prepared to secure delivery when you want it. A # ORPHEUM Tut <THE ARTISTS MODELO™ Mats. 5 ta . 13c. Matinees, 2:30; Mon), 15 and 9:15. i: AUGUSTUS PITOU, Inc. B MAY ROBSON tnaNew 66 Ld Comeay” “* TISH Nights, 50e to $2.00 Mat. Saturday, Bc to $1.59 DL AYE! Fifth and Pine "y ‘This Week—Mat. ‘Sat r Nights, Sle to 1de The comedy , Ste Mats, 226 to Sle bearty Order and begin payments now and we will allow you interest on your advance payments at the rate of six per cent per annun to time of delivery of car. Call and secure details of our offer. CENTRAL AGENCY AUTHORIZED FORD DEALER Ford Cars Parts i Service Commercial Bodies—Painting—Accessories 907 EAST PIKE ST. EAST 320 PANTAGES Mata, 2:30—Nights, 7 and @, Martha Hamilton Co; Ji Lichter; Gildea & Phillips: coni Bros.; Lieut. Berry a Pantagescope. Admission: 25¢ invest your money 2 when you buy srs DUBBELBILT sors “Cravenette” Finished ge | Twenty features of added strength sewed into every DUBBELBILT—That’s why they’re guaranteed for six. months’ service. If DUBBELBILT shows a rip, hole or tear within that time same will be repaired free of charge. A host of styles and patterns. Prices $14.75, $16.75, $18.75 Ages 6 to 16 Headquarters for Boys’ Suits, Caps, Shirts, Hats, Blouses, ete. The only exclusive boys’ shop in Seattle. THE JUVENILE SHOP 305 Pine Street Overcoats, and Blouses priced them for your convenience. § A Wonderful Opportunity to Save Final Clean-up on Women’s Coats, Suits, Dresses, Furs FOR YOUR INSPECTION AND SELECTION we have ar- ranged large groups of women’s most wanted apparel and And on whatever you choose we allow you the privilege of profiting by our liberal credit plan, which permits youto pay for your purchases at a genuine saving. “CREDIT GLADLY” Choose Now—Pay La Our Easy Credit Terms Mean that you may make your choice now and pay for same a little at a time, by the week or month, It’s easy to pay the Eastern way. ! ter’ Men Appreciate BRADBURY Suits and Overcoats You will be quickly impressed with the thoroughness with which we have embodied quality in these suits when you see them. Equally fine in 1332-34 Second every detail to the best to be Avenue had—only these are lower in

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