The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 12, 1920, Page 13

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‘T PICTURE OF GABY DESLYS’ FUNERAL Thousands of Parisians turned out to pay their last eh to Gaby De ae when the funeral cortege of the ation vi #4 actress passed thru the streets of Paris. Shows the hearse Snow. Bath Victim _ Sues R. R. Company/|{7 ‘WOOD CENTER, N. Y., March 12. Byron Smith went to the depot to take the train to Yonkers. Before gets you in the neck, or bea -woddenly—and how you suffer! of that little in- bacillus. It is a fact that when nature tries to off the poisons from @ body the result some is inflammation of the way i =a as you can, either be- fore or after the attack, by off the poisons toxins) from the body thru , hot or cold lemonade, | may e Dr. Pierce’s Anuric et: sae ne Mg mm and 4 bowels i “Ee an casional purgative, made up ¢ May-applele leaves of aloe, iD, sir made into tiny- u ted pills—to be had ‘every drug store, as Dr. bove picture idden with flowers, with inset picture of Gaby. minutes later heard the approaching train. As he left the depot a quan ble Rae gent 2a gare io ‘Sait crawled out ay Meet home. He demands $500 for his snow bath and says the company Purchased his ticket and © few |must pay: or After Pierce's Pleasant Pellets. To build up after the grip—to make red blood and Ti the} with vim, vigor and| vitality, take an iron tonic, known as “Irontic,” and sold at most drug stores, or that well-known herbal tonic which has been so favorably known for the past fifty years, Doctor Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery. This is made from roots and barks of forest trees and brings the freshness of the woods right to you! ever is diminished by the use of Anuric Tablets, but in addition the arms and hands me with water (tepid which a table- i . saleratus to a quart of water has been dis- solved. This may be kept up continuously. HEADACHE: For the headache, a cool pack of saler- atus water applied to the forehead is of great help. Our operators are graduate dentists and are iii known only for thorough work and employ the | most modern methods for alleviating pain—in fact, Union Dentistry is painless dentistry in the truest sense of the word. FREE EXAMINATION Come in and see us. Let us examine your teeth and tell you whether or not we can save them. If bridge work or plates are necessary, you will find our work and prices both right. NEW LOCATION and PIKE STREET The Northwest Corner — Upstairs Two Entrances ———— a srt Baye Mr ica ntrance Next to Rippe’s le —also— 1505 FOURTH AVENUE UNION DENTIST. Hours—9 A. M. to 8 P. M. Sundays—10 A. M.to1 P.M. , FINE SURGICAL RECORD IS MADE War Brought Net New Epoch to Medicine and Knife ‘WASHINGTON, March 12.—What may be termed in medical science the “war surgery period” in America te about to pass. This means that for the wounded in the war about all that human skill can do for them has Been performed. The number of wounded Amer. feans tn hospitals fn Purope and America was 277,000 at the time of the armistice. The present sum ber is 12,000, all in the 14 military hospitals in the United States. Surgeon General Ireland was told today that it has been re- ported that in the last few months high-class specialists, surgeans and doctors had left the service to re- sume private practice and that many wounded were left in the hands of men of Rttle experience. “Nothing to ft," said General Ire land. “By just saying the word every big specialist in the country would come @running to help us.” General Ireland pointed out that had been reduced from 31,- 000 to 2,225, or 93 per cent, and Colonel Wm. H. Moncrief, chief of the section of surgery, who had charge of all the war surgery, point- ed out that 95 per cent of the major operations from overseas injuries have been performed. “They all worked faithfully till the armistice was signed,” said Col. Monerief. “From then on we had a jhard time. But we discharged no men that we couldn’t get along with- out.” Executioner Won’t Get Pay Increase OBSINING, N. Y., March 12— John Hulbert, Sing Sing’s execution- er, who recently asked an increase of 66 per cent in his per capita fee for electrocuting murderers, must worry along at the old price The fate prison department rejected a bill boosting the price from $150 to $250. Says Hubby Puts Dogs in Her Bed jo BELFAST, Ireland, March 13.-— Mrs. Ellen Clarke summoned her husband, Joseph Clarke, into court for desertion. She said she was made to sleep with her husband's dogs, he insisting they were as clean as she was, The husband was ordered to pay her $10 a week. SIDELSKY STARTS A 10-ROUND FIGHT Bee Page 10 of Today's Star Ble EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE Take a Glass of Salts before breakfast if your Back Hurts or Bladder bothers you ‘The American men and women must guard constantly against Kid- ney trouble, because we eat too much ‘and all our food is rich, Our blood) {s filled with uric acid which the kid- neys strive to filter out, they weaken | from overwork, become sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and the re- sult is kidney trouble, bladder weak- hess and a general decline in health. ‘When your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine 1g cloudy, full of sediment, or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you wuffer with sick headache or dizzy,; fa bad, get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Balts; take & tablespoonful in a glase of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. This famous salts in made from the acid of grapes and lemon fuice, combined with Iithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. | Jad Salts is inexpenstve; cannot in- | because nobody can} make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time, THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 12, 1920. Men's clothes of the highest grade can be pro- duced in Seattle and sold below the prices now being asked by the clothing stores and far below prices insisted on by the So-called high class tailors. In opening the largest tailoring estab- lishment ever operated in the West, we pledge our word to the public that we will reduce the price of clothing in this city. Mac Martens Better Tailoring 1201-3-5 Third Avenue, Corner Seneca OCCUPYING ENTIRE BUILDING FORMERLY OCCUPIED BY THE JOHN LINDH CO, Producing clothes on a larger scale than hither- tofore ever attempted in this city, with the lat- est equipment an newest methods, we will nat- urally have greater efficiency with resultant low- er prices to the public. In working for efficiency in producing, we will have the active support of the Journeymen Tailors’ International Union. ‘Enthusiastic workers is the first step toward real efficiency. GRAND OPENING SATURDAY Special Introductory Offer =a SUITS Tailored was to Your Special Order .30 Better Tailoring Not onty will we employ the most skilled tailors, but we will employ them under conditions conducive to the best work. In. a splendid sanitary, sunny shop such as ours, men and women, skilled in their trade, will labor un- der the best possible ad- vantages. Better tailoring will be our motto and we are in a posi- tion to get the workers to make better tafloring pos sible. It is an undisputed fact that practically all the expert tailors in Seattle be long to the union, and that most of the clothes made re- cently by non-union tailors have been a sight to behold. Yet the higher priced tailors have asked the public to pay up to $125 for these poorty made clothes. There is no necessity for $125 clothes. We will prove on Saturday that $47.50 is all that any man néed pay for a suit of the highest quality. Certainly there is no reason now why any man should pay $50 to $75 for a ready made Suit. ~ " Brown Worsteds Brown Diagonals H. Shades Pershing Tans Bankers’ Gray Green Mixtures Blue Serge Scotch Tweeds Irish Homespuns Fancy Worsteds Worsted-Cheviots to Get You In ‘At the special introductory price of $47.50 we have materials wide enough in variety of color and pattern to suit the best dresser and good enough in quality for any man in Seattle to be proud to wear. This is not just a bait price to be used to compel you to take some- thing more expensive. Take your own time; spl o out the Suit you want at the special price, and we will make it up in just the style you want. Mac Martens Better Tailoring 1201-1203-1205 Third Ave., Corner Seneca Our Salesrooms and Workshop Occupy the Entire Buildi Until Recently eee oan Jehe H. Lindh Co Our Guarantee Unless we can win your thorough and hearty good will by the quality of the first Suit you order from us, we would be better off by not selling you. We positively guarantee that every garment we turn out will be satisfactory in every way of your money will cheerfully be given back. The first hundred Suits we turn out will make or break this store. se that our first Suits will abso- future $47.50 Price Is Not Advertised Just Better Tailoring A Suit is only as good as its linings and trimmings. In the clothes we build we offer a choice of several kinds of | substantial linings and in our . Suit building we use the very best of French hair cloth and better grades of canvas. In seeking efficiency in produc tion we do not lose sight of the necessity for careful hand tailoring in the essential parts of a Suit. The collars and lapels are hand turned and so carefully tailored and pressed that they retain their original lines, no matter how hard the coat is used. All our garments are made in our own shop. We do not © “contract gut” at the lowest possible price our coats and vests, as is the common prac- tice in Seattle, even on the highest priced clothes. You made. While the coat is being made we lilzs % try it on many times as necessary insure perfect fit. this makes an extra Welcome Entirely without respect as to whether you need a Suit now, you are cordially invited to visit our new store. We want you to you will tly woud

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