The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 16, 1920, Page 11

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; & j t L UNDERTAKING PARLORS AND CREMATORY Are now located at 313 Kt bourne st. just two Docks west of my OLD location. Those casion to use the Bieits Bervice have found it fined, courteous and co forting in Ume of ber ment BY HORACE ANNESLEY VACHELL Copyright, By EL A. Vachell (Continued From Our Last Tasne) Aa noon as Mins Mirehoure had |Newn” | gone, Dorothy a the paper, “Lert | who hare had oe- “Cet me the IMustrated London ‘Thoughtful, sympathetic Attention ts synonymous With Rietts Services NORTH 587 When she recovered consciousness! “At onos, please. It's on the floor) she was lying on her bed, and Susan |in the salen.” was bending over her, holding up a) When the faithful Susan return. | warning finger, 4 Dorothy was walking up and “You keep quiet, Miss Dorothy. | down, ber eyes sparkling, her cheeks }Yourve just fainted, that's all.” ablaze. { “Ho has preserved him. Oh, Suman give me the paper quick. I must SEATTLES: BFST PHOTO PLAY . prisoner by (hé savage tribe which had attacked and massered the expertitic force. 0 review went on to @ agoyne's thrill. | Ing emcape, his nture, the know! oige of the cou y be had gleaned, and #0 forth “I shall gosto London at once,” | Dorothy said with decision | | “Merey me! AVhat’s happenedt™ | wan, he's not” dead. De you junderstand? Mr. Gasgoyne is alive ver | od preserve unt TODAY—AND JUST A FEW DAYS MORE— COME EARLY! gon fay |was February | “You and Min must stay here. 1} shall come back as soon as I have! soon hit. | ‘Tiel! bring you back,” amended Susan. | | “Perbaps,” Dorothy blashed. | When reached London, she went to Dick's publishers, who, of we, would know Dick's address. surprise, a clerk hem mi-refunsal. he head of the um, if you | The month %y med and 1 wi firm. Dorothy hesitated, but only for a! moment | Mise Fairfax. Miss Dorotify Pair. fax | “Thank you." | | Half a minute later he came tack, acoompan a a kindlyfaced man. Mim Fairfax, will Jou spare me one mir | | “Certainly,” said Dorothy. She was wondering what was the matter with the head of the firm Me seem ed to be much afflicted with some up| fan affection, Dorothy uy © & room lined with | you are Mies Fairfax?” quavered gddly “You } “You—pardon me, for I must seem | indisereet, but you were engaged to Mr. Gasgoyne before he went to! Africa?” | | “Yes,” sald Dorothy gravety ‘The publisher, who waa not only | at the bead of his own business, but & Dpergonage in the mcial world, picked up a pencil and began to |make @ series of dots upor bling pad. “You have something to tell me:! what is it? I am sure you are kind ‘ou with to spare me som iden shock, some-—Oh, what ils i |know nothing, except that be has | written a book. > | | “Just #0; & very mrccemsful book. | |The third edition comes out tomor.| row. I have a copy berg” He LIBORIUS picked up a volume, whieh he held HAUPTMAN, No miys Dorotiry, “If you will look Jat the dedication, you will understand | why I asked you to give me this in terview.” | He turned abrupQy and walked to the window. | Dorethy opened the book. Upen the dedicatory page were tnecribed | ree words TO MY Wire Dick Gasgoyne had married Crys- tab ‘ His | Mightiest Drama of the Great Open North! ¢ The Silver Horde” Men. MUSIC Filled With Adventure and Romance. Hse sea fi fil A. V fi =1>, li Pepe MTT AT THE ONLY FIRST. RUN NEW SHOW IN THE CrIry TODAY—1 DAYS ONLY CHAPTER Y. After Many Days We pass over a fow uneventful yeags. Looking back after |warda, Dorothy often wondered why they had ben so happy. Perhaps compensation had so ordained it, re- alizing that Dorothy was entitled to rest and peace The hourn glided by with so little friction that she might have tinagined Time wan standing still, bad it not been for found tn Tours, and under her able Je, Min learned much that he never | forgot. Then, one day, Susan said | : “Master Min is becoming that Frenchied—" He was % years old, and big fer bis jaee, when Susan fired this train of gunpowder. “Rubbish, Susan” “And he speaks Fingtith Ike a Frenchy.” “Realy, Sasan—* “We ought to go back to Pngtand. | Master Min might attend Miss Mire- house’s school tn Winchester.” E ve Derothy pau. In the ever, she returned to her fy. house, the lease of a house near | Winchester was taken over. * It was |a tiny houne, but it stood In a pretty, old-fashioned garden, and hard by | flowed the River Itchen. The parson and the parson’s wife jealled, and then, tn due course, others, who heard that a young and charming widow had taken Rose- mary cottage. In the cathedral close, in scholastic circles, im the mess room, around the dinner tables | HAMPTONS A MODERN ~ SALOME - Rheumatism A Home Cure Given by One Who Had It In the pring of 1893 I was attacked nd Inflammatory Rheu- T-found ® remedy that cured me com- , aod it has never return siven It to a number whq were torribiy afflicted and eveo bedridden with Rheumatiom, and it effected a cure in every cass. 1 want ery mufferer from any form of rheumatic trouble to try this BANJOIST pare “and Playing “My French Salome” And Other Hits After you have used !t, and it has proven itself to be that long-looked- rin . Write today, MARK M. JACKSON Mo, 113 Gurney Bid, Byrecuse, %. Y. ‘Mr. Jachsen is renpensibia, Above atatement true, TIE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 16, 1920. AT LAST Tye Bought Stock of the AMERICAN TAILORS And I Got It for Cash at My Own Price Men, This Is Like Old T When my old customers come in to- morrow they will feel at home again in he American Tailors’ stock of splendid woolens has been added to my store. the Entire action. ’ve Found What I’ve Been Looking For current prices salers are charging for woolens. But I have beaten their game, and I have at last*laid my hands on a stock of woolens that will permit me to put on an old-fashioned price-cutting sale, the kind that made my store headquarters for economical men. The American Tailors for many years haye been noted as one oY the par- ticular at 13: Condue' on the character and quality of their woolens to secure and keep. trade. shops of Seattle. 3 for This high cost of clothes nearly got my goat. I don’t like-to charge high prices a bit better than my customers like to pay them. doing a rushing business—plenty of orders, with a small profit on each trans- t I have always sold away under clothes, But it has been hard sledding lately with the sky high prices the whole- Ihave always been used to made-to-order For a long while at 914 Third Ave. and more recently » Third Ave., they catered to men*able and willing to “pay the price.” ting a conservative business, they did very little advertising, depending The prices they received may be judged from the fact that they recently announced a special reduction salé of the least expensive of their fabrics, made to order at $60. The proprietor of the American Tailors became engaged in another line of business, which now takes his entire time, and I have just bought, for spot cash, the entire stock of woolens, I secured these woolens at less than half what I would have to pay if I went to the wholesalers for 4 high grade stock of the same size, and I am cerfainly going to take advantage of the chance to eonduct a sale that will remind my customers of the good old days before the war. imes my own stock, giving me by far the largest line I ever di the very finest. isplayed, and also Here They Go, Boys, While They Last owt beri dy $25 to $40 LESS THAN THE AMERICAN TAILORS WOULD HAVE CHARGED FOR SAME MATERIAL LAST WEEK I took a chance and spent a big lot opney—cash money—on this stock because I believed that there is a real demand in Seattle for clothes at a price thatthe man of average income can af- ford. suit for $35 that the I can’t carry this stock long, there is too much money tied up in it, and I surely am cutting the enough when I offer to make you a rice low American Tailors were selling only last week at about double this price. Thirty-five dollars than you can look at a ready-to-wear suit for, and no other Seattle tailor can ly offer you a ike $35. Here is a word to my old friends: Don’t miss this chance. three suits if you possibly can. Prices on woolens are going to be even higher the coming season than they are now. The American Tailors’ stock added to my own gives you a patterns, fabrics, shades and colors so varied that it is almost out of the is a good deal less suit for ahything Buy two or choice of weaves, to question that you can’t find something to suit you. P. R—fince writing the above 1 three wait lengths of the American Tailors’ stock be- Except for these three pisces cause of poor quality. the entire American Tailors’ have returned stock is now im my store. Sidelsky Suits Satisfy of august country magnates, gossip trified with the name of Armine. dean put the question con- “What Wa» Mr, Armine?”| iy ins Mirehoure replied entrusted to me.” Society, urban and suburban, ac cepted this crumb in lieu of @ lonf, but curiouity was anty whetted. Sooner or later “Dorothy knew she would have to dissemble. The day NOTHING BETTER FOR A LUNCH Yreeh cracked crab direct from the icebox with mayonnaise dress. ing. Did you ever try one? Per haps you have; and then effer something terrible with your stom ach chused by too much rich mix ture tn the mayonnaise. Whenever this happens again—eat without fear, but be sure you have a box of Jo-to nearby, for it lp the one and only sure and harmlens remedy that will give you speedy relief —Two Minutes and your stomach misertes have disnppeared. Joto is sold in Seattle by the Bartell Drug Co. and Swift Drug Co, Free sample at any of these stores, } “Tho father | aadea of that darting child, who has been came when an indiscreet neighbor asked outright “Was Mr. Armine tn the service?” “No,” said Dorothy, calmly. Then never spéak of Min’s |tather. He laft me to explore a wild country and there he was attacked You Will Never Be Cured by Local Treatment With Sprays. Catarrh is a condition of the blood and cannot be cured by local appli- cations of sprays and douches; this has been proven by the thousands who bave vainly resorted to this method of treatment. Catarrh should not be neglected or experimented with. The wrong treatment is valuable time lost, dur Ing which tho disease is getting a firmer bold upon its victim, and making it more difficult for even the proper treatment to accomplish results. : Though Catarrh makes its first appearance in the nostrils, throat (and atr passages, the disease be Price Charged by LOUIS SIDELSKY This Ad mas Which ran in the Post-Intel- ligencer Sunday, February 1, shows how much I| am actu- ally saving you at this smash- ing sale. Price Charged by American Tailors .... $60 $35 Amount I Save You.. $25 Does $25 sound like a lot to save? that I am saving you on this stock. advertised as an extya special by the American Tailors and was $15 $30 less than their regular prices. , . IMPERIAL TAILORING CO. Well, that’s the minimum Remember this $60 was Our Great Sale _ Continues for Another Week A great many of Seattle’s well-dressed men have already afforded themselves of this great opportunity. “ This Is No Bunk! You save from $15 to $30 on every Suit or Overcoat, ordered this week. We are offering our entire stock of Foreign and Domestic Woolens at this very low price— $60 ‘ Don’t Hesitate—Come Tomorrow — We Guarantee the Most Up-to-Date Tailoring AMERICAN TAILORS 1329 Third Avenue (Opposite Post Office) LOUIS SIDELSKY, Proprietor 801 Third Avenue—Corner Columbia Be Sure ‘You Get the Right Number—Look for 801 by some savages and—and—" “My ‘dear, saysno more, I see I have distressed you, but may I, as your friend, repeat what you have told me?" “Please do,” said Dorothy. (Continued in Our Next Issue) It Often Leads to Dread Consumption comes more and more aggravated and finally reaches down into the lungs, and everyone recognizes the alarming conditions that result when the lungs are affected. Thus Ca- tarrh may be the forerunner of that most dreaded and hopeless of all dis- , consumption. al treatment affords perma- '. Experience bas taught that S, & S, is the ane remedy which attacks the disease at its source, tho blood, and produces satisfactory re sults tn even the worst cases. Ca- tarch sufferers are urged to give §. 8. & @ thorough trial. Tt is sold by afl druggists, You are invited to write to the Medical Department for expert advice as to how to treat your cavn case. Address Swift Spe- otfic Co., 164 Swift Laboratory, At- inate, Ga. | Says Their Syrup Was Camouflage local restaurants are with false advertising for god sale of maple syrup, that was not maple syrup, Friday. Pros- ecutor Brown filed the charges in Justice Otis W. Brinker's court. Catarrhal Deafness May Be Overcome If you have Gatarrhal Deaf~ ness or are even just a little hard of hearing or have head noises go to your druggist and get 1 ounce of Parmint (dou- ble strength) and add to it 4 pint of hot water and a little ‘anulated sugar. eo 1 ta lespoonful four times @ day. 'Thie will often bring quick relief from the 4 come easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat. It is easy to prepare. costs Jittle and is ploasant to take. Any one losing hearing who has tarrhal Deafness or head noises should £ this pre- scription a trial istressing FOR SURVIVAL” ~ at of The Arena

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