The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 16, 1920, Page 17

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THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, APRIT, 16, 1920. MecDougall-/oathwick Second Avenue at Pike Tomorrow — Saturday Is the Last Day of Our The Great Annual Spring ‘Shirt Sale “The Story of the Wonderful Shirts” —in the MacDougall-Southwick Shirt Sale has spread far and wide. Hundreds of old friends have returned to shop in person. Others have written from away for their share of these exceptional values. And hundreds of'new friends have been made—because of this Shirt Event. The number df shirts which remain for this event is limited—note the items below! Only 1,465 Shirts by Actual Count Remain for Tomorrow’s Selling 372 Shirts, Special $3.65 3 for $10.50—Madrases and woven cloths—all sizes, 14 to 17 inclusive —with just as wide color selection as at the beginning of the sale. AT2 Shirts, Special $8.95 2 for $17.50—Broadcloths, habutais—all sizes, 14 to 17 jnclusive— shown in wide range of plain shades and stripe effects. 370 Shirts, Special $10.85 2 for $21.00—Empire Crepes, La Jerz, crepe de chines, broadcloths— handsome silks, both plain colors and combinations in this group. 107 Fiber Shirts $3.95 144 Twill Shirts $1.95 oa silk shirts in a broken line of sizes _ These twill shirts remain in the following and colors comprises this special group psizes sizes only: as follows: 14 14% 15 h M%y 15° 16 164,17 17% 61 40 «15 3 ge 8 6 20 63 10 2 Exceptional Sale of Ties--$1.35 A special feature of ties—countless color combinations—both conserva- tive and gay—comprise this group of four-in-hands on sale to augment the great shirt sale. MEN’S SHOP, JUST INSIDE THE DOOR 'WOMEN CROSS BORDER INTO BOOZE JOINTS | BY ALFONSO J. SHORTELA |! | JUAIUDZ, Mexico, April 16-—THe || | who enters here leaves all reputation |} bebind.” \| Thourands ef American men and |! this little ‘dobebullt aanis on the |} dewert, weem to concede | this local paraphrase of Hoturn. | | Cronwing the rickety britge that | | spans the Fie Grande with a crowd [of thirsty pilgrima I have been tm preaved how thin the veneer of gen tility may be. | | WOMEN PUFF | CIGARETTTES TIN BAR hoomM | Together with an assorted crowd | of Americans of both sexes from almost every state, I hurried from the El Paso train w @ taxi and or | dered the driver to “step on it” A dozen machines carried our party | acroms the bridge into Juares, after & long wait in the line where border permits are insued. This group of orderty and ordi narily discreet American citizens, to gether with other hundreds that come @aily, began jamming the m }loona, Bning the rail three and four doap. | Women tntermingted with the men, many of them puffing etgar | ettes altho patently novice with the | weed. If they felt « little dubious | what to do, they seemed called to do | the very things they would net do/ back home | 1 mw inamy welldremsed Jeweted | | women tolling at gaming tables with | purses open beside them, winning oo | castonally but losing often with an | ameamed atr of wndifference | | WOMEN “STAKED™ TO | | FARZ ACKOSS BORDER | ‘The proprietor of the finest moon | tm Juares told me that he daily “ntaked™ @ scare of women of this type to fare Pack to El Pass, | | Truck With Brandy ts Seized by Dry Agents SACRAMENTO, Cal, Aprfl 16 Carefully hidden under af pile of fur niture, 250 gallane of brandy and a truck carrying the liquor were ertzed by federal agents yerterday, | on the highway near Lincoln, Placer | according to the federal agents and J. P. Schuller, driver of the track were arrested and brought to the/| county jail hera The liquor was shipped from Napa, aceording to the women who daily dare remarse in |! Unitokm Coffee - ‘ ‘Always, dastes the Se Ed the Cup" WA There’s a Better Coffee That Always Tastes the Same Make a Test and See We offer you a brand of coffee that’s changeless—it brings you a flavor that’s the same in every can, sealed in a vacuum-packed container. All you do is keep the pot clean and make the coffee in the same way daily to get uniform results, We make a special claim to this feature in “Folger’s Golden Gate” Coffee, $0 you may expect uniformity. The world’s best raw coffees vary in flavor. That is a difficulty all blend- ers must meet. Some, roasters don’t take proper care. So their “finished” = in twenty different cans may ring you twenty different flavors. Weemploy blenders and roasterswho have the skill of artistry. We submit endless samples of coffee, to expert tasters. They match every lot of“ Fol- ade Golden Gate” with the lot be- fore. Thus we make sure that our coffee will treat you in the same way daily if you treat is the same. If the pot is clean and you use the same method this coffee cannot fail. \ Pe “Well, my wife solved the — Corres problem. It’s the same now everp dap.” But be sure to fry it—three or four cans at least so you can fessitsuniform- ity. If we save a uniform coffee you want to know it and the trial is the only way to learn, Expect It To Be Different—For It Is Look fora flavor that is better, differ- ent—in the first can that you use. Then look for that same flavor in all cans that come thereafter. Learn what it means to have uniform coffee. Get a package from your gro- cer now. FOLGERS “i” COFFEE ‘Always Tastes the Same in the J-A: FOLGER & COMPA officers. They said that before nightfall an entire gang of dealers |in Nquor would be under arrest. eee Says European Nations Are on Drinking Spree | CHICAGO, April 16—~The people of Furopean nations, expecially of France and Great Britain, are today @rinktng more than ever before, ac cording to Miss Margaret Wintrine er, temperance worker here, furt re turned from a six. months survey of conditions abroad % Tt will take 20 years for probi bition to become effective tn al Purape, Mie Wintringer sald. | |. “In the retuxation period follow: | tng the war, all clases In France. Great Pritain and Relgium are drinking to an appalling degree,” | she mid. “Tirttish women drink | | more than any other women tn the| worts, Whisky tn the Rritteher:| tea fs a popular drink and yorne| girts are érinking in public places.” | | eS | He Christens Dock | With Contraband Booze W. Francia, milor, came to grief | when he came ashore from the Prin coms Charlotte Thursday night with two bottles of booze on his person. — | When Inspector A. A. Oxborne at | |tempted to seize the whisky Francis | christened the dock with it. Now he| is held for the customs officials, eee | Three Held in Probe f of Poison Liquor Sale More arrests are expected tn the linvestigation of the sale of poison | | liquors at North Bend and Snoquab- mie, Sheriff John Stringer said Frit | day Three men, whore names are | kept neeret, are held in county jail Itiness, following indulgence in bootleg drinis by some of the na tives, prompted Stringer’s investiga ‘tion. Chief Deputy Sheriff Frank Rrewer made the arrests Thursday, Investigators say in Rossin de struction has gane as far as ft can go, and that construction now ts In | evit able. (HELP YouR] DIGESTION When acid-distressed, —— the indigestion wit KI-MOIDS Dissolve easily on tongue—as pleasant to take as candy. Keep your ‘stomach sweet, try Ki-mioids. MADE BY SCOTT & BOWNE TT ¢ PI An ideal dairy country Evergreen pastures, pure mountain water, temperate climate make Tillamook ideal for dairying. The summers—when most of the cheese is |—are pleasantly cool, of a ture about the same as the old spring house on the farm where grandmother kept her | butter and milk. Tillamook County, which makes necessary the regular, rigid testing of every cow for health. When you see Tillamook on the rind, it means that the Look - for TILLAMOOK on the Rind ! of living? quality goes back to the very source of supply. Are you using Tillamook Cheese to reduce the high cost TILLAMOOK COUNTY CREAMERY ASSOCIATION ened and Operated Dairymen 24 Chease Kitchens O Cooperatwely by Tillamook TILLAMOOK, OREGON

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