The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 11, 1920, Page 9

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FRASIER PATERSON CO, SECOND AVENUE AND tenant STREET For Clearance Saturday 189 Silk Shirts «ee an Souetal Sale at $8.95 —High-grade Shirts of pure silk and silk-mixed fabrics. the majority from $12.50 to $14.00. 65 Silk Shirts Fomnetly $16.50 and $18.00 —All in this sale at $10.00 In all sizes, 4 to 17 —Formerly priced at $10.00, $12.00, $12.50, $13.50 and $14.00— fj a0: ~The Men's Section, Just Inside the Main Entrance Ce ea OO THE SEATTLE STAR Indians Put Liguor | the grave pe and tobacco | the corp me bition cannot halt the prac; In the old dayn & complete hunting hd there are many stills in ise | equipment was meluded, but now ' where, in violation of all! wuppties of food and drink are placed ad a nha t Indians can obtain the pee on the graves. Ary stimulant for cold and hungry| In some manner the pork, bread | fah ang whisky disappear houses are built In ke old Indian te The grave with thi hat th |EAST SIDE BRIDE OF | MILLIONAIRE BARES | BY 1 P. BURTON one is born tn the Social Register, | Y K, Jur 1 Iutth ©.) 008 Is received on Fifth ava, be he & to try le-| TomUe or angel; if one ia not born in ¢| the Social Register, eived, be he ev heaven's own emissary { fine Irish parents on TH ‘wart set’ ackn ain, but insisted that of tw the pre ed linen ts going to be hung out than Am has om, more} 4 ave. is goir ecaune Tt who | ORIGINAL ANCESTORS » of | COBBLERS OR FERKYMEN ‘eolared the former Mary Casey,| daughter of John and Bridget Casey who first saw the light of day beside! the tracks of the Third ave. elevated. “Simply a contest between th | power of militons, Fifth ava, and th rights of the plain people, Third ave, puess of the case! him on of my 6-yeur-old boy jot of linen tn pub comes to trial ity, to nee whether or not Y| cas, because Joel's fa can buy even some courts in New! rnorne, who recently di York. | intelligence and ecfucation that I have t I am gol fight now to » to throw into this! tact to ittte Joel. if in America it is |Hun Warning Bell People Lelie Legs BLEITZ DOVER, Engtand, June 11—~The NEW here of persona leaving their behind in tramears, jana or bec! Are now located at 315 Kil yp nat Many Ceremonies _to Be Legalized Those who have had oc- casion to use the Bleits have found it re- courtecus and « = forting in time of berea’ ment. Thoughtful, sympathetic peek-a-boo waists, bare arms @ scores of ceremon. 40 years thraht to public vie [than a wanton, he maid tS a 95 —part of the For $100,000 Saturday’s purchase Selling ROM among the huge assortments we received through our exceptional purchase, recently f} announced, hundreds of exquisite hats have been selected and taken to the Lower Price Floor for final selling. Tomorrow will be a grand day, indeed. This department is a veritable garden of floral crea- tions, representing values far in excess of your compre- hension, Take advantage of the com- forts our rest rooms offer you. Cozy, comfortable and convenient. Tele phone and desk ih ss : P - Trimmed Hats, Sailors, plain and with prétty bands in plain and in shades; close-fitting models, wide drooping effects and others of the more matronly type there for you. —all extreme values at $2.95 Marines WESTLAKE AT PINE Maxime Building Three Floors of Hats Shifted to Dover) on Cars in Liverpool LIVERPOOL, England, June 11-~ alarm bell which the German inhab-| An awkward habit has developed Old Styles Ordered for Zion City CHICAGO, June 11—Shbort skirt, Margaret necks and mosquito net ntocking aflt 40 years it has just are the works of the Evil Ona and ih ae that its clergy never | must be forever kept from Zion City wen to perform mar-|Overser Voliva has told his flock NORTH 587 act of parttament/Any woman who woul neath obstacion.’ amall atu don Art & very mwarKer co-oper-| ative apartment house of artists at Mary Casey T apartm fixed by the court logn re looks the ro-| cainet the rich Three of these |mantic figure that she ix. Her face) Ne I studied exhaust UNDERTAKING | artificial limbs were lated in the re utiful and in ber eyes Nes the| theme rich people as the trained |} PARLORS AND port of lost property. The list also] t igence that promo her from | psychologist which I am, and I have CREMATORY neluded #ix gas masks, sixty Bibles cast Side to the ha ff Colum. | thelr number, | where she touk bh pastor's degree in ph “The Thornes had juat one pase-| word that opened the door to their family and thelr world, and that was the Social Register,” she said. “I am going to tell the | them when I get on the mtand. skeletons. and ‘Third Competence Asks No Favors He Serves Himself Most Who Serves the Public Best DR. REID : * A stream never rises higher than its source, nor does a_ business grow greater than its builder. Some people have marveled that I have built so large a practice in a few short years, and Dental Supply Houses have commented on the fact that I buy more and better Dental Supplies than any half dozen competitors, some of whom have been practic- ing here for years. I am fair enough to admit that I do not deserve special credit for the feat—because the KIND of competition I have had made my task easy; in fact, I feel that many up-to-date, competent Dentists, pos- sessed of the requisite skill and training, who would display the courage born of knowledge and ability, could have done the same thing—and perhaps in less time, If I seem so far AHEAD of the procession, it is so because others are SO FAR BEHIND. I saw the shortcomings of the system em- ployed here by the old-time dentists; I knew | the public put up with it simply because there | was little choice between the methods of the old schools, and I knew that the two greatest | evils of that system were exorbitant prices— | and unnecessary pain. I had the courage of my convictions and I told my story in the papers and in my office—and I MADE GOOD, BECAUSE: What I told the people was the TRUTH and I have proved it to them. The work is giving perfect satisfaction and has stood the test of time. My practice is limited to high-class Dentistry only— at Prices Every One Can Afford. 20-Year Gold Crowns ....... . $5.00 Bridgework ................ $5.00 Best French Maroon Plates. . - $10.00 Open Evenings and Sunday Mornings. Lady Attendants. Crown Dental Offices: (Which Disappears) | on Graves of Tribe CHARLEVOIX, Mich, June 11 Mappy Hunting Ground and must kitty-wah-boo is firewater and the! have a habitation the search. urvivors of the mighty hunters and| These shelters a ullt on the warrigm of the Chippewas crave it| graves in the wooded depths of iso. | mightlly sted Garden Island, inhabited only | yet, to comfort thelr relatives| by a few Indian fishermen, When | lo the! the house has collay \) Mu " |that the soul no lor asemen ‘ t, and the shelters White fisherman grin and wink | when the Indians insist that the ne | spirit comes back for refreshment LIFE IN SMART SET he in not re en archangel and I was born T m-]| “Fifth ave. fam uulekty forget == Blouses, regular $5.00 qualities. The ty, only to b subsequently | that all ita origir restora were Georgettes are in white, flesh, by her distinguished “inlaws” and|cobblers or grocei en or ferry. isque, or e, gold and French husband |men, and they go out and adopt iieque, orange, | ged “That's what thin conteat between | ‘rests and look down on the rest of my husband and me for the ponses.| the world, and if one of their men sion of our child simmers down to,”|™4rries a poor girl, no matter how) nt aho may be, they never for The Thornes are doing al they} man to keep me from getting poses “That's why I am going to wash a c when thin case | t | “The child is the great stake tn the her, Samuel |) Every ounce of intellect, Of} friend, and he entailed Joel's fifth of the eatate so that it will come in-| fl | “At this moment my lawyer tells |! —-|true that ‘virtue can rise from be! me the boy ts In a cheap $15.a-week | f/ boarding house ont Weet whfte his Mra. Thorne had recetved me tn aj father enjoys an income of $100,000 nent in the Hotel/a year, and I live on $760 a month, | “T am going to establish the right [Hl justice for the poor even when % in the city of i world about 1 wil! air their closets and drag ont thetr I will show people that | the difference between Fifth eve uve, is exactly what tt ie— “It | two blocks—that and nothing more.” > ae SEQOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET Special Price Basement 2,000 of the New Fashion Waists At $1.98, $2.59, $3.45 and- $5.00 Offering Savings of at Least One-Third At $1.98 and $2.59 —Blouses of voile in plain, seeded and-checked patterns—slip-over and hand-embroidered models and models with adorable frills, besides a variety — of lace-trimmed styles. At $3.45 —Twenty styles in newest short |p sleeve Georgette and Crepe de Chine {f blue. The Crepes in white ami flesh. ‘ara new neck treatment is represented, —tTen styles in high-class Georgette Blouses, both short and long sleeves. Lace trimmed, embroidered, beaded and tucked, in fact with all the up-to-date touches of the blouses regularly sellimg at $7.50 to $9.50. In the seasonable shades, in- cluding navy and black. $15.00 For a Coat Polo Cloth —Never such values in coats this sea- son. In a generous assortment of the desired shades, some semi-lined, and some unlined. —Swageger models, too, with trim little belts and pockets of latest design. —Alil sizes for women, misses and girls, 12 to 46. —150 of these coats on sale Saturday at $15.00. ‘ Velours Jersey Tweed Flowered | Sateen Petticoats | $2.19 —860 of them, on sale Saturday at this low price. Well-made Petticoats of sum- mer-weight sateen, in dark grounds with fancy floral designs, in blue, green, lav- ender and rose. ‘All have elastic waist- bands and deep knife-plaited flounces. | 75TrimmedHats Specially Priced for e Saturday $2.95 —These hats will be found in an attractive variety’ of styles, colors and trimmings. BANKERS OPEN. Children’s Hats One Special Lot at $1.45 Each a y ‘check from the Queen ‘Anne Dye | check ‘and has little hopes of getting | works, he mailed jt to bis prospeo | the Portland job, | tivo Portland employer, just to prove NEW | YORK, June 11—George — be 60 a week. | Colbert, a shipyard worker at Mare hed the pros. , Cal. is one of the heins of ok 1 It was stolen from the| the $7,000,000 estate left by his fath- |mails and cashed in a local store, ac the late Captain Charles Colbert, — cording to Detective R. R. Herbert., who was an official of the Lucken- Now De Corvert ix minus the _bach Steamship corhpany. i Two-Day Confab “Will Be| Held Here lz | Makes markelis e€aste,- i take ‘Aome weeks supply cf i “With many vis itord™ in attendance | opened a two days’ \sion this morning in the Seattle House association quarters a building. aring ayor Caldwell welcomed the yis-| ) \itorw, Adéresses by J. 'T, McVay - Carnation president © Clearing Hou as ry » sociation nor Hart, H. H WF Ja Walla; W. J. Hind-| fe) A and a representative | pe wos. Be sure you get Cornation § turns Detective agency, were | cheduled for today Visiting 1a were to be enter | ' ony neet club this after . ‘The evening program includ- to Des Moines, follow. jancing and vaudevill LORY Pa TIT XXYY Carnation % | |His Proof Stolen Out of U. S. Mails When Honry De Corvert tried to |get a job in Portland, he was not |offered enough money getting $60 a week and I ean it,” he told his prospective em- pro ployer. De Corvert drac

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