The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 2, 1920, Page 4

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THE SEATTLE STAR FRIDAY, JULY 2, 1978. WHITE SHOE SALE ae JP Wife Tells Strategy§ Time For THe “rourtH” WHITE 4 | mm en NEW YORK, July 1.—The strange | below the knot, then in the center, | ‘ D) After waiting for over two years A ‘ eecpieyeholudy. ok the WAtRUAL Ze-| oan vot At Bll We are not going Charles M. Perkins, supe: ae jn seph B, Kdwell, wealthy society! “His little toapee—made of the! to wait until after Of mails in Seattle, received his % gambler, was disctosed today by hin | finest this he would turn and 5 ment as assistant postmaster Pe ‘ Elwell }turn hin long, perfectty | the Fourth of July ednesday | ; r ind his smiling eyes, | manicu », and he would say ‘ Assistant Postmaster Perkins ts t : ‘ ? What was the|in an even drs | ‘ to slash prices. All "& man of wide ence in mail of his ¢ ¢ at card t “Women ar ‘ ‘ Fransportation. On ’ . ; p wat a White Low and | fo and with women? | their feat dag along ps Bo ‘ Biwel yee a DArtagnan|and the t r, the harder I. WHITE High Shoes from man, a nian) the 4 exciting Siatant postmaster nad ; | | with « great passion to live and tol things well, but w "y BUCK our enormous stock | appointed ender liove. He had the sbler’s cold fear | plished # thing, then I'm done | ’ . is, ana th ‘ stan : lor esa | - ? $4.95 are being sold with- | of death “Then he would carefully place! 2 TES thes time Postmaster Battie : GIRL, WHEN leo par is Bien, ake Gira ide WHITE DUCK out profit—nfany at had no assistant - ¢ MARRIED HIM actly straight upon the other. $4.45 a big loss. Not - " | / Mrs. Helen Ehwell was a mere girl ED THEM & 58. ot a “Powder Didn’t Go “ jwhen she married him years ago. | 4 LITTLE PAST | WHITE pair will be carried They had been separated for years i | | beto des "And he would say ‘I Hke them "ANVAG ae Off So He Inquired . [yen abe mid, turning er head | cold, talsa ewutifulbut. withal Ssos over to next season. |toward the window, “I loved bim, daring, racy, « little worldly—a little | ’ ' past 27, let Us say—with a memory - | too, when I married Dim—it was a) P y sia ‘ “4 : gi = ee | = thing—that marriage! jof & pasta woman who might per inne EYELET TIES see Why the blast didn’t ex-| - | haps a little worn with love, but r > CANVAG What did he love in me aot 2 His body is in an undertak- . : os. Ghammeane: hecoatt an at the devastation—and $3.95 WHITE £ ANV AS— Be establishment at Edmonds | |": eoaibility— 1 was hard to|Muching, that's it, laughing. They $2.95 Reid was clearing land near the Fees Gawu: ao they say jshould laugh alwayn, in the face-of WHITE KID Valley scho ¢ for the Pu “1 Uked him, he was tall and fine | *¥erything-—(hey should take things $3.95 Min Co. The cha xploded al pee : and handsome then, 1 did not know | ther with humor, or with hauteur.’ are under his feet re wasn'ta! After Grandma Breckinridge Castleman, of Louisville, KY.| that ne wore @ toupee—and be had Ife had no ebild quality in him, ANI a on his body, Physicians de-| arrived in San Francisco there was no chance that the demo-| manners and a way with him—oh, |X¢ePt perhaps bis mania for his own $6.95 he died from concussion of the notice national convention would be mismanaged. Of that| my dear.” she went on, a little catch | looks her ¥ Teware of those with| “He wan forever admiring him her granddaughter, Miss Mary Hone, of New York, was quite |'® ber them—bie soul wes a |eeif with his hand forever at the ip, | al Osteopath smilingly sure. Mrs. Castleman claims to be the oldest living |“ ™ ra |kissing goodby to those who had ° woman delegate to any party convention—without revealing | © 1 aid not know at the |Jet him see that he was @ great deal, 4 Named President her exact age—and is also a member of the executive com-| beginning what he thought of women | to them, ~ E Dr. W. E. Waiso, Seat ».| mittee of the national democratic committee. Here they are did not know that it was alo He mate acquaintances enstly , f E * been named pres! D he : te : | om tness that had attracted him./and while he could b ve@tional, t i f ‘ N can Osteopathi ciation, | Jing to convention hall. “WOMEN ARE FOOLS,” jhe cared nothing jonality h BUCK AND joberta W. Ford, also o ' : : Many of hi ends he met , NVAS 83. Dr. Robe oe." P.O. Employes Get |! n bil civil service wont, HIS LOVE DICTUM | ; CANVAS $3.95 Hits Gcteoparhic Wom n'a N a ee ee ee be | is IDEAL Ww AS THE fation, at conventions being Pay Boosted Bit fh dee . what he ald to SNAKE WOMAN, OR VAMPIRE [himself and to mo as he carufully | 5%! in Chicago With & new minimum of $1,400 and | —— dressed The which he certainly had SRE CAREFUL! Dont start o fire in| % Maximum of $1,800, Seattle mail . » tribes pull their fin-| “He would stand there, by that jwas the anake woman—perhaps you when you begin or end your carriers and cle@@s had thelr pay unt nts crack as a form | mirror tying one Ue after another would ¢ tthe vampire, I don't Be bare your match, cigaret or nahitatio trying many stick pine—first « little | Know that's the popular word now, | a. pry: boosted Thursday, when the reclaasi- P Pi eadcsassind . n't it WOMEN! INSIST ON “DIAMOND DYES” e- cared nothing for mm ate Don't streak or ruin your material in a poor dye. Buy only “Diamond Dyes.” < 0 | Directions in package guarantes perfect results. Druggist has Color Card. “ Sanrio caabie Cilmaee INSTEP " 2 ——__— be maid it was all about drink TIE IN WHITE T maid it was ese love—but he J c 5 You Will Like FREEZONE FOR CORNS = is SP 5 “He was a marvelous @gncer, but he cared nothing for music except to dance to. He had a pansion for red Any Corn Right Off. {It Doesn’t Hurt a Bit! decorations and for’ rugs, but he never really loved but one thing~ “He loved life as no man has loved life. 1, who have seen him dress for hours, know also that he was ndét a man who could have killed hiummelf it's too ridiculous. | “He haw xpent hours, numberiees hours, over some quacks theory of } . ve life. |ATE RAW PRUNES, TO LIVE TO BE 150 “There was one man who told bim - 4 . | oo ee Bs that if he ate tive raw prunes be-|"founcas that he has obtained infor Car Shortage May Brazil Vice Presider, ‘ | fore each mea! he would live to| mation that Joseph Bowne Elwell | | 4 . 3 § |e & hundred and fifty. He did it./nad been engaged in the purchase of/ Halt Grain Crops Dies at His Home a i | “And bad be killed Dimeelf.” he) jarge quantities of liquor for specu ‘ 5 ~il : - naid, “he would not. have done it{latee ‘purposes aborlly before hia| Unless the existing car shortage is} RIO DE JANEIRO, July 2 4 p without wig and without teeth. He death. | relieved shortly, local rafiroad traffic | Delephim Moreira, vice-president of t ty would have done ft In grand manner| Elwell, according to Shevith, was al men declare the Washington state| Brazil, died at his summer home ia. he would have died ‘beautifully member of a “whisky ring,” which | grain crops will be delayed in dis- | Santa Ritz, Brazil, yesterday, fob | with the rcent of flowers about him, | included several prominent business) tribution: ‘The annual influx bm @ long iliness. | Moretra was acting president of s and his body made magnificent for! men and sporting associates of the| empty cars for grain purposes has litm last repone—that the last woman slain turfman. His information, |not yet materialized. The cars are| the republic on several occasion® a ! Free-| Freezone for a few cents, sufficient |to see him—whoever she wae—could | Shevlin said, showed that this “ring” | tied up in the East, tt is @eclared, | uring the absence of Epitacio Pes zone on an om, ntly| to rid your feet of every hard corn,|have seen in him only that dandy| had made plans for a large profit | www | sa. He was nino the republic's that corn stop y 5 ortly |Roft corn, oF corn between the toes, that he made of himself for the|thru the sale of liquor in this city | dance as yet to support the theory | chief executive from December, 1918, ) you lift it right of with flogers— and painful foot calluses, without the | world.” |and at Saratoga during July and Au-| that these trarfsactions led to his) when the retiring president left of- Truly! least soreness or irritation, No hum-| James 8. Shevlin, supervising pro | cust. | murder,” enid Shevlin, “we are seek-| fice, until July, 1919, when Pessoa Your druggist nefe a tiny bottle of | bug! hibition enforcement agent, an-| “Aho we have obtained no evi-| ing such information.” {ans SUITS 10°26 Off. This is a positive fact. We have cut and slashed prices and the entire store is aflame with bargains. It’s to your interest to be here, as never again will there be such a bargain festival. Just gaze at a few of our wonderful bargains listed below and then you'll surely come here to DRESS UP FOR THE FOURTH The Enormous Wholesale Stock Is Offered to You at Less Than Wholesale Prices SALE STARTS SATURDAY, JULY 3,9 A.M. SUITS MEN’S SUITS § MEN’S SUITS § MEN’S SUITS OVER- Odd Lots—Values to $30— Hand Tallored—Values to Serges and Worsteds— Cut to $85.00-—Cat to Values to $50.00—Cug to atten cans $12.85 $38.85 $24.95 COATS MEN’S SUITS [| MEN’S SUITS 9 MEN’S SUITS ff tcinr simccnera. Finest Wootens—Values to Newest Styles—Valuey to Fine Materials—Values Qe. your Winter $70.00—Cut to $40.00—Cut to $60.00—Cug to Cent now, and cave $34.95 $19.85 $28.95 peter READ THIS BARGAIN SHOES! SHOES! BOYS’ SUITS | BARGAIN WILL NEVER AGAIN BE LIST Te fit you in the finest maken, either for work or dress, LIST 7 _ OFFERED TO You AT . W Prices, eavy Shoes cut to ; ‘ ‘ a Shoes, alm cut to... .9¢. by tt r SHOES Union Store ee No Johnson & Murphy, Nettleton, ur Slogan BOYS’ SUITS Queen Quality and other fine Bring that boy in here i in Men's and Boy's, La We Accept Pay Checks and we'll put a Suit on 1216-18 Third Ave. Phone Main 3139 dich and Gitte’ Rhoce thrown a6 Hl + terty Ronda Be Bead bin, save "you y = Between Unt ty and Sencca Sta ‘ « ‘ away smiling. Fi aa ciclo ea 49e cut to 81.68 85 Men’ nin cut to 82.08 $1.50 Hibbed Underwear cut to DRe Cape cut te.

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