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FRIDAY, MAY 20, 1921. Maurice Browne coe and Ellen Van Volkenburg offer Two Free Scholarships Mach worth $500.00. One for a Man and one for a woman, in the SCHOOL OF THE THE ATRE, Jyne 1 to November 1, arn SHOLARSHIPS ed by Adolph Bolm The Celebrated Dancer One for a man and one for @ Woman, Each worth Fi60.00 E. Robert Schmitz Pianist oy Scholarship worth $120 00. Fa man or for a Woman "Berges Klibansky, Voice One Scholarship worth $120.00. For a man or for a woman. OTHER FRE Fer Application Blanks, address THE CORNISH SCHOOL Drama Pine Street at Broadway Music Dance ‘Telephone Mast 579 | Watch Our Windows Each Week For Bargains This Week We Are Offering Ladies’ Pure Thread Silk Hose; Black, brown, white and polo; wont a ....., 91.25 2 Pairs $1.25 5 1 u05l DAN ERY--UINDE Ladies’ Phoenix Silk Hose; bl + mag Pe and $1 6.45 vais $ 3°95 win tairwind $1135 Children's Khaki Play Sults; special at... 75c E’ Wear FOR MEN WOMEN AND CHILDREN 105 PIKE REET OTICE OF PUBLIC SALE of Both Red Front Stores by the Merchants’ Board of Trade, Inc. The Merchants’ Board of Trade, Inc., has taken charge of the Red Front Stores in order to readjust the business affairs of this well-known concern. In order to raise the necessary cash they will offer, beginning tomorrow, Sat- urday, the entire stocks of both RED FRONT Stores on public sale. Following are a few sample prices, showing how this | | stock will be sacrificed: Arrow Collars cut to 3c. Men’s Dress Shirts to 85c. Men's heavy union made ov alls have been cut to %5ce. Men's i socks to Se. Boys’ wool mained suits cut from $10.00 to $425. Men's white handkerchiefs : at 4c. Over 200 men's wool formerty to $30.00, cut to Men's all-wool Hart, Schaft $40.00 to $9.85. Children’s ed suits from $1.25 to 69¢. Men's wy work pants, formerly $5.00, to $1.98. Children's scuffer shoes cut to $1.85. Men's Stetson dress shoes cut from $10.00 to $398. And men's scout shoes have been cut to $1.98. All women's white canvas shoes and children’s shoes go at one-half price. Men's Koveralia, in khaki er blue, cut to $1.98 Men's Finest Dress Suits formerly to $60, eut to $16.45, and Men's Heavg Khaki Pants cut to $1.49. ~ This sale starts promptly Saturday morning at 9 o'clock. you want to save money come, and bring this ad with Hundreds of other bargains are on display in both . Public sale conducted by the Merchants’ Board of Trade, Inc. at both Red Front Stores. Main Store—1601-3 First Avenue—Corner Pine St. Red Front Annex—1415-17 First Avenue Between Union and Pike Streets 5 | Fish Believe ’Em or Not. Many Sound “Fishy.” Mayor Gets Trout. (From the Reservoir.) RY AILEEN CLAIRE Réward 8. Franklin, industrial tn surance shark, leaned in his chair and gazed out over the Sound. “Relieve it or not-—," he began “L won't.” I hastened to assure him. “t don't know whether I have broken the fish or bird laws,” he continued “Tt waa this way: I waa fishing off a jong pier on Bainbridge island The water was very deep, and my sinker was down about 60 feet. I was fishing for basa “Suddenly I felt a terrific bit. 1 THE SEA Quits Society; W TTLE*STAR ill Study Ants| Says They Show Women Can Rule Jorked my line and felt an wena Jerk. I had hooked him! “The way that fish acted was! queer, It seemed to flutter around with the hook in the most undecid ed, erratic way. Finally, after I had hauled it to the surface, I discov. ered that I had hooked a ‘wud hen'— | & species of gurbage duck “The hen had been diving after fish, and had been attracted to ba |minnow on my line Franklin leaned still farther back | in his chatr, “Of course, It te rare that a bird dives as deep as 60 feet,” tuded. “It ia,* I assured him eee he con-| Mayor Hugh M. Caldwell was the! recipient of @ nice mens of mountain trout. They were sent to him by L. 1. Youngs, supeintendent of water Youngs is quite a fisherman,” the mayor told visitors to his office, as he exhibited the fish to them. “He |knows every trout stream in the Cascade mountains.” The following day Mayor Caldwell ran across Youngs in the county-city building. “Where aid you catch those won derful trout?” he asked him. At the Beacon Hill reservotr,” Youngs replied. “We were cleaning Mrs. Philip Werlein, New Orleans society and suffrage the tank, and when it was empty we| leader, who is going to the Orient to study the gynarchy form gathered up the trout that were high and dry, left “You me, a few of the little fellows stip down the pipes from Cedar |river,” he added. } eee . Fish were biting rapidty tn Union Bay, Lake Washington—so rapidly that Howard Ewing, rug merchant tm the Crary building, lost overboard| my one of the two poles he had rigged. A buge ‘rout had swallowed bait }and hook and made off with leader, jline, reel and pole while Ewing was hauling in another prize on the other side of the boat, “But that did not worry me,” said unperturbed Walton. “Next i went back again, caught trout and recovered my other rod and tackle.” eee B. J. Reese, stenographer tn the office of the special agent of the |treasury department, is @ bright young man. “Speaking of cotncidences,” aid he, “listen to this fish story.” Nobody had mentioned coind- | dences, but I let that pass. “There once was a girl who became lengaged to a sailor of the sea,” said Reese. “He gave her a nice diamond ring, but before they could be mar- || ried he had to sail away on @ trip ||around the world. “The maiden languished and be came very thin, longing for her lover. She grew so emaciated that she was j of government of ante. | SEW ORLEANS, May 20—Mre going to China and) ar future to study ants, That's because she is interest ed in a gynarchy. A gynarchy is « government ruled by a woman. “These Insecta enjoy the highest form of civilization,” says Mra. Wer. brothers In Paria, eaten luncheon tn & submarine on the bottom of the sea, in a leader of New Orleans so- jelety and the mother of four, * She is a practical chemist. wrote a hook on the Vieux Carre.” the pict She “Iron Railings of The Vieux Carre in ue French quarter of ein. “Their government is purely New Orie: altruletic. They work for elch other | and the good of the state as «|And so it may not be surprising to whe Their government is a cyn-| "ee her at some future political com bar cama |¥ention advocat a gynarchy for Mra. Werletn te Youtsina chair | the United State og lines defined man of the League of Women Voters. | ber ant studies, [She has been identified with every | movement for the betterment of chib | dren and women in the South in re cont yearn | She has hunted tige@ tn India, shot big came in Africa, ballooned | all over Europe, broken wild stal lions In the steppes of Russia, Nown in the first plane of the Wright ORR ene tremendous catch. When I pulled hook in, It waa imbedded In a Bottle of fine Bootch. After fishing there for several hours more, I took the bottle homa I decided to pre serve the bottle, but didn’t want the label on it “ filled a tud full of hot water, | put the bottle In, washed the label) off and took the bottle out again. It was empty. The cork had come | out.” HAD LOST HEART, STATES LITTLE SEATTLE WOMAN Mrs. Gillem Was Ready to Give Up; Gains 14 Pounds Taking Tanlac “There te nothing toe good for! _ me to may about Taniac for it! broveht me bealth and strength $50,000, 000 we Tokyo Skyscrapers. NEW YORK, May 20.—Japanese determined to make Tokyo the New York city of the Far East. As & starter the George A. Fuller Con- struction company ef New York ts to build in the heart of the city three iS-story skyscraper — an cedented height for Japan. They will cont $50,000,000, iishing Banned in Berlin City Offices BERLIN, May 20—The Stinnes campaign to stop the use of tobacco hag scored its first remarkable suc- coma, Berlin's lord mayor has forbid. den smoking in the municipal offices, where everybody has been allowed to indulge in the weed. $3,835 Is Paid to Fell Just 2 Trees SYDNEY, May 20.—It took 20 men 17 days, working eight hours a day, to fell two trees. Two motor cars were hired to take the men to, work. The total cost for the work was $2. 588. Mra. Werlein ts a woman of action. | unpre | - PAGE B For Spring, Summer or Fall Wear Wraps of Eastern Origin IN MANY MATERIALS REPRICED Between $39.50 and $99.50 We have been complimented for their appro- priate styles and fine materials 60 often and so sincerely that we urge promptness in taking advantage of this offering. These wraps are too good to remain long unsold—and too good for you to miss. Shop tomorrow. NEW BLOUSES Up to Size 52 Perhaps you did not know that our new Georgette and .Crepe de Chine blouses in- clude the sizes up to 52, in very becoming models. We make a specialty of the larger sizes in all departments. Between $12.50 and $22.50 ‘A Specialty Shop of Feminine Apparel ing Two Entrances 138382 SECOND 209 UNION Cash or Charge Extended Payments If Desired WE ARE CLOSING OUT OUR PHONOGRAPH DEPARTMENT Come in and see for yourself the newly reduced prices on all mi S. in the war. The book is composed entirely of letters written from the jfront, Published in chronological or Play lf Ma der and reciting episodes of the big LONDON, May 20—Jease Jacob |ittice Tt concludes with, two let son, BR Hedges and F. T. Hedges. tory written by young a actors, finished a golfing walking who were killed the day the armis- tour from Birmingham .to Hull, @ |tice was signed. distance of 152 miles. It took them | 6 days and 7% hours to play the match. Jacobson won, having 67 strokes less than his opponents. This Is a Book of Dead Men’s Tales} PARIS, May 20.—The strangest | war book yet published is about to) make its appearance in France. It was written by scores of men, not one of whom ts now alive The idea was conceived by the Union of | French Fathers and Mothers, an or- | j waniagtion of parents who en ons Walk 152 Miles to = gg ye aga ro Dodd, Kent, who for 28 years has champion rhubarb grower in the trict, has this year again carried the prize. His rhubarb was dinarily large, the sticks 57 inches in length, against 49 es last year. Our Featured Styles | | | positively skinny. So skinny, in fact, | that one day while she stood on the shore waving in hope that her sweet heart might see her from the crow's after I had almost given up hope,” aid Mrs, Janet Gillem, $748 Evan- ton ave, Seattle, Wash. “Vor several years I suffered terribly from stomach and inte | | nest, the ring dropped off her Mager } and was lost in the sea, Bring out the “High Lights” in your hair! yD 4 : “y There“is-an elusive blue light hiding) amidst your dark tresses, Rich Brunette,} or perchance an alluring tint of bronze. And, Dainty Blonde, there are golden’ glints unawakened that will make yours a true crowning glory, once they are aroused. And, why don’t you, Stately Titian Girl, emphasize the dancing lights that. make your hair so fascinating? All of you should let” ED. PINAUD’S HAIR TONIC bring out the “High Lights” in your hair. Ask your dealer today for an 8 OZ. bottle PARFUMERIE ED. PINAUD American Import Offices ED. PINAUD Bldg. New York “One day the sailor returned. The maiden revived and they were mar. ried. After that the sailor settled down to the life of a fisherman. “One day while the wife was eat- | ing a fish her husband had caught | her teeth struck something hard. it was—" “The diamond ring™ I exclaimed. “A fish bone,” said Reese, oe. Judge John B. Gordon ts the king: || pin fisher-magistrate of the county. So zealous a fisherman is the judge that when a man was tried in police court for fishing In Cedar river wa tershed, the court asked him if he didn't know any other fishing places, The defendant answered in the affir- mative, an dthe judge at once de manded “Where? The prisoner took a nentence rath- er than disclove that precious secret. eee Detective Earl G. Anderson was still telling today about his great fishing exploit, He said he enught the fry in a creek near Enumclaw, “And the fish were so thoroly mat: 4 urated with aleohol from the water of the stream, which passes close to Bnumelaw, that When we ate them we got a regular Johnny Walker "Kick’,” he reported. Motorcycle Patrolman George F. Reynolds is a great fisherman—by his own adminsion, “I get round- shouldered during the fishing season from carrying the fish home,” he admits, “Once 1 was fishing and made a tinal troubla My appetite was variable—one day good and the next day I might not be able to eat! anything. Whatever I ate lay like a lump of lead in my stomach.| At times I had awful attacks of pal- | |pitation of the heart, due I was/ told to an excess of gas in my stomach. “1 lived on @ rigid diet, not eat- ing meats or vegetables except at} rare intervais and then I paid for it by suffering afterwards. I was nervous and miserable, getting little sleep and just dragging myself | around during the day. My back ached nearly all the time. “Taniac soon had me feeling like a different person. I have a} splendid appetite now, perfect di-| | eestion, and have regained all my) lost weight. I now weigh exactly | fourteen pounds more than I did |when I started on Tanlac. My nerves are calm now. I sleep like a child at night and wake up in the morning as happy as can be. I never dreamed I would ever again | be as well and strong as Tam) now. I'll sound the praises of Tan- lac the longest day I live.’ ‘Tanlac is sold in Seattle by the) Bartell Drug Stores and leading | y urday’s Star WE BOTH WIN I am now devoting my entire time my dental _ pr |Having now the people her |twenty years, je good by. doin, at work that nies and making my e good. I do not gompete with Che Dentists, nor do I operate on yo Oe metyook or ~ Fon give two. dol ental work for every dollar I save a dollar, I 4 r interests a ‘Ou conversa. | lara’ worth bet! m pen evenings till 7 and Sunda: tu'32'30 “for people who work, KDWIN J. BROWN, D. D. & | Bealtie’n Leading Dentiat 206 Columbia Bu st — MEN: VISION Why does one business enterprise grow and develop with a rapidity that astonishes the busi- ness world while another, equally favored in all visible aspects, falters, hesitates and finally sits by the roadside and watches its competitors go by? The answer—MEN and VISION! For seventeen years the men of the Puyallup Valley have wrought and toiled to make a vision a reality. They have built up a great industry that last year brought into the state a good five million dollars for finished products-—jams, jel- lies, preserves and canned fruits. Year after year have they paid dividends, while building and operating great plants. Now the industry has grown beyond them. They need co-operation from the cities which benefit by their enterprise. You can become a partner in their success. The Oregon-Washington Can- ning & Preserving Company offers you the way. These banks and financial houses will accept your stock subscriptions ($100 per share 8% preferred; $10 per share common): Seattle National Bank National City Bank John E. Price & Co. Metropolitan National Bank The National Bank of California, N. A. Oregon-Washington Canning & Preserving Co. Organization Commitice for King County HH. C, HENRY J. W. SPANGLER 531 Henry Building Elliott 4148 REGINALD H. PARSONS GORDON C. CORBALEY SEATTLE of the Town Only through effi- ciency of chain-store buying could we offer such values as these. WE ILLUSTRATE: A Military Heel Tan Walking Pump with in- nat’. $4.95 Per pair... A Tan*Brogue Oxford with military heel — at Pair... D499 A Patent Pump with instep and anklet straps. Full ae us $4. 95 heel.