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FRIDAY, APRIL 7, 1922. Mutt everett interaaneenenvvevnaeannnnan: @ 315 Pine Street |New Goats and Featured for Saturday At Very MEARE ee Fs, emphasizing the lon trimmed with SPORT COATS IN TAN, GRAY, BROWN AND suapes.. $16.75 10 $24.75 $39.7 ] HI ‘ TODAY AT 4:00 TONIGHT AT 7:45 AND 9:45 LAST TIMES OF EVA TANGUAY Coats and Wraps Special Prices All the season’s newest and most individual styles in Coats, Capes and Wraps are depicted in this splendid offering, Wraps Bell or Cape sleeve, embroideries or deli- sm: cate stitching. The range of materials is wide and includes Normandy, Velton, Panvelaine, Arabella, Orlando, Veldyne. The colorings embrace the latest shades— Sorento, Fawns, Pyramid, Navy and Black. Tailored Suit Special Cut on long lines with all the deft touches in finish and bound buttonhole, the PH J HALOTKENATFOTAERNOPAOEAOEUAEEESEAOUEESGHEOOEUAEOOUEAUOLEUO SUEUR LOSE = OF Benjamin J. Hecht, ssiwhat I drew this time in “Greenses =| with « whimnical strain ef philosophy S|reader’s lips.” Perhaps the best com- HUES | dishes were stil! in the sink. , TOMORROW (SAT.) AND ALL WEEK VIOLA DANA —IN— PERSON BEST PICTURE — AND — HEADED BY AN ALL-GIRL “MELODY FESTIVAL” Other Good Acts No Advance in Prices! AND IN HER LATEST AND HOUSES” VAUDEVILLE ' By Homer Brew = over the pink edition which threat ‘The day had been disgustingty nor = ' moat =idies, So, With a chastened spirit, Being the Chronicle of the End of a Dull Day for Our Little Group of Serious Thinkers THE LOG “The Outeast” by Selma Lagerlof, Doubleday, Page & Co., FINAL WIND-UP OF THE STUPENDOUS RED FRONT BOYS’ SHOES— Come here and get Boys’ Shoes, vas Glovon at values to $6,00-— FIRE BALE AT FIRK SALE PRICE— PRICK— 3c $1.87 MEN'S UNIO! WORK SHIRTS ALLS — Men’ —We have @ large lot of Can- Garden City, N. Y., $1.90 net. “Chanting Wheels” by Hubbard Hutchinson, G. P. Put- nam's Sons, New York and London. “The Mystery Girl" by Carolyn Wells, Lippincott, Phila- delphia, $1.50 net. “Green Sea Island” by Victor Bridges, G. P. Putman’s Sons, New York and London. “Cytherea” by Joseph Hergesheimer, Alfred A. Knopf, New York, $2.50 net. & popular here with the men, When the Little Group of Serious | necnac cnt, pple baggage ogosar drew thelr chairs around | criticiam I have to offer of the book ng radiator and clevated| “s5ven i¢ it's not entirely convine their No, 9s to the hurricane deck ling, it's an amusing story, well told, of the windowsill, there was a light land altogether worth an evening of pause, one’s time.” | Nobody was vastly excited over| HOME BREW PULLS any new book by Joe Hergesheimer |q DOCTOR LOOPE . “And that’s more than most of the modern novels do,” put in Homer. “Whenever I want to spend & down- right miserable evening, I buy ‘realistic’ novel and learn what « rotten world we live in.” Cries of “Pollyanna” end “Bun- shine Smiles” greeted this criticiam, and Homer relapsed into a consider. ation of a pretty girl walking down Beventh ave. Hal bad drawn hin usual detective Mory. For 20 yearns he has been searching for & good detective story and has been consistently disappotnt- ed. This time he had read “The Mystery Girl.” “Thia in the best book that the author has written—according to the publishers,” Hal commented ocridly. “It is @ myntery tale, A college pro fessor in found dead in bis study, with « degrer wound In hie neck, and all the windows +and doors locked from the inside, No weapon in found. There are two mysteries. One is how the professor met hin death. The other is the mystery of the Mystery Girl. The reader solves the identity of the girl when half thru. the beok, and the reat doesn't seem to matter much.” MYSTERY NOVEL JUST A DAY'S WORK FOR HER Chal yawned. “Carciyn Welle doesnt conaider that she bas done a fair day's work unless she has written at least ove myntery novel,” he declared. “Congress ought to pass @ law agninat her.” observed George. “Next!” ordered Homer, whe was trying to get away carty. “Whaddidyoureadthen? snapped Hat “Wel,” stammered Homer, “ot courne you fellows knew how busy I 4m; bow I curry most of the burden of the office on my shoulders? But T began and almost read three chap ters of ‘Cytherea,’ by Joseph Herges- Beveral of the cognoscent! present were thinking about campaign lush funds; others were «till worrying ened to come up from the press room without a single murder, divorce, shooting or gigantic catastrophe on jthe front page. “What's (he big story? somebody asked Hank, who plays nursemaid to the Final. “I don't exactly remember,” he jconfided sorrowly, “but I think the |headline was ‘Man Almost Stabbed.’ ” ‘The boys shook their heads gym pathetically. But even undertakers have their quiet days when nobody they took up the business in hand without further comment, CHAL ORATES ON Gyo amasapaan ISLAND” “Booms like there are a lot of books uthors on the market bewan Chal “That's Hisland,’ by Vietor Bridges, It is a mmoothly written, easily read novel, he plot woven about the adventures of John Dryden, young ex-naval of ficer, and in connection with his in-| |heritance of an island, Greensea, by | the death of a scalawag uncle, “The scene is laid for the most }part in rural England, with o¢casion- al skips to London, but the excite | ment and adventure is furnished mainly from a background of South American’ revolution. “From out of this background ap . the girl, and the that keeps a emile hovering on the mentary I can make on the book is the fact that the Mra started ip reading it the other morning and when she finished the breakfast unique genius, wil not fall } to give great satisfaction to the thou- |eands of his admirers who for #0 jn tong have eagerly been awaiting a my | B&W book by him,” GEORGE EXERCISES A LITTLE DISCRETION “Well commented George, that case, I'll be careful that |wife doesn’t get her hands on the| Bob spied the red cover that Ho lvolume, 1 don't want to wash the | ™er was holding under the desk. dishes when I get home at night." | HOMER 18 DENOUNCED Bob waved a volume in the air BY ANGRY MOB and demanded to be heard. ‘The| “Tie's reading from the publisher's |book was “Chanting Wheels,” by | advertisement,” be shouted jndig Hutehinason, | nantly. said Bob, “i = novel! Cries of “Put him outf’ “Lynch which is decidedty different whatever | him!" “Take away his Fatimaat else may be said of it, It tells of| greeted Homer's attempt to slip the adventures of @ romantic, rather | something over on the intelligenzia, eccentric young musician, who goes| Ho relapsed sullenty. to work in his uncle's steel mills—| George was the last person on the partly #o that he can earn @ living;| list and the only one with anything partly in an effort to set the song of | particular to @ay. (Bditor'’s Note: the ‘chanting wheels’ to muri George is Homer's bons) “The author rather taxes one's! “There's typical Tbeenesque heavi. credulity by making the hero fit into| ness and power,” he shifted his pipe his new surroundings with hardly an|from one corner of the mouth to the effort Personall: am inclined to| other to remark, “in "The Outcast," doubt if a romantic young musician | by Selma Lagerlof, would find the steel milla as much| “I say ‘Ibsenesque’ because the |to his taste ag did Dante Rossettin | tale is out of Northwest Europe and | Rateigh—n: I at all sure that |is strongly saturated with the stolid |he would have been able to become! fearlessness that characterizes the WARNING! Say “Bayer’ when you buy Aspirin, Unless you see the name “Bayer” on tablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Headache Colds Rheumatism Toothache Neuralgia Neuritis ; Earache Lumbago Pain, Pain * Accept only “Bayer’’ package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablets—Alao bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Aspirin ie the trade mark of Bayer Manatecture ef Maoacnticnci¢ester of Salicylicacté THE CORNISH SCHOOL Drama Music Danee Roy Street at Harvard Telephone Capitol 0240 Piano, Voice, Violin, Violoncello, Harp, Dancing, French, Spanish, Expression Moderate Tultions—Faculty of 50 Eminent Members : large banch of Unionalls in blue Work Shirts, or khaki — for- marked to $1.50, merly to $3.00—~ which go AP AT FIRE SALE FIRE SALE PRICK — PRICE— 69c 28c MEN'S SUITS OVERCOATS Men's Overcoat s—former —AT, FIRE SALE PRICE $9.85 Sonera SALE PRICE MEN'S SOX $7.85 MEN'S HATS 250~AT FIRE SALE PRICE Men's very good Hate—val- THE END IS HERE The insurance companies paid their loss in full—we got the money—you take away the goods. Everything goes, of cost. Now is your chance to save money at this Genuine Fire Sale. Join the crowds *_WINDUP PRICES SATURDAY! BOYS’ SUITS MEN’S PANTS Over 200 Boys’ Suits values Special lot of Men's Pante—to to $1200—-AT FIKK SALE $6.00—AT FIRE SALE PRICE $3.85] 98c WORK SHOES SHOES Men's = High-Gi Dress Men's Heavy Work Shoes— rade values to $6.00—go AT Shoes—values to $10.00—AT FIRE SALE PRICE ues to $5.00—AT FIRE SALE 7 PRICE 1.98 COME TO THE WIND-UP OF THIS GREAT FIRE SALE Sale Starts Tomorrow at 9 a.m. Red Front Clothing Co. 1601-1603 FIRST AVENUE, CORNER PINE STREET, SULPHUR SOOTHES The First Application Makes Skip Cool and Comfortable RUBBER PACS They sold at $1.50, but now | s0—AT FIRE SALE PRICE | Sic | | Ulerature of the Scandinavians when horror enters into the details of « story. WAR ARRAIGNED BY NOVEL “Briefly the novel ts an arraign- ment of war. In it a young man, once honored, is pictured as despised | and unloved because he is supposed | to have eaten the flesh of one of | his comrades who committed suicide | when crazed from starvation on al! Tigorous Arctic expedition. | “But the war comes and dead| bodies are washed upon the shore with eyes plucked by gulls and the | If you are suffering from or some other torturing, emb ing skin trouble you may q rid of it by using Menth declares a noted skin specialist. This sulphur preparation, of its germ destroying prop seldom fails to quickly subdue ing, even of fiery eczema. The application makes the skin cool comfortable. Rash and blotches an healed right up, Mentho-Sulphur is applied like any pleasant cold creas and is perfectly harmless. You obtain a smal] jar from any drugeist—Advertisement. : magnitude of war's inhumanity so far overshadows in the minds of the people anything that ‘the outcast’ | may have done that he, « prodigious | worker for respectable burial for the | soldier dead, ie forgiven or rather the charge against him is forgotten. | “To be nure, there Is a love affair | In the book, but it deals more with beauty than with passion and it has no “happy ending.’ | “The novel has power and does credit to its well-known author.” “But,” remarked Red, “why «peak | of war? It's an old theme now.” | “Were you ever married?” chirped | Homer, who ts always reminding people of disagreeable things, and | the meeting broke up with everyone feeling greatly depressed. | Stops Itching Instantly! ECZEMINE ‘The wonderful discovery for and skin diseases, At all ¢ruggistay $1.00, or sent, p. D., by Joyner Drug Co., Spokane —Advertisement, LADIES! DARKEN YOUR GRAY HA Look years younger! Use Grand mother’s recipe of Sage Tea and Sulphur and nobody will know |Dancer Shot by Her | Husband, a Suicide BLOOMINGTON, Ill, April Mrs. Charles Strain, better known as Marie Lioyd, a society solo dan-| jeer of more than local repute, was! |shot by her husband, who then killed himself. The shooting occurred at home of the young woman's par- jents, Mrs, Strain was married to Charles Strain in Chicago a year ago, the wedding following an elopement. She Hunger-strikes Her Way to Freedom the The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its nate ural color dates back to grandme ther’s time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked ap x pearance, this simple mixture was ‘ applied with wonderful effect. a At the afternoon card party or in the FREMONT, Neb., April 7—The! But brewing at home fs mussy and 10.day hunger strike of Mrs. Loret- | : A outof-date, Nowadays, by asking at ta Schriner is ended and she has evening when good friends call, there any drug store for a bottle of been released ‘from the county Jail : i ; ot “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com Mrs. Schiteer, a wealthy women,| is nothing qute so sure to please—as pound,” you will get this famous old had not touched food since sen- Coffee. It is a beverage that every, preparation, improved by the addi- tenced by Judge Wintersteen for . 4 tion of other ingredients, which cam be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair, : A well-known downtown druggist For there is warmth and good cheer | saya it darkens the hair’ Qnnieeinee ip i {and evenly that nobody can tell it os ba as good fellowship in a cup of has been applied. You simply damp orree. en a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, 7 .f " takin, ne st id t a time, By Moreover, it may be served with equal cierntag tie, rag: Hate? SUAGR EE propriety with the lowliest sandwich or the daintiest sweets. And itis always in good taste} one likes. refusing to send her twins to pub © schools CUTTING and after another application or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy.—-Advertisement. The phrase, “J-certainly-did- have-a-good-time,” has a familiar ring to the hostess who serves— ‘COFFEE ~ the universal drink ! | “ | Thig advertisement is part of an educational campaign com | vate tee wan. teak jae ra ducted by the leading Coffee m of the United States | OO Co tae tebe time? | in co-operation with the planters of the State of Sao Paulo, 1221-Thed A seth mis ges a Brasil, which produces more than halt of all the Coffee used 22 Vind \ cnly worked. hare four, wiontis, da the United States of America—Joint Cofee Trade Pubs CAR UNI "4 Lictty Comaustee. 14 Wail Street. Mew Yark.