The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 22, 1923, Page 7

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ees TUESDAY, MAY SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET Special Price Basement Such values as the following are con- tinually being offered as proof of NEWEST STYLESNAT LOWEST PRICES ! In this Bargain Center New Street and Afternoon Dresses $24.50 Canton Crepe, Taffeta, Veivey, Georgette, Printed Crepe. Whether for general wear or very special wear, here are charming new Dresses fashioned in the popular straightline, basque effects, drape and panel effects. They are smartly trimmed with laces, braid and beads. Colors include navy, cocoa, gray, brown and black. Sizes 18 to 48. Middy Blouses $1.25 and $1.49 Splendid selection, in regulation and co-ed styles—made of high grade middy cloth, white with tape trim- med collars and embroidered emblem sleeve. Sizes 16 to 44. New Sports Coats $19.75 | Jaunty new Topcoats with raglan sleeves have just arrived. Smartly tailored and full lined. Considering the many occasions when such coats may be worn, there is definite economy in purchasing when they are obtainable at so low a price. Sizes for women and misses. “Nifty” Sweaters in Two Groups At $1.9 and colors. At $3 4 Mohair, high-grade worsted and j = fibre and mohair combinations in navy, copen, gold, brown, jade, orange, gray, orchid i i any others. Many styles to choose from. Sizes to 44. | Mohair, worsted and combinations in a wide assortment of styles LADIES’ MUSICAL CLUB PRESENTS FEODOR CHALIAPIN WORLD-FAMOUS RUSSIAN BASSO The Foremost Figure in the Musical World At the Moore Theatre, Friday Evening, May 25 PRICES: $3.00, $2.50, 82.00 SEATS SELLING NOW : C Choose from Such Artists and Organizations as These low prices, recordings. spectacular price, Paul Specht and His Orchestra The Georgians The Happy Six The Columbians Al Jolson Nora Bayes Toscha Seidel Louis Graveure - Margaret Romaine Eddy Brown Josef Hoffman Perey Grainger No Refunds No Exchanges Open No Demonstrations |climbed fn thru there. fand, hat and coat still or, sat down Very Special! Select List of ! Columbia Records (10-Inch Records!) For three days only—~Wednesday, Thursday and Friday—we are going to offer the immensely popular Columbia Records at these ridiculously Select your own favored numbers by the world’s greatest artists from their recent Every record, remember, at this 1923 Columbia Catalogue. WE GUARANTEE THESE RECORDS TO BE BRAND NEW. ALL LISTED IN 1923 CATALOGUE, | The Star’s Daily Short Story The Revolver, by Alden Brooks ANOTHER COMPLETE SHORT STORY TOMORROW yund the whole 195, Wh pent ru just counter explained its mechan: | ome in Reaching the # ism, stipped in a ca calml, After @ 4 ho brushed empty, and steppe walk again, he gay marble surface tion and smiled pleasantly revolving doc that even in this last t | some prete © must But once Hard), 6 minutes later a tall thin d into the h on the # . arma on the . and the slightly welghing down |! at his fingers, pinc and stepping to the counter, said in a 1 the trembling substance in : his that other conscious: | € a s farsh volce, “My name is am 8 3 . te | them, sudd sitting back, he rah v fy name te William ness back, not even a dollar | im, Rue Irawets and put his| Hikins. 1 apent the night in room j left now, 40 years of life tmoked mec open s sed) opt: oe On the train this morning I and beaten, step by step, down to § insed my pocketbook ning this futility, and yet if in the begin 000, I may have lost the pocket ning, or at any other time, he had | book or left it in the table drawer « only had a fair start, the way ao |my room. Have you heard anythin many others had, that slight litt of it out of the ruck, all might have The clerk stepped to one side a been different. But 1t was no une second and came back and thinking of that now ‘Nothing has been reported But t tt To c count them bureau, but I'll have them teleph walke ° pped up and entering the) UP and sec,” ‘ » & Co.) fronts ee saw a bellboy, tapped the And I'll go myself, I'll go my up, ha antly on bis palm, and] self. | e 4 ‘ DIRIGIBLE IS anything . over c went scootin label on F and forward ¢| him, then turned round the corridor structed for th |to look for a chambermaid or valet, | tapping a little wildly now on his , palm with the wallet, and hat on the IN 4 HOURS " half an |back of his head, overcoat open, At} i }last he saw a chambermald way | t{down there at the end of another| He wal briskly and in ept that had alway his asvets, asked for a room right Into the hotel 4 by Frank Fretwell, Boy Scout tbddees | Wh aaa cies never any ‘of these annoying “Yea” Prai erupt pear, dab them at night | %, © service Dar ie es.” Tt went with the manner.| Praise Canal Camp) with thet gente, healing Poojam| Te bie dirigtble will probably take oft from the Sand Point alr base and will start her flight as soon as the tests have proven her ready for the trip. Admiral Moffett, of the navy air service, Is expected to arrive within a short time to pass judgment umber High praise was given Camp Par-| ointment. It t# 80 concentrated that While he signed the name he had) sony, where Seattle's Boy Scouts|by the next morning the pimples chosen as a, pscudoynm, a second|trotic in the open, by L. 1. McDon-| have sometimes gone. If they aren't clerk whispered into the ear of the| aig, nead of the department of camp- | all gono then touch them again with first, “Isn't the 135 occupt ing of the national order, and L. W.|a bit of Poslam, This does the trick “No, no; he left this me Barclay, director of the national | At all druggists 50c A 1 out of t wa: | educational department. — ~Advertinement.| on the Sand Point base and, accord- tor a 1 tho bell boy down| Ay guests of President Henry| ing to Underwood, has already pra | the his heart beat alguesaic of the University of Wash tically mado up his mind that se attle is the logical point for North | little » tho deep within hin west air service headquarters jand he was very calm. He jalways expected just much a |He had always said to himee jacute occasions, even in a sort Joptimistic way, ‘ington the two conferred on the| 1/scout masters’ training course to be NC./hold at the university this summer h| The two scout leaders also conferred ofjwith Supt. of cols Thomas It. “At the worst I/Cole and attended a dinner at the n always buy a revolver and put/ faculty club of tho university Mon-} bullet into myself." And he was|day evening . lly very glad sd a mess was WHAT BIG BROTHER KNEW He—There are an awful lot of gi who don’t want to get. married. She—How do you know? “IT have asked them!" Council Votes to Continue Service d him the Deeg ote. ce amd nfarrets oped jatreet railway heads when the ques- | b>: ht aia 19 | ton of abandoning the Youngstown, the door’ and, locked it. Then he/ ray st. shuttle lines came up Mon jeame back and unlocked it again.| 407 "5 "T"plaine voted to discon |Why force them to break open|{*% © 1. 3 she St Wealare re on scticoey |tinue the service, saying he believed ie pte mi La gas ym |the department heads should be per- Rendle a nd They could bave(imitted to operate the street car Seeneme, Tene: LOey, bg ode ines. Supt. George F. Russell of RAPS ithe utilities department and D. W. that fs why they put transoms initienderson of the strect railways |hotel rooms. He had never thought! irceq the discontinuance of the |the room and, elbows upon its |of that before. paren | | | jamooth glass’ top, loaded the revol-| From tho window there was a ivast windy view over the city, He |stood there several minutes looking jout, not troubling to push the lace lcurtains aside. Then he turned] }ver, put in all four cartridges in|] 4 } H | case there should be a miss fire. | Lift Off with Fingers) Thru his thoughts ran a rather! | vague pleasant sensation. The giass |tép, of course. It would wash #0 jeasily. It seemed to be liks an | operating table. When he was at last quite ready jand held the revolver there in his right hand before him, a slight dizzi-| | ness troubled his eyes; the hand and) | revolver seemed to grow larger, de- tach themselves from him complete- ly, be something by itself, the con- | summation of all these circumstances Z ’ NATIONA ~ at the small table in the middle of Under Supervision of the State TRADES UNION SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION 1215 Fourth Ave Eliot 0696 Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, {n- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lft it right off with fingers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freezone” for a few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or trrita-|, tion. : Perf ect Comfort of the body can be en- jJoyed only when the or- Kans which sustain life are Working properly. ‘A teaspoonful of Jo- To powder {8 a haif- giass of hot water cleanses «tomach, liver and bowela and ‘ives’ you health-com- J0-T0 can be dependéd upon fo give quick relief from indigestion, gas pains and other stomach and bowel miseries, with no inconvenience. Oe, $1.00, 81.50 phe. Each or 3 for 85c IN SUBORDINATING individual plans and preferences, and marketing the apple crop of the great Wenatchee District under the “Eat Wenatchee Apples” plan, a big step forward has been made in the handling of a leading Pacific Northwest crop. : There have been a number of “starts” and “stops” toward sound co-operative marketing endeavor in the Pacific Northwest; but the time apparently is near when the “growing pains” will have been outgrown and soft fruit, berry, apple, melon, potato and various vege- table organizations as economically sound and smoothly operating as the raisin, orange, is to be found in the standard For Sale at un ALL DRUGGISTS Evenings Ria heseoRs c Hellingham, W “Grading” Up—Costs Down : the Pacific Northwest. ‘WHY WE SELL GOODYEAR TIRES if eis We could sell you so-called “long discount” tires at “bargain prices” if we liked. | We could offer you “special deals” or de | lusive “guarantees” on unknown brands | and make money at it, temporarily. it But we want to stay in the tire business a long time, and succeed in it; so we sell Goodyear Tires instead. Our profit is smaller on them but we know they satisfy our customers, and satisfied customers are what we are after. If we sell you a Goodyear Tire we follow that tire with service that will help you get from it all the mileage built into it at the factory. SoS ae . . . As a Goodyear Service Station Dealer we sell and recommend Goodyear Tires and back them up with standard Goodyear Service Cane Tire Company Metropolitan Garage Sth Ave. and Stewart erait x ersity Garage yn Ave. and E. 45th treet Tire Shop ¢ and Boren re Park Ave. Woodlawn Hardware Co. 7104 Woodlawn Ave, ze 603 Fifteenth Ave. N. Gatewood Garage 7113 California Ave. “Western Made or Western Tr Located on Second Avenue at Cherry Street prune and other associations which have worked out so well for the California grow- ers, may be seen here. In co-operative marketing under the plans and practices developed in California, “grad- ing” invariably goes up while distribution. costs go down. Crops valued at millions of dollars have been moved with a sales cost of three, and at times less than two per cent. The tastes of “the more than hundred mil- x lion people” who make up this country, when properly cultivated, afford a market suffi- ciently great to absorb the most bounteous productions of the valleys and high lands of

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