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PAGES 9 TO 16 ———____——__— SECTION TWO The Seattle Star RATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, MAY 12, 192 | Recruits for the Fire Department | BODY IS FOUND Min and Brownie Add Three New Members te Roster of Our OFF PIER 1 : Flame-Fighting Force Down at Station No. 3 . , Man, Believed F. J. Winks, TT STORE MEN TO OPEN MEET Coast Retailers Convening for Annual Business OPEN PROGRAM TUESDAY Entertainment Features to e Banquet and Lunch Three Hits ey men 2 4 on Orpheum an mel Final Bill a “7 tay. Is Found in Sound . vian the F Plyme dan add E. J. Brown COAST SPEAKERS HERE ARE MANY REASONS WHY “SWEET SIXTEEN?” is so successful—chiefly because so many women of Seattle and the Great Northwest have found “Sweet Si een” so well prepared all the time, any day, in all seasons, to supply every need in dress at— SIXTEEN DOLLARS Can you, who do not know what this means in style, quality, variety and assured satisfaction in your Suits, Coats and Dresses, get the full import of this? tures of the oo: annual banquet, tendered by the wholesul manu facturers and bankers of Seattle Tuesday night at the Rainier club. and the noon luncheon Wednesday given by the Seattle Retail Trade bureau. SUNDAY'S HEAT SET RECORD Pacific Northwest Hottest Section in United States The bromidic individual who asked unday, “Is tt warm enough for bout ft. It was You Take Big Risks in the search for a garment to please you, sind i the more so as the price goes higher. im wa. eno Sunday, in fact, was not only the warmest day so far this year, with its maximum temperature of 76 be tween 4 and 5 o'clock, but it was ‘way above the average maximum temperature for May, which is only e6 degrees. ‘urthermore, the Pacific North feat was the hottest part of the United States Sunday. Walla Walla broke all local records with a tem perature of 92, while Yakima regis tered a high mark at 94 West of the mountains, the tem Le . perature was in keepimg with the! & ‘ , . . Sn ees ; Reto warm wave of Seattle. Portland ran Brownie and Min, with their triplets, Fidgie, Widgie and Pidgie, break into limelight her thermometer up to 88, while #6 as Seattle's finest fire-boat rat-catchers. | was registered in British Columbia-’ They are attached to Station 31—Fire Boat Snoqualmie, Massachusetts street dock. With no moisture in the air, the u day only needed a stiff breeze to BY G. LUCILLE BUTLER =| miachlef—I_ don't eee ‘em any make it ideal for forest fires, The ¢¢ryxcuse ME,” remarked Min,| where.” ‘That's the impression Min humidity reading was 33 per cent nearly half of the May normal of 61 Forty or below is the danger for fires, and Weather Man M that now is the Summers says e to be ext ly careful Why not grant “Sweet Sixteen” the priv- ilege of showing you what wonderful val- ues you can get here in style and quality at where the Alerter } —or for the little more if you want to save b. AOE: the in proportion on garments of the finer of Massachusetts i * A ee grades, which we price the saving “Sweet street, ‘but we'll tell the world boredom, which belied the glitter In| we © finest palr—er—fam. ha 1 fees ~ is .9 Three-plece Knicker Suits, Sixteen” way, at from $25 upwards? Amerats retest @ 7g value; all sizes. .... as she made a ying leap for| meant to convey, anyway, disappeared in the Brownle, affecting an air of of a heap of old e end of the dock. hin eye, surveyed the gray-green | tly © cate’ you ever saw Now's the time for seancaps of ¢ ats fairly swarm nd that boyish suit $16 know oe =|then once Want to Feel good all over ? Then have your feet comfortable. Get “Panco” soles and Pancord heels on your shoes today. Your repairman has them. And ask for new shoes soled with ‘‘Pan- co.” Your Dealer will get them—if you insist, there sure We are not bothered with the worries that beset those who have to resort to “Sales,” with their misstatements and flamboy- ant offers of garments at seeming “reductions” which are fla- grantly impossible. BEWARE! ‘6 heard of fire horses,|she went on—that {s, and fire dogs, too,” suggested the| have, if she could! So This Is Sunday Countryside Ravished by City Trippers’ Wanton Destructiveness We have no “Sales”—no use for them. Nothing unsalable in stock, to be urged upon you by preposterous “reductions.” Here there are new models coming in all the time, and there’s always plenty of business to encourage us. _ G I R L Ss RUrwm= There are no soles like ““Pan- co,” no heels like Pancord —absolutely none. They're flexible—no stiff leather feel- Sixteen Dollars, here, really gives you America’s greatest val- ; va i. RS pe eccranvdtene able |e Gia ney cf sidery a vie da ues. And we're improving them rightalong. You have at your ing—dry—no leather soggi Oe Ree TO: P50 A eon) eae. Ove e aed Seems, Onn Ree ommand the smartest style, clever originations, the best qual- ness—cool in summer—warm talist. He's just as carefully | back porches or lying Heslessly Neng zacns! yie, iging 235 q in winter. Fix the names cuttivated, peeudo cynicalas the | along the road noir the ‘cily ity and the largest assortment that any institution in the country “Panco” and ‘“Pancord’” firmly in mind for the utmost in foot comfort. Hundreds of thousands say “they’re great.” You'll say so too. uns >on rest of his brethren, But, be- cause he has no $11 bile and lives in a t front apartment on th floor of a flat-topped t and used to live in a seven can offer you. limits of the city, cast aside when thelr freshness melted in uyron the evening's heat, Of course the reporter ten't sontimental, but he almost vow- | room house in the center of 160 acres, he has been “honing” to get out into the country this spring and smell the moist loam and kick rocks along a duaty trail, and listen to meadow larks and watch farmers ride a peg: tooth harrow across a cloddy field. Sunday some friends droveup PANCO CO: | ta ew, eda, end he CHELSEA , MASS. | the opportunity Series 4, No.7 into the open, where men are still men and the odor ot cow ed he wouldn't make another trip into the woods this sum mer, Ho wouldn't admit it if you asked him, but there ts something sickening to his farm-bred complexes when an overcrowded automobile pulls up beside a natural flower bed and a horde of ravening crea- tures pile into the blossoms, mple them underfoot, pull up in armloads and leave & desolate waste—for the sake of a few minutes’ selfishness, barns hangs heavily from Ren- ton junction to Enumclaw. | ° ‘All went well, and tho report- MURDERER ENDS ' er enjoyed himself watching | Mount Rainier thru the after- | @ 1 ren ry noon haze and listening to farm. OWN ; LIFE ern at the picnic grounds dis. | cuss the price of butterfat and | | : the chance for a good berry | nba " crop. |. Six orphaned children of the B. D 7 ‘ And the reporter, tho he wartwood family of Spoon Lake| 4 . ~Y makes cynicism his professional |were Monday making funeral ar goal and files into a rage at the |rangementy for thelr father and) hint of sentimentality, perticu. | mother, the victims of a double trag- Jarly enjoyed watching the long | edy Saturday. | stretches of dogwood blooms In Mrs, Swartwood was murdered | the rich greénery and casting | Saturday morning on the back porch | his eye at roadside patches of |of her home by her husband, whol huge buttercups, It looked like |then onded his life ina well about Jowa—and a Seattle apartment | 400 feet from the house. rh house ts a Jong way from an The couple had been quarreling | Towa timber “forty.” over the proposed marriage of thelr | MOTHER :~ Fletcher's Cas- But when the reporter and his | 16-year-old daughter, May, to J, @ & is a pleasant, harmless friends started homeward, the | Fisher, a logging partner of the girl's ‘i ( dogwood blooms were ravished | married brother, Harry, Tho father | ubstitute for Castor Oil, Pare- and the patches of nodding but. | opposed the marriage and the mother 7 7 teroups were uprooted, trodden, | doalred it goric, Teething Drops and and sorry remnants of thelr for shooting occurred “about & Soothing Syrups, prepared for mer nelves, o'clock Saturday morning, a few min And a thousand touring cars, | utes after Swartwood and his wife | rondaters, sport models and ‘|urose. Swartwood's body was not sedans were filled with droop. |found until 3 o'clock in tho after ing blooms long before they had |noon, after bloodhounds from the | ie back to |sheriff's office had tracked the slayor mmend it. covered the 60 miles od the slayer bret Seattle, and most of the flow. to his death placa Infants and Children all ages, To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of ( Proven directions on each package, Physicians everywhere r echelon, homme All “Sweet Sixteen” patrons know this. They come here again and again, assured that the reputation of “Sweet Sixteen” is an asset that will not be impaired by any departure from the “Sweet Sixteen” custom of style and value giving, We never disappoint them. It is you, who have never Paeen “Sweet Sixteen,” whom we urge to a first visit here. In making the acquaintance, you take a step that will not be regretted. : Silk and Bolivia Capes| $ New ea : "Fall anes 16 In Our Millinery Department There’s a hat here for this Spring and Summer to become you, whatever the occasion of wear —and it’s a lot cheaper than you can find its equal anywhere else. MILLINERY DIRBCT FROM NEW YORK Where they make the Fashions and the Hats $375 $500 $675 $750 See these hats—compare them with others—and you'll know why they are so popular i New York } f s yy Portland San Francisco Y 4} ° iN Los Angeles ‘il hams “ Rialto Bldg., Second and Spring