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TUESDAY, MARCH 10, 1025, The Taileur [ e AW /1 / \ / $59-50 to $69.50 | \Y’ A . i \Y I'he taileur is character- ,[',r \ ized by its slenderizing | lines. Some of the coats 2t are even longer than the || | _—— model illustrated. These St)"& reach almost to the bottom of the skirt. Braid, tucks and flat buttons are used effectively as trim . mings. ! . ' The Tailored Suit For the Stylishly Stout Matron The stylishly stout matron will find the lines of the strictly tailored suit most flattering. ' Sizes 46 to b 4. § : | 4 Blouses - | For the Taileur | > 4 Complete the taileur : ‘,", A I _ with a dainty blouse. B OF B There are smartly N A tailored blouses, dain i g ¢ N B ty lace trimmed mod ,A els and French beaded Rioo blouses to choose k AR, from. | - CREDIT { | | | GLADLY | Two .“‘ 'Z' TRMAI 1332-34 Second | Entrances @G £ H\ 209 Union { L - o Ny Q=Y Oulfitting: s sese R - R SR et * A e .._______._._____.._'——*‘ - _.__._____.‘ ......._.N .._..m e a——— | oWt &0k £ 2nd floors ealy N\ |We Guar- J 3 » W\ antee ¢ J * 9 N Salving Of Jx S Q .‘lb\"’)!'!lf(/' From §lO ING- ] Money-Back to sls on © IS Guarantee AN ==Y | Garment! N \ sop-woma sawes moc/ 7 | ‘g‘ 1910 WEITLANE AVE ) Nt Your Spring Coat | §. > $1 5 1 /} A=y 20 | i /N $25 /i nl WKL Only : 3 IN¢Y Values that defy competition! Values that will compel the | ‘ ladies of Seattle to recognize that in the purchase of Finely Tailored Sport and Dress Coats, | ] it is not possible to duplicate 5 ’ Herling’s prices. | To introduce these magnificent l values to Seattle we have re | 1 duced our margin of profit to | practically nothing for these | opening days. We are selling ' practically at cost; and the cost was exceedingly low, due to the tremendous purchasing power ‘ , \ of the great Herling organiza y: . tion. Latest styles in Imported ‘ Slres 14 to 44 and Domestic Fabrics. ' THIS CAPTIVATING COAT, EXA.CTLY . as pictured, in an exceedingly splendid fabric, only | sls. Every woman in Seattle owes it to herself to | inspect Herling’s Ladies’ Coats. . 19 ; , | INC. 2nd Floor, Home Savings 81dg.~1520 Westlake Ave. | BETWEEN PINE AND PIKE ON WESTLAKE AVE, CHARGE DIVORCE Plaintiff In London Suit ‘ , May Still Be Wife LONDON, Mare 10, ~Charging that the divorce \\'hfih Mrs. Dorothy Muriel Dennlstoun, alleged interna {tlonal courtesan, obtained from ‘l.lrm. Col, lan Dennistoun in Paris | Was soecured thru s clandestine agree { ment, defense counsel in her $6,000 Leult agalnst hor former husband, to j day will question the validity of the decroe, | Mrs. Dennistoun, who already ‘.'""' admitted engaging in intimate { relations with Clen, Bir John Steven | Cowena, *‘the best quartermastor { since Moses,'' and an unnamed Span. fard, today was to face 15 hotel at | taches who will seck to identify her as the woman who stayed at thelr | hotels as the wife of several men. ‘ | z | LEAGUE SOLVING i \ TAX PROBLEM s | ‘Appoint Commission to Study Double Taxation | GENEVA, March 10.-As & means of solving the problem of doubls tax ation, the counecll of the league of | nations, which opened ity 36th meeot. { ing here Monday, voted to appoint a | commission composed of United States, South American, German and | Polish experts, to study the question | Austen Chamberiain, British for. ;clgn minister, announced at the opening of today's session that 26 lumm had signed the league's proto }col, agrecing to arbitrate all dis i putes arising under commercial | treaties, ' The counell declded to Invite Mex { leo and Beuador to sign the drug con -1 vention, DISCUSS TRADE ; KN 'Chamber of Commerce De partment Gives Luncheon The first forelgn trades departinent of the Chamber of Commerce lunch: con meeting under the regime of the ;new executive committes was held { Tuesday noon In the new bullding. {lt wus an open meeting, at which | reports on topies which the commit. fteo Is studying were taken up. i J. P. Hausman told of the incon { venlence of shippers being compelled | to produce two original bills of lad. i ing. W. E. Conan spoke of the appli cation of terminal rates to the port {of Grays Harbor. Willlam M. Ingiis { spoke on the convention of the Na. { tional Forelgn Trades councll to be held in Seattio this June. { 'Plan Funeral for ~ Noted Local Actor { Funeral services will be held for {David H. Wiliams at the Home | Undertaking pariors, Wedneaday, at {2 poom Mr. Willlams dled Bun. | day might at his home, 1008 James i ot after a long liness | He was a resident of Beattle for 120 years, and for many mseasons ! was one of this city's favorite stock {actors, He leaves hia widow, Clara 1. Willlams, of Beattle, and several 4 brothers and wisters at his former ’ home and birthplace, BByracuse, IN, Y. ": Mr. Willlams was widely known in the profession as “Happy Dave”™ lg He entered the theatrical profession {in the East at the age of 14, ! His local career began In 1892, ! when he jolned the Cordray stock | company to play In “Alons In Lon. P don” X - Boy’s Body Kept in Alcohol 100 Years GLENCOVE, N. Y., March 10~ Buried perhaps for more than 100 years, the body of a baby boy, pre served in a jug of alcohol that also contained several century-old Ameri. can coins, was unearthed taday by workmen excavating for a new bulld. ing opposite the Glencove bank. Dr. Fred Hernsteln examined the body and sald it must have been In alechol at least a century. While dates on the colns were not legible, they were of a type that were with. drawn from circulation prior to 1850, 2 Arrests Are Too - Much for Brocolli Two arrests at the same time are too many for Bam Brocolll or Sam Brock. ~ Last week ho waa arrested by Roy C. Lyle's dry agents In a rald, At the immigration station Deputy U. 'B, Marshal Eugene Lalrd recognlzed 'Mm a 8 Sam I!rnc‘k, wanted for con spiracy to violate the prohibition law, ' Sam is now secking additional ball to enable him to *“‘get out'’ .__.—-———-——-———.‘o-—--’.‘ Drys Smash Bars and Arrest Four Julla Mayfalr, barmald, and Goorge Nokamura were In the lm migration station and their “‘soft drink bar” was in kindling wood Tuesday, following a Monday night visit at 122 Washington st. by Will. lam Whitney and a squad of federal dry agent ax-wieldern. The agents also chopped Into the New Bruns. ‘wick bar at 202 First ave, and ar. rested Y. Kogita and Mra, I Oka. - Falls on Pitchfork . - in Dad’s Barn, Dies BEUGENE, Ore., March 10.—~Lloyd Johnson, 4, son of Mr., and Mrs, Ivan Johnson, dled here us a ro sult of Injurles suffered yostorday in his father's barn when he fell on a pitehfork. One of tho tines penetrated the lad's brains, Manuals to Be Used . . - in Training Camps The war department In publshing new training manuals, entitled “Studies In Cltizonship,'” for uvse in the eltizens’ military tralning camps and resorvo offlcers’ training cnmps, T'he primary objoct of this instric. tlon In to akuist Lthe students to por form thelr dutles, both civil and mill tury, with intelligenes and an nppro cintion in full measure of the oblign. tlon Imposed by eltizonship, Tiny Bit of Wreckage Beside developing the ter ritory, running a railroad, rca&ting seal hunting, and doing a score of btfl jobs in Alaska, Uncle Sam finds time to look after tiny Alberta Rose Adamson, waif of Sit ka. A childish wreck, she was brought to Seattle, has been repaired under direction of the bureaw of o'ducation and is to be trained in a gov ernment school near Anchor age. wPhoto by Certer & Niradley, Htar 11-. l! Photographers A - A!.BERTA ROSE ADAMBON, one of the smalisst bits of human wreckago that ever came to Boa.us for repairs, will return to her own Northern country this spring, whén the lce goes out, marked “Care of Uncle Bam.,” Sho Is 8§ years old, naif-native, half-white, and is stay- Ing In th's elty with Mra Nallie Ostorloth, 106th st. and Stone way. With both arms and both legs broken, Alberta was found aban doned on the bsach at Sitka, Alaska, last fall. Bhe {s sald to have been roughly handled In a quarrel be. tween her white father and native mother, Officlals of the Alaskan school mystem took care of her mnd sont her to Seattle. FHer lroken bones had set crookedly, due to lack of attention. At the Orthopedic hospital Yere the bones were rebroken and reset. The United Statese bureau of edu cation, under Dr. J. T. Wagner, asked the Washington Children’s Davis’ Job Will Be to Stop Leaks on Border Department Wars Against Alien Smuggling BY WILLIAM J. McEVOY (United Press Staff Correspondent) (Copyright, 15825, by United Press) WAaul.\'(rm.\'. March 10.--Stop ping up the holes in the Can. adian and Mexiean boundaries of the United States to halt the admittedly large lllegal entry of allena, s the Job confronting the department of labor, Secretlary James J. Davis, enter. Ing another termn, will shortly call all of his expert immigration and naturalizsation men into conference, to go over all acts of congross af. octing this situation, with a view to submitting 4 proposal to congress that will serve as a basis or a per. manent policy. Codification of all laws afecting the activities of Davis' department in arbitration of labor disputes, nat. uralization and Americanization works, surveys of labor conditions and costa of living and welfare work supervision, as well as the para. mount problems of Immigration reg. ulation under the 19024 quota law, will bo attempted also. As the department now operates, its activities are hamperod by & large number of conflicting laws. There have been so many different and unrelated measures passed by con. gresa, the administration of which were passed to his department, that Davis belloves codification 1s the mosty important step to be taken now. \ ““The laws Jook like a hodge. podge,”” Davis sald today. *They resemble a bunch of small packages tied up In a big package. We want all of them unwrapped, consolidated and bundled in one contalner.' Davis plans to Incresse his force of immigration agents to cope with the smuggling problem. One feature of the program s to place his most skillful agents at the most likely points of (llegal entry. “Gratifying progress,’’ according to Davis, 1s being made in the de- which produces any desired temperature for cooking almost instantly. The Up-to-date GAS RANGE is without a competitor where speed and accuracy of temperature are important fac tors in cooking. Lorain Automatic Heat Controlled Gas Ranges * do superior cooking with Speed, plus Accu racy. Seattle Lighting Company 1308 Fourth Ave. MA in-6767 THE SEATTLE STAR ; home to care for her, ‘The home 1| aceepted and placed her with Mra :iOflrrlolh. In the spring the girl {will go North, probably on the U, ,ln. B, Boxer, to the bureau's plant at .| Eklutna, 28 miles north of Anchor ~age, Alaska, She will recelve an " | education thers, with scores of other #inative girla V - | James J. Davis partments’ work In conciliating la. bor disputes. He hopes to continue and expand this service of the de. partment in prevention of strikes and lockoutls thru adjustment of dif. ferences, reached whilo production in continuing uninterruptedly and re. turns to the management and labor are going on. During the lnst fiseal vear, conell. iation commiasioners were assigned in 544 trado disputes, strikes, threat. ened strikes and lockouts. Of theso 475 were settled thru the efforts of the commissions, State and local agencles ussisted the federal comims. glonera In settling 69 others, T LKiy SR T e o) STEEL TONNAGE REPORT NEW YORK, March 10.—Unlited States Steel corporation unfilled ton nago report for February showed an increase of 247,448 tona over that of the previous month. The unfilled tonnage on February 28 was 0,284, 771 tons, agalnst 5,037,323 on Janu ary 31; 4,816,676 on December 31 and 4,012,001 on Fchruaryw. 1924, The census bureau estimates that $5,000 on thy averngo must be (n --vested to piovide work for one man in industries of this country, astgbl , ,-o\%\\ '.‘.<" B G S : AV )=, < ,;éf e ' ’ I ‘HERE is the same . reason for pasteur . izing cheese that there is for pasteurizing milk " —tomakeit pure,whole some and safe for hu man consumption. For cheese is but another way of preserving milk. Kraft American Cheese is a pasteurized cheese —the finest of Western madecheese,selectedby one standard only— quality. You will never be disappointed in the cheese you buy if it bears the Kraft Label. )/A ] (*3 NALL 1 TR - J. L)/j L\J—f?\kls?_)][s d) Decidedly Better ' Varieties . Swiss Brick Pimento Amegican : 01d English (Sharp American) 1 Ib. and’B Ib. loaves . Also 5 Varieties in 'nn(a. . M Pasteurized for Purity S VAo A 3 BT [ AR B SOV A P SASN A SR Live to Be 100 Y ears— But Not Right Away CII‘LCAGO. March 10-The averago length of life will reach 100 yonrs by tho year 2,000, Dr, Glibert Mtzpatricl, surgeon and member of the Gorgas memorinl inatitute, de elared at the Ameriean Medical as. gociation here today, Life oxpectancy Is steadily Ine oreaning, ho sald, Dr, Fitgpatrick gave (he following tablo on life expectancy: The average span of Hfe In 1776 wan 27 voars; 18706, 87 yoars; 1026, 67 yoars; 1076, 80; 2,000, 100 years, Tho big Inerease In lfo expectancy during the past (0 years can he traoced to the “germ theory” of dis ease, Dr, Fitzpatriok sald, ngm‘m theory has made it possible to trace and fsolate discaso germs and find cure for allments though incurable, he sald, Bettor vontrol of diet, less crowd Ing and Mhm{anonm must enter beforo the 100-9¢ay stago 18 renched, Dr. I'itzpatrick declivied. Ways and means must be found to keep tho alr pure, balanced diots, loss crowding and perlodical examin atlons by physiclans are essentlal, ho says, “There must be no over-oating,' Dr, Fltepatrick sald, “"They will havs o plonty of fresh foods in which the 7 Fanny YHurst’s Father Is Dead BT. LOUIS, March 10.-Samuel Hurst, father of ¥anny Hurst, died at his home hero last night. Tha authoress had been called hers be fore her father's death. The Miassissippl supremse court has hold that honey bees are domestis ented animals and that therefore their owner {8 lablae for any dam ugoe which they cause, The court awnrded n man $2060 for two mules stung (o doath by boes of a neighe bor. Some expert has figured out that there nare 625,013,639,600 different whist hands In a pack of playing onrds. frosh vitamines have not beon killed by poor mothods of preservation™