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LOTHING, RAINCOATS Hats and Men’s Fumishing Goods Will Be Sold at Enormous R WE ARE GOING OUT OF eductions BUSINESS Every Article in Both Our Stores, Including Fixtures, Must Go. GREATER REDUCTIONS WILL BE MADE FOR SATURDAY WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED a large shipment of new Fall Hats, soft and stiff; also a lot of new Fall Clothing, which will ABOUT HALF OFF. Other stores advertise reductions of a slight perce: be sold SATURDAY FOR ntage. We mean business, Reductions in both our stores will be about one-half, and in many instances a great deal more. We will make a quick job of it. Our stock will be sold at a loss. Our Clothing, Hats new and up to date. The finest lines in the market are Boys’ Clothing will be sold at less than half. Moth Saturday. You can buy Three Suits for the price of on CLOTHING For the Men .. $5.65 eee. $12.85 $7.65 $25.00 Men's Suits, Fall Eng- $10.8 $12.50 Men's Suits cut to $18.00 Men's Sulte out to $20.00 Men's Quits cut to .. tten ren, y $14.85 jout to . $3.00 Men's Pants cut to SUITS $400 Boye’ Suits $1.89 ...$2.89 and Overalls Sold in Our First Avenue Store Only $1.u0 ae ig 38c $1.89 $2.89 $5 and $6 Boys’ Suits cut to $1250 Stipon cut to .. out $5.00 Men's Dress Shoes cut to. Raincoats now $2.50 and $3.00 Hats cut to $3.50 and $4.00 Hate cut to.. 95.00 J. B. Stet- son Hats out to. $20.00 Baima- $20.00 Overcoats $1.35 $1.85 $2.89 $10.85 $10.85 and Furnishing Goods are represented in both our hers, bring your boys down ¢. FURNISHINGS $1.50 Men's Dress Gloves cut to .. 48 15c 360 Men's Neckwear cut to . ‘ 350 and 500 Silk Hose cut te — 18¢ $3.75 G. & M, Underwear, silk tO nae 25c and 60¢ Suspen- dere cut to ..... 15c 180 Handkerchiefs 5 c 25¢ Men's Hose cut i. , 12c $1.00 Dress Shirts cut $1.50 Dress Shirts cut $750 2 aM Union Suits cut to $3 85 tune cut to... 1.65 $1.00 Cooper’s and Roxford Underwear cut 38 : c $1.00 Union Suits cut Alyse hacpctarsteheaga «(= 50c B. V. D. Under wear out to 28c Ties cut to ‘ 38c to $1.00 B. V. D. Union Suits cut to 68c Fiber and Leather Suit Cases and Hand Bags and linen, out $2 35 cut to Agden 48c $3.50 Wool Union $2.00 Drese Shirts cut 95c to 750 and $1.00 $1.50 Union Suits cut 89c HALF PRICE Store Open Saturday at 9 A. M. MODEL STORES We Will Sell WHOLESALE and 819 Second Ave. LESALE an 708 First Ave. BIGGEST FIGHTS IN ALL HISTORY Here are some figures showing the number of combatants that took part {n some of the most {m portant, epoch-making fights of tho past. Mukden, tn the Russo-Japanese war, heads the list with a total of more than 700,000 men in bat- tle array. Leipsic (“The Battle of the Nations”), October 16 to 19, 1813 —French, 160,000; Austrians, Russians and Prui ns, 240,000. Total, 400,000, June 18, 1815— Waterloo, Wrench, 71,947; British and al lies, 67,661. Total, 139,608. Gettysburg, July 1 to 3, 186% Federals, 80,000; Confederates, $0,000. Total 160,000 Sedan, August 29 to Septem ber 1, 1870—French, 160,000; Germans, 250,000. Total, 400,000. Mukden, March 1 to 10, 1905— Russians, 400,000; Japanese 201,000. Total, 701,000. WIEADACHE OR NEURALGIA PAIN ‘When your head aches you sim- must hare relief or you will go| It’s needless to suffer when ean take a remedy like Dr. | Headache Powders and re- the pain and neuralgia at Send some one to the drug B Bow for a dime package of | Headache Powders . In a few moments Will feel fine—headache gone, neuralgia pain. ingle rooms CITIZEN POLICE LONDON, Sept. 18.—Twenty thou- sand citizens of London have joined the volunteer police force as spe cial constables, to take the place of | the regular policemen who have gone to the war. Navy department orders many changes and shifts of officers con nected with Puget Sound navy yard. ———_—$ —_—_— —————— For 90 days the Albany Dentists Wil give a special discount of 10 Percent on prices quoted below fe do honest dentistry at honest} Pees, and with our painless meth Os, which are entirely harmless, We guarantee the painless extrac filling and crowning of teeth. No students employed, only skill- graduates of years of experience. _NO HIGH PRICES FOR EFFECT. IMPOSSIBLE LOW PRICES DRAW A CROWD. | Good Red Rubber Plate Maroon Rubber Plate. HEADACHE,COLDS, CONSTIPATION Get a 10-cent box. Take a Cascaret tonight to cleanse your LAver, Stomach and Bowels, and you will surely feel great by morning. women who have M®adache, coated tongue, a bad cold, are dilious, nervous, upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomact,, or have backache and feel all worn out. Are you keeping your bowels $12.00) clean with Cascarets—or merely 5.00\ forcing a passageway every few per|days with salts, oathartic pills or 5.00 | castor ofl? -$5.00 $8.00 World) ......... Crowns (extra h Bdge Work (extra heavy) Gold Filings . $1.00 UP| Cnscarets immediately clennse gam Fillings ; 5O¢| and regulate the stomach, remove Our work is guaranteed for 15|the sour, undigested and ferment oot ing food and foul gases; take the A L B A N you bile from the liver and car DENTISTS ry off the constipated waste mat ter and poison from the bowels PEOPLE's BANK BUILDING aa ond Av, and Pike S8t. Open Remember, a Cascaret tonight ing. A 10-cent box from your ere, Sunisys 8:30 to 12:30. 'ness for month your druggist means healthy bowel action; a clear head and cheerful Don't forget the will straighten you out by morn ull’. Phone Eliott 4083, children, CASCARETS CURE You men and} CHATEAU - town, whose name has figured constantly in the recent fighting, was the just a century ago, French and the allies. It is 59 miles by rail from Parts, on the route to Nancy, and so situated as to have suffered terribly in near! every war that has swept across France. The English captured it in 1421, the Spanish in 1591; and it waa sacked In the wars of the | Fronde, 1652. On the hill is a ruined castle dating from the eighth century. Population, 7,847. MONTMIRAIL — This village also suffered at the hands of the French and allies, 100 years In a big battle waged hero, Na poleon was victor. The village is 21 miles northeast of Paris on a hill overlooking the valley of the Petit Morin. The population | OUDENARDE — Thirtye!¢ht miles west of B s, and a little jover 60 miles southwest of Ant jwerp. A line of railroad runs through it northeast to Alost and Malines and then north to Ant werp. It is situated on the right bank of the Scheldt, and is an im portant manufacturing town In July, 1708, the duke of Maribor. ough gained a great victory over the French, under {ts walis. SEMLIN (Hungarian, ZIMONY) A town of 17,000 inhabitants, in Hungary, eight miles north of Bel , across the River Save ants miles by John Hunyadi, Hungarian hero, di here in 1456 RIVER ALLE—This river, which is continually mentioned in the | dispatches, rises in the lake region ast Prussia, and flows north- Joining the Pregel river, about 35 miles east of Koenigs. berg. The town of Allenstein 1s near its source, and Alle situated a few miles above junction with the Pregel STANISLAU—An Important trad- ing town and railroad center, with a population of 33,000, half of whic is Jowish. It {# 87 miles from Le berg and within sight of the Car pathian mountains Branch rail |road lines from this town to StyrJ and many other emailer places makes its possession of great strate | gic value. STRYJ—A busy town with great cattle market, on the slopes of |the Carpathian foothills, As the center of a cattle raising district, Stry) is of great value to the Rus- |slan commissary department, The 000. village in Holland about 15 miles north of Antwerp. The resumption of severe fighting between Belgian and German sol diers, reported from this village, must have occurred in the region [around Capellen which {# only 10 miles north of Antwerp, The vil between the a population 1 | PUTTEN—A THIERRY — This) scene of a flerce battle | Near-| STAR INNES AND WIFE FACE TRIAL FOR GHASTLY MURDER Mrs. Victor Inn lages in this neighborhood are largely composed of the villas and fine homes of wealthy Antwerp | merchants ‘WHAT DYSPEPTICS | SHOULD EAT A PHYSICIAN'S ADVICE “Indl nm and practically all forms mach trouble are, nine times out of ten, due to acidity; |therefore stomach sufferers should, whenever possible, avold eating food [that t» acid in its nature, |by ohe | develops jeuch a r aoldity ninates most | which ar asant to the taste | well as those which are rich in blood, |flesh and nerve building properties This ts the reason why option and stomach su that yital energy come from a well fed body. For the benefit of those sufferers who have been obliged to exclude from their let all starchy, sweet or fatty food, and gre trying to keep up a miser- able “ex 6 on gluten products, I would ment that » uld try a meal of any food « which you may Itke, {n me taking tm 1s ately afterws | This me a little hot or cold water, neutralize any acid whioh present which ma | Bisurated f fectly leas the beat antacid known |tion on the sto | y of the food tents, and femoving the ® of the ation which inf the delicate stomach lining, it ¢ more than could possibly be done by any drug or medicine, Asa | clan, I believe in the use of w whenever necessar mit that I cannot the cause of ible » bisurat gnesia from y« ruggist, eat 1 Want at your next meal ome of the bisurated magnesia and see tf I'm not ent | MODERN DENTISTRY EXAMINATION 22K Gold Crowns. ..$5.00 Bridgework Full Set of Teeth Porcelain Crown. . Gold Fillings .. Silver Fillings.........50¢ We do exactly as advertised Lady Attendant, Terms to auit All work guaranteed 15 years ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS |B let and Pike, Opp. Public M. ' Laboring People’s venti FRIDAY, SEPT | police departments so thin, emaciated and lacking in| which ean only| |teaspoonful of bimurated magnesia tn | | cultured and astute man | meet Innes, to whom she was be- | from | purporting to have been written by | shall.” 18, 1914. PAGE 11 Victor E. Innes SAN ANTONIO, Tex., Sept. 18.—In the Impending trial of Victor E. Innes, former U. 8. deputy district attorney of Car son City, Nev. and his wife for the murder of Mra. Elolee Nelms Dennis, hie flancee, and %, prosecution one of the most shocking crimes of a de- cade. It was Marshall Nelms, the! avenging brother of the two girla,| who relentessly followed the trail of Innes across half the continent and whipped about him the net of circumstantial evidence which re od in his arrest and that of his wife on a farm in Oregon, after the of the tire country had been groping for clews Guarde Them on Return And it was young Nelms, the grim nemesis, who stood guard over Innes and his wife, during the ab- sence of officers, on the return trip from the West to the jail here, de Victor E. Innes is a deep student of Hindu mysticlam and the ocoult, and in writ- ing to Mrs. Nelms Dennis, Pp he already a wife, the former U. 8, deputy district attorney used a special type- writer with Hindustanese characters, which Mra. Den- nie deciphered through a key he had » her, Thie wae done to k secret com- munications between the two after objections to Innes’ attentions had devel- oped In the Nelms household In Atlanta. Deciphered fragments of these letters Indicated that Innes and his fiancee had planned to go to India after the proposed marriage. spite the protests of the accused man that he feared violence at the hands of the girls’ brother. Nelms is firmly convinced that his sisters were poisoned and their bodies destroyed with caustic in a great vat’at the house occupied for several days by Innes and his wife in this city. Find Shoe In Cauldron In the house were found a num ber of photographs of Mrs. Dennis, whom Innes had promised to marry, and in the cauldron, covered with was a fragn t of shoe which Nelms says Mrs, Dennis wore. The neighbors, too, told Nelms and the detectives he had employed that they had frequently seen Innes accompanying two young women to the house. Victor BE. Innes, capable attorney, of the world, has maintained almost un- broken allence since his arrest, de- nying his guilt but making no at tempt to explain away the mass of evidence that has been gathered against him Says Motive Was Robbery The motive for the crime, says young Nelms, was to secure the money which Mrs. Dennis pos- sessed, Mrs, Eloise Nelms Dennis and Miss Beatrice Nelms were the daughters of a wealthy widow of Atlanta, Ga. Last June they started for San Antonio, where Mrs. Dennis was to ye, trothed. He had met her a year before in Nevada, where he had represented her in a divorce action. Letter Tells of Murder It had been arranged that he was to make certain investments for Mrs, Dennis, and she took with her $16,000, After that nothing was heard either of the sisters until their mother received a mysterious letter, dated at San Francisco and the elder, which read “T killed Beatrice in New Orleans and have come here to kill Mar- The Atlanta police to whom Mrs. Nelms carried the letter, tele: graphed a warning to Marshall Nelms in San Francisco, who im- mediately secured police protec: tion. He never left his apartment un- |1ess accompanied by a bodyguard, believing at first in the genuine-* |had tried to reat « house having a| Or Made to Mieasure ‘Your Winter Suit Overcoat $S2O ALL WORK DONE IN MY OWN WORKSHOP HERE IN SEATTLE. If there is any better tailoring to be had in the city, even at $30, I want to know it. I have sold suits to men in all walks of life and every one “Satisfied. I will give you your and, more than that, I will that no other tailor can pr ice my opening choice of as fine a line of woolens as you ever saw, ut workmanship into your next suit or overcoat luce for the money. All work under my own direct personal supervision. Try Wilson and you will never regret it. to offer. WI Look over my stock. It costs nothing to see what I have L_LSO THE TAILOR 1201 Third ness of the missive and that his; sister had lost her mind. | Find Clue In New Orleans =| After weeks of police activity in) many cities, a clué was found in New Orlean The sisters had purchased tickets for San Antonio, after cashing a $1,000 draft. | Then the letter took on a now! significance. It had been mailed to misdirect any search that might be made for the missing girls, | Young Nelms at ones concluded) that his sisters had been tuurdered. In San Antonio, whence he had rushed efter a conference with his mother in Atlantu, he found that the trail of the steters merged with! that of Innes and his wifs, D0 hed) come there from Carson City. It ended in a huge cement caul-| dron in the yard of a cottage on the) outskirts of the city. Finds He Bought Lye | From the owner of the house Nelms learned that it had been) rented by Mr. and Mrs, Innes for) three mont but had been occu-| pled only a few days. Although the weather was ex- tremely hot, Innes, it was learned, furnace, and that, shortly before leaving, Innes had also purchased & great quantity of lye at a nearby! store begun, ending with the arrest of him and his wife on a farm near Bugene, Ore, where the couple were living with their two adoptod) foundling children. Enough evidence had by time been accumulated to justify the !ssuance of a warrant for mur- der. LAKEVILE, N. J., Sept. 18.— Clarence Humphrey started his honeymoon by running over his mother-in-law and breaking her arm. She urged the newlyweds to Then the search for Innes was! this) crank their machine again and go on their way. Avenue, Cor. Seneca WON'T LET ’EM~. |DANDRUFF SOON - PLAY TENNIS) RUINS THE HAIR AMSTERDAM, Holland, Sept. 18. Makes It Lifeless. Dull, Dry, ~The Cologne Gazette says: “A! Brittle and ‘Thin. ' thousand English soldiers a-» now prisoners of war at the Doeberitz) oi .i, 1¢ y. wry military exercise ground near Ber-) weretital alone Mite tale: po by a iin. | means get rid of dandruff, for it “It 1s proposed to give English) will starve your hair and ruin it if officers facilities for tennis and|¥°) (°Mh . 4, much good t > golf, but this plan ts opposed by the| prust er wasn inout The only sure Gazette, which says that men of/way to get rid of dandruff is to dis- the nation which plunged Germany into the war will be better oceu-} pied ait countr, — ———@ | RESIDENCE THEATRES — ——— - At the Home Wntli Sunday aoe mat The Law of the Lumberjack,”|°"$2, Sif tind too, that all itebing drama; “Animated Week-/and digging of the scalp will stop 80, topical; “Universal Ike,;end your hair will be silky, fluffy, lustrous, soft and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get | liquid arvon at any drug store. It At the Pleasant Hour Unti! Sunday|is inexpensive and four ounces is “The Love Victorious,” three-part | !! you will need, no matter how “ 7 nuch dandruff you hi This ramas ‘Almost a White Hope, nple remedy never fails——Adver- isement solve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get ebout four ounces of ordinary arvon; app) it nigh ting down thinking of thelr| Wien retiring, ‘use’ enough to ‘ fi | moisten the scaip and rub it in gent- | ly_with the finger tips By morning most, if not all, of your dandruff will be rome and three or four more applications will com- pletely dissolve and entirely destroy ¢ sign and trace of it two-part ly,” No. 1 t., Nearly Gets Married,” comedy. | eee BINYON OPTICAL CO.—1116 FIRST AVENUE, NEAR SENECA. Special All This Week Gold Filled Spectacles and Eye Glasses, Fitted With Spherical Lenses— $2.50 clentific examination by Optometrist and Eyesight it. BINYON OPTICAL CO. DR. J. R. BINYON, JR 1116 FIRST AVE., NEAR SENECA INYON OPTICAL CO.—1116 FIRST AVENUE, NEAR SENECA. DAY 38414 GILI— OD feondo uokuIG @ Binyon Optical Co.—1116 First Ave. Today’s Styles Today “The Best $20 Value in the City” —So remarked a customer yesterday morning after trying on one of our suits of Bradbury ‘System Clothes 1332-34 Men in all walks of life wear these clothes— sold exclusively by Seattle’s Reliable Credit House. All the latest Fall and’ Winter styles for men are here, ready for your approval. An extra special value priced at $20.00 ‘As credit is the same as cash at this store, a payment of a few dollars down and the balance in monthly, semi-monthly or weekly payments is all that is necessary. Enjoy a “charge account” under our liberal credit system. iting Second Ave. 211 Union St.