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HOLLY FLOUR $500.00 CONTEST $25 for Interlaken $12°° for WestSeattle $12 for Ballard This is the result of Monday's and Tues- day's answer in the Holly Flour Contest. (Both West Seattle and Ballard correctly counted the berries and by a coincidence both answers were mailed from their substation at the same time.) Count the Berries On a Sack of The contest closes on Monday March 29. Unbleached There is still an opportunity to win one of the re maining next Buy your sack of flour—count the berries —send in your grocer’s sale slip with your an- ewer, THE CHAS. H. LILLY CO, SEATTL S OF JITNEY BIG LINER SINKS; BUS INJURIES CREW IS SAVED inquest will likely be ‘sca the death of Matthew B. Lock-| who died late ‘campy A from | sustained = wh thrown | a jitney bus. R Iten, the driver, tried to! hitting a dog on Ratlroad) 8. ‘He turned sharply, throwing| 00d out. An ~uto driven by H. Cobb passed over Lock-| 's body. } } BH! BACKACHE! LUMBAGO OR FROM BACK Quickly ?—Yes. Almost instant re-| crew and passengers were saved from soreness, stiffness, lame-| by the liner Manhattan. and pain follows a gentle rub-| News of the collision came to the nae “Bt. Joceks ott.” |ottice of the Atlantic Transport Co b this soothing, penetrating oll| via Cape aRce, in a wireless dis-| it on your painful back, and like | patch from Capt. G. E. Metcalfe of| sic, relief comes. “St. Jacobs |the Megantic. is a harmless backache, lum- 1,300 Miles Off Cape Race and sciatica cure which never! News of the wreck reached her points and doesn't burn the|from the liner St. Louis, which re the Denver was “leaking * and that her passengers and those torturous “stitches.” ia lecaw had been taken off moment you will forget that you| This message declared the Den. B had a weak back, because it|ver was 1,200 miles off Cape Race ‘ "t hurt or be stiff or lame. Don't NEW YORK, March 24.—An- other tragedy of the sea has been prevented by the wireless. Far up in the North Atlantic, whose waters have proved the graveyard of so many ships, the passengers and crews of were the Mallory liner Denve: saved by rescuing sti just before the down, The cause of her Ing Is not known. The captain, his wife and 12 mem bers of the Denver's crew were rescued by the White Star liner Megantic, one of the first to re spond to the wireless call of dis tress. The 8. 0. 8. call sent out by the t Get a small trial bottle of Denver was caught by nearly a |, honest “St. Jacobs Oil" from | score of vessels within a radius of druggist now and get this last-|several hundred miles. A dozen| relief. turned in their courses, and reach ed the Denver in less than Although the Manhattan fs} known to be steaming towards New York and is expected here Monday, no word has come from her regarding her part in the res cue. The passengers of the Denver consisted mostly of the crews of| American steamships which have! been stranded in Germany by the war. She sailed from Bremen for New| York a few days ago, after having | delivered a cargo of cotton at German port, She is a 4,500 ve ship, commanded by Capt. Avery, and was built in 1900. MRS. BARNHISEL evaeteretre DR. L. B CLARK, D. D. 5. Frank Staut Dreads the | 1§ HOW SUING HER © And this is the reason why: | PASTOR HUSBAND “I had three teeth pulled by three| Different dentists and after this ex-| Perionce 1 was very much afraid) to come to your office. * = * * TACOMA, |hard-fought chapter In the domestic From now|infeticities of Mrs. Olive L. Marc h 24.—Another | Barn On my dread of the dental chair coma society passed, for the Regal Dentists | 2/8! prominent in Tacoma roctety and Arthur H. Barnhisel, formeri Certainly can pull any tooth pain-|oastor of one of the largest Hessly, as they did not hurt me) churches in the city, and now in Me org Joleen Ge winy.» {the Feal estate business, ts due to jane ‘ . y be writte We-can refer you toa good many! A year ago divorce action was people who have had the same ex-|begun by Mr. Barnhisel. This time Perience fis Mr. Staut, to-wit, that| Mrs. Barnhisel 1s the plaintiff | thes dentists have hurt them ter Replying to her complaint, Barn-| Tibiz in pulling their teeth or doing hisel denies she ever intimated a other dental work, but when they desire for reconciliation. He also ¥ came to the Regal Dentists their) denies he is worth $50,000, and able i troubles were over. We can do\to pay $250 a month alimony your work,and not hurt you a bit.|. In the divorce trial last year Barn \hisel broke down on the stand and |declared he still loved his wife. % | His complaint charged that her | _ Regal Dental Offices {extravagance and yearning for ‘vo DR. L. R. CLARK, MGR. clety” had bankrupted him aud es 1405 Third Avenue tranged him from his own children N. W. Corner Third and Union — and Union and home. FIRE PAMAGRS HOUSE eKiInD nea, + ad To Paseat Fost Bo. Fire 5 a. m, Wednesday | seriously od a one-story dwelling owned upled by ¢. M. Parker, at 80th Damage totaled $1,800. A dete ic tive flue was the cause, 1 fica lb, Free cup served cO., hg oR Pines Market Flour BY WIRELESS 24 hours.! This ts the for narratty BY PHIL RADER oar "LONDON, March | 10-The most pleturesque and weird hour of all the fife in the inches |e the time between and the fall of darkr If the real picture were pu' on the stage, it would not be believed. As you ait and wateh It your: self, you feel that your eyes d your mind are deceiving you The gold In the western sky turns to red, the shadows lengthen and the quich of the trench |e filled with the deep: ening darkness of early night It begins to grow cold and the frost crystals form on th muddy sides of the trenches, giving the effect of tinsel or bits of bright stones. The darkness of the trench ls broken now and then by the flare of a cigaret, puffed nervously, or by the flare of a rifle sending out its messenger of death. Silhouetted against the red sky is the erect figure of a legion sol dier, bis glistent bayonet pro |truding above the trench wall and t atching the dying glare of the jeun's light Further along are the waly shadows of the machine guns brightened by the polished brass work Machine Guns Work Only at Night As the darkness you catch a glimpse pin point of light on a dis which flickers in the telegraph code, a message from a French battery to its comrade many miles away They are talking of some new plot to kill human beings. There is a rattle of rifles and their quick flashes, first at one point in our trench and then in an- other, From grows per of a sharp t hill afar comes the putt-putt putt of a maxim gun. Nightfall ia the machine gun's hour. During the hours of daylight the machine gunmen have thelr ranges and fixed their alms, and now, in the darkness, whea their precious guns are safest from sharpshooters, they flare out thetr result of the day's work From distant corners of the | compass comes the roar of deep throated batteries. The stars shine 1 the brighter | Night Lights Sent Aloft for Protection Suddenly the sky is binected > beautiful glare of pure white light, which transforms night Into day for the space of many seconds. It fs a night light sent up by the en emy so that they can see what we are doing. We might possibly, they this. FREE STANLEY, EX- eee | Ex-Patrolman Charles G. Stanley who drove an automobile on a cop joyride on night of January | 8, and killed one man and injured | |two women, Is acquitted today of a | charge of manslaughter, A jury in| Judge Mackintosh’s court reached verdist of “not guilty” at 9 o'clock ast night. MAY ARREST FAMILY WHICH AIDS GIRLS CENTRALIA, Mare h Robert | Kerr, arrested for aiding Pearl Mor- they think, cape from the state school for girls | at Grand Mound Sunday night, to- day pleaded not guilty before Jus tiee Hons. The girls were discovered in a north end residence Monday night |The family which harbored them may bo prosecuted ‘ONLY OREGON FOLK CAN FISH IN RIVER March 24 |, SALEM, Or It is un lawful, ur the Oregon laws, to fish for salmon in the Columbia ersons who have lbeen residents of the state for six months or more The supreme |court of Oregon so decided in hold ling the legislative act eouctitutional BRYAN WILL SPEAK Former Congressman J. W Bryan will speak on “Social Legis lation in the Last National Con ntral |river except to gress,” at a meeting of the ( Council of Social Agenctes Wed nesday night in the assembly halt of the Chamber of Commerce | Rep, W. D. Lane will speak on Social Legislation in the Last State | lature | WILL GIVE CONCERT A concert and dance will be \given St. George's day, April 23, at Douglas hall by the British-Amert can Rellef association to ald the |war relief fund The St. Patric lday concert netted $1,000 SELWOT DANCING PARTIES HIPPODROME Filth aud University Clean Amusement Homelite sur 10-PIECE UNION OKC Competent Dancing Leachers gazing et them | because you are \trom the bottom of your black | trench. an arc of sparks, terminated by a/ STAR—WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1915. PAGE 2, | ABOUT FIGHTING AT NIGHT | Phit Rader, Garbed as an Aviator be out of our trenches, with our | bayonets fixed, charging on them |through the darkness After the white liht fades, the night seems darker than ever, The and sbriek over wantly | bullets whistle t it like this noises and lights, noses and lights. The night is filled with danger and surprises. Daylight charges 1 | are never mado; ft t# In the night | time that the Germans leave their trenches, or we leave ours, to run ahead into a hand-to-hand stabbing affray with the enemy The gray of morning ts a sight of good cheer “The Juggler” Tells | When Morning Has Come we measure whether or not of “the jug In our trench the} morning light by we can see the | gler” fluttering In the wind | ‘The juggler’ was the corpse of Ja Frenchman, which for #ix weeks lay some 200 feet tn front of our| trenches on bis back, with his arms outstretched, a canvas water bucket clutehed in each hand, hin egs sticking up into the alr, in a spot so deadly from rifle fire that no one could reach him. The dead man lay there through the nights and days | The French called this grotesque heap “the juggler” because they membered that Japanese ath- letes stretched themselves out in this dead Frenchman's posture and | tossed things about In the alr with thelr When the rage on the legs of the juggler” were plainly seen then we knew that morning had jcome, another night of madness} }had passed, and we might sleep un til the night lights and the night) noises broke out again at sunset. | LABOR WILL INITI Marsh, of the State tion of Labor, Wednesday announced that an initiative bill, providing for a true “first ald” for injured workmen, will be filed with the secretary of state a8 soon as |the laws permit Under the constitution, new int tiative measures cannot be filed until after January, 1916, to be voted on at the regular election In November, 1916. At the Inst election, the “first yaid” tnitiative bill, approved by [the labor organizations, was de feated by a narrow margin after the governor declared he would ap point a ission of employers and employes to draft an impartial measure. The governor's commission draft jed the measure, but the legislatare ignored It Marsh is confident the | federation’s “first aid” bill will car iry by a big vote next year. |LISTER verTors KLEEB BILL OLYMPIA, March 24.—De- ‘Fairy Dreams of Appetite One Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet Will Enable One to Digest Any Meal, Any Time | Make up your mind to go to your next meal with the desire to eat iS you will and do it \ | wy q “avery Meal Smiles at Me Now | Since I've Been Taking Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets” | After that meal take a Stuart's gan and Charlotte Spangler to es-| Dyspepsia Tablet and fear no evil) effects from the food you have | eaten, for it will be digested ens- ily, quickly Then gradually fairy dreams of Appetite will come back to you, and in a short time the old romping ap- | petite will return to you. | All druggists carry and recom. |mend Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets, 0c a box. Trial free by sending | coupon below, Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co., 180 Stuart Bidg., Marshall, Mich., send me at once by return mafl, a free trial package of Stuart's Dys pepsin Tablets. Name . Street .. City DENTAL and OPTICAL PRICES CUT suse ° such low prices hehe Optical « were over offered attle or elsewhere u need not hurry, « low prices will con the hard Hard Times Optical Prices Call at My Op tleal De part ont and uu and T will gua n 500 to $5 0 ted for save y of glaswes you may requi Juplicated @ specialty, Edwin J. Brown, D. D. S. Dentint. TAs Wiewt Leases Ave. i STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS ° First Ave. Open evenings until! & and Sun- days uptll 4 for people who work, GIVE “FIRST AID” TO WORKMEN labor | ATE BILL TO ! are better any “first aid” bill than the Kleeb measure passed by the legisiature, Gov. Lister vetoed it T id without e veto that the employers and work. men contribute In equal | amounts to the fund to provi: | medical attendance for injured workmen, but that the employ- ers shall have charge of the fund. It also provided a 10 | day waiting period before any | comp. ation may be | It also allowed the empl contract for physicians’ services, [they so desired, Small employers, unable to do #0, would have to fur-| nish « cash bond with the state tn-! dustrial insurance commia: The measure also provides that | for allen workmen the measure*of | compensation should be only one-| half the workmen The governor objects to each }the provisions, and says the last! section put a premium on the em ployhent of foretgners. In All Their Splendor for Women and Misses 1119-1121 Third Ave. Between Seneca and Spring UITS! Truly American styles in rich shades “particularly new,” such as putty and sand; also shepherd checks and the popular blues and greens. The charming styles in . which these suits are made will please you. Our selection embraces the most select gathered in America’s greatest style center—New York. Here they are now on display and at your command at prices as low as you will find in any of the Eastern markets, There is a certain style, color and price especially suited to you in our large assortment. You are invited to come and pick it out and try it on. It to You Pay for it as you can temas or wets Kisthetic Dancing Girls Fail to Show Up for First Matinee Class at Y. W. C. A, Suppose you're a woman and just a wee bit plump. And the spring styles are all for slender, willowy figures. 1 And #0, WHAT DYSPEPTICS SHOULD EAT like to adjust yourself to style- weight by dancing the Russian dances—just like Paviowa? | Three hundred Y. W. C. A. times of ten, out hour for whenever p that is actd ¥ hemical action In the girls are doing it. oaeth Not that they're all too—er | —plump, either, They do it just to keep in condition and n why dyspeptic add grace. j erera are usually # na} But not just ike Pavlowa—not elated and lacking fn that vital en-|just exactly, that is. They have ergy which can only come from althe grace, but not the garments well-fed body. For the benefit offense is. they have garments, too, im thelr diet er|but not just ike those Pavlows wears in her Russian dances Paviowa, y'know, is kinda care }less about ‘om | So, if you want to learn the Rus. upon by wit Es | the Y. W That's to avold Mr It} son's neutrality proclamation. fo seh: | thetic is another word for Russian Well, ask Mise Elizabeth Dicker \ ‘ if'tt isn't. She's the physical | Die. are | inflames the delicate ston h lining,|instructress, and she ought to rie does more than could possibly be | yrow MYSTIC done by any drug or medicine physician, I belleve in the us Medicine whenever necessary, b t I cannot see an Infiam: y with drums tn 1d. Asa of t y se of “BELIEVE DROWNED | MAN IS IN ALASKA | Chairman Nile if you want to try too fa—er— esthetic stuff, and get down to wil low-weight, if you haven't anything else to do In the afternoon, |Join the afternoon dancing class. A Puy ADVICE Wouldn't you, in spite of The class was Indigeat nd practically alll your neutrality, wouldn't you | yesterday, forma of stomact D weren't enough applicants Of course, was deserving, hard-working | ture of E | girls to get there, 4:30—but may- | be the difficulty | Maybe the bosses of the laundry | girls and department store giris| on vings will close up their shops the next time, so the girls can get in on a & Trust Co. | “Concerning Shriners’ Convention” NOTICE “JOURNEY WITH THE MYSTIC of the Shriners’ tion, which is to be held in Seattle k of July m-|sian dances at the Y. W., you'll binessed casarnenta tha te Mul |have to wear regular garments—|ciuRINE” is cold water, This will neutralize|regular gxym clothes — middy | ication which may be present, or| blouses and bloomers and stock y be formed, and instead of/ings. Pavlowa never did wear) ing ‘we Re ent asa a your food) sackinee when she danced Business men | They call it esthetic dancing at| rsons who do not have letter Joseph A. Swalwell, Illustrious Potentate of Nile Tem- are WARNED not to consider | !if@ er in your community, save “JOURNEY SHRINE” ficial publication In which the Lo- cal Shrine Temple is interested. TREFETHEN, a PERSONAL | jtion signed by DANIEL B. Publication Temple, Committee, A. A this 1 little esthetic stuff. They'll Mkely like the esthetle dances. They're not on their feet much of the time, anyway, and itl give ‘em exercise Only One “BROMO QUININE” Whenever you feel a cold comin, ERXATIVE why, to have started it didn't. There | think of the full name, | BROMO QUININE. Look for signa= w OVE on box. an awkward | 25e, will be solved. OF SEATTLE Resources Nearly $5,000,000 WHY NOT SAVE? “If you want to be anything In OFFICIAL Pub- Conven- 12th to 18th. who are called of introduc WITH THE| your money and begin to do it is the only of-|right away. You can't start too | early or young. Saving puts a man | together, makes him fit and able |to do things."—Mark Hanna. Committee, | Interest 4 Per Cent 1915 Executive | Ss.) JAMES D. HOGE, ent The disappearance of Capt. J. Ed- wards, veteran Candle, Alaska, miner, has been linked with the |discovery Sunday of an empty sail boat on Lake Washington bearing a man's hat Friends have identi- fied the hat as belonging to Ed. wards. Edwards has been missing | from the Wallfirst hotel since early ] Sunday morning { AFTERNOON AND EVENING Pol. We Make Motion Pictures Finest Equipment in the Northwest Jacobs Photo Shops Building, Seattle President. N. B. SOLNER, Vice President and Trust Officer. HOGE BUILDING Heart of the Financial District. In the KOLLER’S RINK FIRST AND SENECA = Sten DISPOSES OF ALL MEASURES ee eee Pe Ob O bad HOES Customers bring shoes inere from every part of the city, be- cause our work is different. .. It’s a bit better, REGAL SHOE REPAIR SHOP First and Senecs HALF PRICE SALE ON MONUMENTS Art Marble Co, 1540 15th Ave, N. Seattle Monument Co. 2011 Second Ave. Opp. Main Entrance Luke View Cometery Main 4196, ¢ Thin Hair Made Long, *| OLYMPIA, March 20.--Gov, Lis- 4 Abundant, Beautiful {/ter has completed consideration of > 4 @ |the legislative bills by disposing of ° @| the last six measures Tuesday mr es uae wore |) “He vetoed the Kleeb first aid bill, allowed the capitol bonds bill 999 0404 $464 696644 6H8e/to0 become law without his signa For hair that han lost ite lustre--{tre, and signed four other ineas or has become scragey and ix fall-|Ures, including the extra appropria Ing out-—there ts a surprisingly ef fective treatment that tion of $12,000 for islative ex it Into @ luxuriant, fluffy luatec ous it though he 4 fa oe ae Ht Mattous | message that the session popular in|proved to be the most extravagant xclontific|of several legislatures in the past owing and AN you ie ot vier TRANSFER STATIONS fina, @ tion whieh oT oD chestra @nd parquet METROPOLITAN Potash and | Perlmutter | #m i ompany touring A gallery, 28 Mats, Wed and nor and boxes, $1.00 galler jor's veto. ‘The bill will come up| mt {in the council Monday NO ARIZONA RACING your druggist} PHOENIX, Ariz, Mareh it andwill| Arizona will have no horse ractug | © dissatisfied. /under the parl-mutuel betting sys pa recs tem. Gov, G. W. P. Hunt has today | Star Wants Ads find the lost| vetoed the measure passed by both houses in the final hours of the| legislature, bination Harfina dandruff ts loosened itching 1s ended, the| hair is stopped from falling out and hoad of hair made strong | veautiful Harfina from articles, PANTAGES larmony Five when rubb scalp given the e showing the tr a hair an appearance of freshness and |p) ont - wing the traffic over life, and after a few applications| te elty’s Lake Burien car ine ts actually ‘Induces conditions . for |on the increase and that an extra prying fine, ae w, utiful hair,|car would soon be needed on Sun vith $t you wil elve absolutely |days, the coune! os CO Zegh Ht zee will recat lays, the counell utilities commit free She Mere tee recommended the transfer} yy @ sy which you ex jof the railway substations to the scalp and stimulate lighting department over the may- | Versatile circulation, Under thi | " LOEW’S EMPRESS | FIVE OLD SOLDIER FIDDLERS WAR TIME MELODIES And Five ¢ NEXT WEEK Starting Sunday Night SEAT SALE TOMORROW ROSE | STAHL In the New Comedy “A PERFECT LADY’ Prices 50c to $2.00 et-Me-Not Girly—8 taoular Dancing Novelty ret Revue her Big Acts nV ds find the lo