Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
“Oh, George! They're Selling the $3.00 Straws for Two Fifteen!” Yes, and five-dollar Panamas for Arrow $1.50 Shirts for $1.15. Monarch $1.00 Shirts for 75c. STAR—TUESDAY, $3.65. And B. V. D.’s for 35c. Porosknit for 35c. | The whole stock on hand «0» 's #1 Row is in fact marked down for speedy riddance—not because it’s unworthy—not because it isn’t worth the price asked—but because the He’s educated for it. s . ! Have you tried an Ice Cream) Soda at the Hollywood Lunch be, all Fia-| Teeth Extracted | Free | From 8:30 | to 10 Each To demonstrate our absolutely painiess methods, we will extract teeth free each morning. And, remember, at this office your work will be done by a regis-, tered and licensed dentist, a man) who knows his business, and knows) how to do your work properly. And a written guarantee that means something, signed by the operator | and by Dr. L. R. Clark, Mgr., goes with each piece of work. better than a guarantee that isn't) signed at all? Fountain this week? Yors.— Adv. fh. ay no attention to ists who are jealous of our suc cons. Regal Dental Offices Seattie’s Independent Dentists OR. L. R. CLARK, MGR, 1405 Third Avenue N. We Corner Third and Union | - And he has all the necessary tredentials. man! What is it Oliver says about ‘em? Why, then the millennium will Gicais ts tha there. But this is not writing a cloth. ing ad— Which is what I started out to write, Wh Suits But it seems sometimes to me that the prices on the clothing are not so important as the men who make the prices. And that’s why I've talked so much about the men—men are of more importance than clothes, anyway! But you should have seen the crowd yesterday and Saturday— Saturday was the worst ever— couldn’t wait on the people fast enough. You see, the character of the sale speaks for itself. You don’t have to yell about-- “Tremendous values.” “Superb tailoring.” “Classy models.” —and all the hackneyed expres- sions that the orthodox ad writer, in all his glory, loves to use. No, sir. The plain facts are enough. The $25.00 Suits are selling in Hutchinson’s sale for $16.75. The $20.00 Suits are selling for $13.75. These Suits are the best thet Hutchinson can find to sell at And, as stated, he has been buv- ing clothing for twenty-five years. The Balmacaans, Raincoats, Auto Dusters are all reduced about a third. Auto Coats half price and less. HE Straw Hats are selling as follows: All the $5.00 Panamas at $3.65. All the $3 Straws are $2.15. The $2.50 Straws are $1.65, and the $2 Straws are $1.45. These were all bought to sell this season. There’s not a “haswasser” of a other Shirts sold, ment than read. “| would But ought And all the Underwear is re- Hut duced. The cool B. V. D.’s and Athletic Union Suits are 75c. The Porosknit and the B. V. D. Separate Shirts or Drawers are 35c. Depos' BERKELBY, Cal, June &—Chas R. Bishop, vice president of the Bank of California, who once re), prominent Elk of Moscow, Ida fused the crown of Hawail, is dead. | {x dead here today Bishop was 93. He was head of the Hawalian ministry at the time Judge Dykeman will address th of bis marriage to the Princess Fauntleroy Men's club at the church Bernice Pauhai Paqui, After the Fauntleroy station, Tuesday ever death of King Kamehameha he was|ing. Ladies are also invited offered the throne, but declined.| dinner will be given at 7 p. m ' On the death of the princess, Bisho: inherited an estate of $3,000,000. "MOTHER MISTAKE LA GRANDE, Ore, June § | Shot by Sheriff Hugh, who mistoo’ Reduce the Burden of Doubt Recipe: One pound “99” Coffee, 25c; 40 cups galloping hot water. Boil 3 min- | utes—makes 40 cups good coffee, ready to drink. Another recipe: One cup “99" Coffee, put in cloth or wire percolator—pour over coffee 6 cups galloping hot water—drink. Sold by grocers i-lb, carton, 25c, Sen’ Wark, Creacent Mig. Co, though one that these same Shirts sold in New York city for $3.50. And he had one on to bear witness. Many of the fixtures are already him for a yeggman, John Keefe, 30, store is to be turned into a bank! ite Ribbed Cotton Union are 65c instead of a dollar. Fine Shirts are selling for about a third less than they’re worth. The regular dollar (and a few one-fifty) Shirts are cut to 75c. Lots of fine $1.50 “Arrow” and fine Shirts, in handsome stripes, are selling for $1.15. And the finest $3.00 Silk Stripe are on sale for $1.65— tor told the writer but there’s still a goodly supply of show cases and clothing fixtures. See knows all about the fixtures and the prices. That’s enough for an advertise- Mr. Halstead—he for one night. Maybe more you'll take the trouble to But— It may not be a “strong” cloth- ing ad— Like some of the old guard like to see— it has one quality which to make it at least slightly interesting — a real statement of the case. chinson’s go out of the clothing business. The Northwest Trust & Safe it Company takes the corner for its banking room. Written by George Francis Rowe . HUTCHINSON CLOTHING CO. SECOND AVE. AND UNION ST. "THE REFERENDUM _SETS UP A NEW RECORD, HE SAYS of the ' A complete check signa ,, tures filed by the Washington Ref 4 eren league, completed at noon “today by a force under Chief Reg jatration Clerk Gaines, shows that 88 per cent of the names were qual || {fed and legal This is the highest percentage,” said Chief Deputy Comptroller Ag new, “of any set of petitions ever presented here. The referendum | petitions were exceptionally free || from fraud.” The final check shows there were || dum No. endum 17,823 for No. 5, the convention system; 16,844 for No, 6, the antl picketing bill; 17,784 for No. 7, the ertificate of necessity bill; 17,710 for the port bill, and 17,474 for No. 9, the fake budget bill. These signatures were obtained in Seattle alone, Several thousand | were obtained in King county, out 3, the inittative and refer No. 8 lside the city limits, and in other | parts of the state. | The petitions will be filed at | Olympia Wednesday SEATTLE COUPLE TO WED kh RETT, June &—A marriage Heense was issued here yesterday to va Irene Batteate and Mark C || O'Meara h of Seattle. Mise || Batteate lives at 4431 40th ave, 8 Fraser-Paterson’s New Optical Department University s« “in charge) JUNE 8, 1915. 18,009 legal signatures for Referen-| 17,891 for No, 4, the recall; | PAGE 5. Q.—Will you please let me know where the state soldiers’ home is located in Oregon, also in California and is there more than one home in | California? A SUBSCRIBER | A.—The soldiers’ home in Ore in Call rnia at he one Yountville in that state Q.—As you always give such good advice to others, | concluded to come to you with my troubles, | am a young married woman, over 20. and not bad looking. | have a small |ehild, and in a way have one of the [meanest husbands In the world. | |have the biuee so bad sometimes | feel like running away so far he will never see me again. He is good to me in ways, and some ways |he Is very mean, He never takes the baby and me anywhere; doesn’t leven walk up the « with us, ae he doesn't want young girl He hie friends to know he is married [goes to his lodges, club and so forth, and my baby and | must sit jat home alone 1 have often noticed any lady Is better than his wife, It doesn’t mane any difference what | do to |please him, he will take the young girls to the theatre and treat them to ice cream and so on, If | ever speak of coming up town to meet |him from work he will say, “Stay |home and tend to your business | That is the answer | get, Miss Grey | and sometimes | think | will go crazy; then, again, | think | would hate to lose my mind over such a fool, His fault is he loves the young girls, the younger the better, you help me? YOUNG WIFE A.—Just as long as your husband thinks he can keep you home wear jing your heart out over him wil do it. Turn the tables on him and nee how he likes It. Sometime , forgets that the woma jh rried has any person u! allows thin to ocen it very will go on until she lowes her identity altogether, That's what you probably have done. Pluck up courage yourself a jolt and remind yourself that there jis no reason on earth why a man you Give jshould take the lordship attitude jtoward you. Your child will not tn terfer seriously with your going jout if you go at reasonable hours If you want to go uptow eet your hu An ye company next time he # you to # ome and mind your business, tel do, and that you are that he minds bis, 1 in taking the offensive ecemsary. But when It and make a stand Dear Miss Grey: The following has been recommended by a good physician to improve the genera! in and whiten and soften is, go to It For ail Gl-o-cide fF", UsepBy Mii Troubles bad complexion If you, too, are embarrassed by a pimply, blotchy, unsightly com plexion, nine chances out of ten ‘Resinol will clear it Just try Resinol Soap and Res- inol Ointment regularly for a week and sce if they do not make a bless- ed difference in your skin, They also help make red, rough hands and arms soft and white ey contain ne harsh or injurious ing nw GOOD SIGHT Comes by wearing my glasses because they make the eyes fo: cuf proper! ' From $ in lenses up to the finest, and guarantee them by returning your money if they don't lease vou Ww Optician | 3036-7 ARCADE J 0 spherical Can| | Carbolic acid, 20 drops; glycerine.| 1 ounce; alcohel, | ounce; lemon! juice, 1 ounce. Apply once or twicy daily EDNA A.—1 receive two or three queries daily for such a formula, and | am grateful to you for the contribution Q.—We are six girls who have a} summer camp, and would Iike to have a suitable, but not suggestive name for it. Will you kindly tell us of some that it might be named, and oblige, A BUNCH OF GIRLS. A.—Rase Cottage, Rustic Lodge. The Pines, Takoma Lodge, Dryads Green. The Bungalow, Wildwood Inn a Kla-How-ya | Camp Woods | Q.—We have a friend that has a perfectly terrible temper either recovering from or about to boil over a 35 or more years old, and should be able to see the folly of it. The most disgusting phase of it is the lame excuses she makes to justify her ac tions, and how she hedges and tells yarns to get sympathy—any- thing but to give up the very thing that will surely ruin her What is the best way to handle such a person? Your good advice will certainly help. Respectfully yours, AVA | A The fits of temper may be et lil-health, and in such ¢ the woman Is entitled to some sym pathy. It is beyond one's power to sWeeten another's sour disposition if that person is not willing to re ceive help, so, perhaps, the best way is to walk off out of hearing and let her be her own audience | when she loses ner temper. Com plete isolation from her friends ought to cure her if temper is the cause of the outbursts Q.—I'm a working girl 22 years old. Three years ago | wae engag ed to the only man | ever loved. Later he went away %o college, and thru misunderstandings on my part 1! broke the engagement. Later | | found | was wrong and apologized, | but the engagement w: }newed. He com and | am practically | sure that when he Is thru, in two | years, he will ask me to marry him Now, for the last six months | » with another man. He! poken in a general way of get ting married, and has lately shown unmistakable signs of failing In love with me. So far he has never pre sumed in the slightest manner, and | like him very much, but feéi that him enough to irning a good jary. I'm sure he enjoys my com.| pany better than any other girl he! knows, but | want your opinion |to what Is the right thing for me do regarding him. Thank you, eS M. B. A.—Follow the dictates of your| own conscience. The chances are that you would not be happy mar ried to one man when you loved another better and thought there! was a chance to win him; and if you w dd to win him and failed,! and in the meantime lost the oth too, you would probably be just junbappy. Marriage is « gamble} |any way you take it, and each must | play his own carda. | Dear Miss Grey: | noticed a query in your columns not long ago | from a “Mother,” asking how to rid | her childr heads of nits. “White! | precipitate,” sprinkled in the hair,! will drive away lice and kill the! [nits in one night. A druggist told | me of it after | had tried everything from kerosene to fish: es. Never have been bothered since, as | prinkle my children who go to School with it once a month ANOTHER MOTHER, A—Thank you for this bit of ad-| vice. It will prove beneficial to} many HOWE PICTURES WORTH SEEING For travel pictures, Lyman H Howe is undoubtedly the peer of all moving picture producers He is sowing pictures of Philtppine life rural France and U.S. naval scenes at the Moore theatre until Thurs | day night. As usual with Howe, he | bas his pictures illustrated with lat | est sound devices. Hot metal dropped in water | 1 can hear the sizzle. Boatmen rowing—you ean hear the splash of oars One of the best pictures is the er {he {firing of the big guns. You see ‘them load, aim, and fire—and you|™ can hear the roar at A number of comedy pictures! ta | also feature the Howe pictures. show !s repeated matinees and|!) The | driver of the machine was O. Wolff, 196 ESTABLISHED ac ougall fouthwick Store open trom 9a m to 6p. m. daily. Second Ave. and Vike St, Sale of Summer Coats For Little Girls and Boys HREE special lots of Coats, all Spring and Sum- mer weights, and mostly all this season’s mod- are indeed very special. The values 42 Coats $4.95 els. 2 to 6 Years Dandy little Summer Coats f Bedford Cord, Covert, Serge and Black and White Cheech [hey are all me- dium and light weight Very pecial $4.95. 36 Coats $6.95 2 to 6 Years This lot includes Silk laffeta Coats in Copen- hagen, tan, navy and black and black and white check, in several styles. Special $6.95. 64 COATS REDUCED TO $3.95 2 to 6 Years this lot includes every Coat from last season, re- gardless of former value. You will find checks, serges and cheviots. Many of these styles are practically the 3.95. —Thirad Floor, same as the later models. Very special Imported Scotch Gingham The Yard 25c Fast color gingham, 32 inches wide, in a variety of new stripes, checks, plaids and plain The yard, 25¢. Foundation Silk, the Yard 25c Silk and mercerized yarn fabric of a very high luster, suitable for slips or lining. The width is 36 inches. May be had in 14 shades; also black or white. The yard, 25¢. Ratine Suiting, Special 38c Values to $1.75" \n outing suit from this material can be made most Widths range from 36 to 43 inches. You may select from cither plain or fancy weaves. Formerly $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75. Very special, yard 38¢. Third © shades. reasonable 73e, Lace Brassieres Very Special, 50c A’ sketched, these Bras- sieres are cut V-shape and are very well made. There are two styles—one is in imita- tion Filet, the other ot Tor- chon lace. Very special, 50c. ~-Third Floor. Polo Scarf: E have a new line of these Polo Scarfs without the now caps, in white, Emerald green, old rose and Bel- gian blue. On sale in the Neckwear Section, 95e. Polo Sets, including cap and scarf, same col- ors as above, $1.75, Neckwear Section, Firat Floor MacDougall-Southwick 4 Second Av. and Pike St. WAR VET IS HURT J. A. MeKinney, a civil war vet- an who lives at the Port Orchard yme, was hit by a jitney Tuesday | orning at Second ave. and Spring and badly injured. He was| ken to the city hospital. The 6 N. Brosdway evenings. WANAMAKER AD MAN TALKS HERE : | Advertising and Sales Manager! |Appel of the Wandmaker — stores |‘ Jaddressed members of the Seattle Ad club, retail merchants, and ad vertising men at the noonday luncheon of that organization at) the Rathskeller Tuesday is Mr. Appel is on his way back | pe Kast from Los Angeles, where he | addressed the Pacific Coast Ad-| Pr men, in convention last week is His talk to the Tuesday Seattle admen |in ness,” He is a strong advocate of an absolute truth in advertising GETS NEW TRIAL - .G. Evans the American hotel, at Fourth and Pike, convicted of obtaining money from unfortunate women, was} granted a new trial Monday by Judge Alston of Everett, sitting here. former proprietor of Doctor Tells How to llayer before retiring, removing this was made up of excerpts|In from one to two weeks the com- Shed Bad Complexion restore We olal tissue any more atore a lost limb. cannot degenerated than we can It is useless to vorn-out com- The rational the compl ave the deviealts Doctor Lathrop fs licensed by the as the underlying cutis ts too! State Board of Medical Examiners too tender, to withstand. in z i ‘expose. Applylug ordins | Practice in the state of Wash at yas ds A ington, und he has been practicing een a new. youthful skin appears, /in Seattle for several years, The ft and delicately tinted as a rose|doctor does not claim that his treat tal * ment is a cure-all, and he will not No lady need hesitate to try th Doure an ounce ef mercolized wax |tke your cake If he thinks he can- the druggist, Spread on a thin|not benefit you, If medical or surgical treatment is what is need- the morning with soap and water. | aq in your case, he will tell you so, “qj.{plexion ts completely transformed, | and advise you to go to your phyai- from his convention address on “G1-|P!exlon t bee < . ("An approved — treatment — for ant Twins—Advertining and Bust | wid ies ie ye etaed Meo aiabotyioe clan and surgeon for treatment. Dr, {Lathrop does not charge for con- |sultation and you are welcome to visit his office at 214-15 People’s Bank Bldg, any day except Sun- | days, between 9 a. m, and 5 p, m. [Some of the diseases that Doctor | Lathrop suecessfully treats are: Asthma, Heart Trouble, Dyspepsia, La Grippe, Female Trouble, Consti- |pation, Lumbago. Neuralgia, Liver | Trouble, Rheumatiam, Appendicitis, of powdered saxolite In a of witeh hazel. Bathing in the solution brings and remarkable remults.—Ad- WEDDING ANNOUNCEMENTS sc lion, falling dacs Headaches, Paraly: Tnaomanta, NEOTOY, Att a Cliereons Kidney Trouble and Stomach ‘ Enaresers Trouble. Penne wpe raves ELE SOR eee eee