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To Close Out the Hats| | Values From $3.50 to $7.50 Are to Go At One Dollar Apiece Five hundred of the finest Hats anybody could wish for, sailors and gunboat shapes, white and colored, trimmed with bands of flowers, with velvet ribbons. Some with silk \ crowns. None worth less than - three-fifty. Many, many worth up to seven-fifty, are to go at One Dollar Apiece To Close Out Coats and Dresses at Five Dollars \The following list of garments has been gathered “first hand.” The news is direct. Also it is positive and correct. ! STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 11, APPENDICITIS FAULT OF BELT? LISTEN TO DOCS ere’s a story off the wire from Rochester, Minn.,” said the city ed “Doc W. J, Mayo, one of the biggest surgical guys in Amer. ring a belt ma pendicitis, Call up ttle doctors and see what they say.” Wf you are thinking of becom- Ing @ reporter, never try any such experiment, Look what the pnocent reporter for ar stirred up He called up Doc Don H. Palmer in the Lumber Exchange bullding Wears it to Reduce “What's that you say?” shouted It is not | varnished, nor “finished” in any way. © white—were $9.50. Read it. Act on it. It will pay. Seven Coats of novelty checked coating, in| blue and white, brown and white, green and Two Coats of red serge, with shepherd check trimmings—were $10.00. One of black and white check coating—was $11.50. _ One of sage green coating—was $10.00. Two of Royal Blue coating—were $8.50. Eight Dresses of blue coating serge, trimmed with braids and taffetas. ~ Two Dresses of bottle green serge. One Dress of striped taffeta silk. at $5.00 Each GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE & COMPANY eee A Uv ¥ H N sf ° U R c H s D I T owCcH > a Merchandisers and Financiers for Business Institutions, in Charge of PANTON’S DEPT. STORE "LEVEN SEVEN TO ’LEVEN ’LEVEN SECOND AVE. 100TH BIRTHDAY, You've gotta , be an octogenarian —and then some—before you can qualify for a bid to “Dad” Thomas Wardall’s 100th birthday party, next August 9, On that day the aged man, who lives with his “kid,” Alonzo, aged) 70, at 2640 Walnut ave., West Seat-| | tle, will give a “Foxy Grandpa” party to anybody and everybody) who has reached the age of 85, in| Hiawatha park He has 150 descendants, among whom is one great-great. grandchild | \in Texas. The oldest child is Mrs . of Monrovia, Cal. , N. M. Wardall, 45, jelerk for the King county commis- sioners, TRIES TO KID JUDGE RECEIVES 30 DAYS: Cc LEVELAND, Ohi | Louis Duke, aged when arraigned in municipal erim |{nal court on a vagrancy charge. “I've got a home, I'm no vagrant, | he cried. June 11, | “Where 1s your home?” asked | Judge MeGannon “Search me,” replied Duke. “I've |looked for it, but some one moved the house, I guess, and I can't find jit.” | “Thirty days,” said the judge. WILL 8.E. CO. PAY UP? Supt. Kempster of the Seattle Electric will give on Monday his answer as to whether his company will pay $8,000 as Its share of the) Alki ave. improvement assessment ‘to the city council, PLANS PARTY ON' protested | HITS FLYING BIRD WITH A GOLF BALL bag? TOPEKA, Kan,, June 11,—While| eing off” at golf S. C. Pettit shen down a sparrow with the flying ball The bird was deal when it reached the ground. It is said by golfers that such an inct- dent has occurred only once be- fore. A professional golfer on a large course in New England once | killed a bird with a golf ball, | A LESSON |In economy, easily learned |by depositing a small part| |of one’s earnings each ‘|week, soon. becomes a habit. Interest. MB Per Cent ‘UNION SAVINGS & ‘TRUST Co. OF SEATTLE ‘Capital and Surplus, $811,000 JAMES D. HOGE, President |N. B. SOLNER, Vice Presi dent and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING Palmer. “Helt gives you append! citis? Gosh! I wear one-—to re duce. I'd better call up Doe O'She: Dick O'Shea+you know him He's fat, too. He wears a belt.” But Fifteen minutes later The Star office man was fairly bursting with sound, Every telephone line into the office began jangling at once.| It soun like the Anvil “Sorus.| “Hello!” yelled the meck seribe.| “S' this Th’ Star?” It was Doc J. Tate Mason. “Say! What's that about bel Gee whit! hearing from the boys tho, cause it.” Says Mayo Didn't Say It “Hello, Star!” yelled voice, “Yes, this Lyons, Mayo never sald thing. Ph? Well, he always tell the truth, that's why. And there's) nothing to that belt thing.” Hilo! ‘Lo! Star? This is et W. T, Lovering. Mayo says the! belt brings on Q@ppendicitt That That's what I've been Porsonaliy,/ so? Well, it might tend to encour age it. I wear one, too. G'by!" There was a long, long ring on Ly particularly loud phone “Hilo!” gasped the reporter. Boston Doc Calle Up “This is Doe D. H. Craig, former | tle of thelr uncle, ? Appendicitis’; Yes.| house at 121214 First ave, 1915. PAGE 2. BY i id £ 4 ° , s pa) a : 4 pi ' sige * — eat How Shriners Wiii Decorate Cluster ight Poles =e TO INHERIT BIC GERMAN ESTATE Mrs. May Couch, proprietress of the Yellowstone, a small rooming has re ceived word from Berlin that she and her sister, Martha H, Hoth, have fallen helresses to a vast Ger- | man estate, thru the death in bat- Franz Zindeman, ly of Boston, now of Port Angeles ja German army officer I hear Doc Mayo has condemned | i How's that? Oh, be has, oh?| #ister left Seattle a few days ago) yee 1 wear one,|!m search of work delta. Well, 1 don't know. when I want to be comfortable.) Doe Mayo must have got excited or something. It was William that said it, wasn't it? I thought. Now, if it had been Charlie {t would be easier to be- leve.” Just the same, Doc Mayo did say | Berlin and a vast country home! {dea his luck had changed, and on It It's reasonable enough,” he said,) “to believe it true. Years ago, when they wore nothing but galluses, no. body ever heard of appendicitis, but since they've been wearing belts everybody wot | it.” HAS NO USE FOR DEAD ONES CHICAGO, June 11.—Albert Op. penheim of Marietta, a member of the Western Nitroglycerine Manu facturers’ association, in session here, discussing means for Increas- ing the production of glycerine, an essential element in all high ex- plosives, suggested using the bodies of the horses and men killed on European battlefields to obtain the necessary animal sinews. He said the war is necessitating the use of so much glycerine that the entire supply in the United States will be exhausted within 90 days. ‘The Dental War Is On ny mDWwin J BNOWN State Dental 6, with an Ad & Dentist as ite on the warpath to destroy com again petition. Dental Work at Own Price Your BEWARE ful Dentiate who prate of youth story and Star, and how yo a dollar, | make a dol lar and the Combine lones two dollars when I do your Dental work at your owa to any Combine Dental office in Seattle, wet their prices, then call on me for examination and consultation without Al » the penalty and suffering a neglect of the teeth. Be Fr teeth and they will do g Mh My nder m are. 1 offices establis personal have made my « and my guarantee } ¥ prices will mult y HOWN, FE Ave, Unto Seattle's Leading Dentist Matn 3640, {In the Heart of the Financial District Open evenings until & and Sundays until 4 for people who work You, that's what|!ne no children, the letter ati Mrs. Couch, a widow, says her She has not |heard from her since and does not know her exact location. The uncle died a widower, leav- en, two nieces sole and naming his heiresses to $50,000, one of largest furniture ¢ tablishments in} near the German capital He was killed in a recent skir- mish with the English. 25 pleces.—Adv Praises Nerve Specialists I feel it my duty to recommend you and your system of Dear Doctor about the state of inh |treatent to the pubite for the cure Washington guaran ai [that I received from you, For sev, oir -work b eral montha before I cailed you to my house I had been # ach, liver, kidney ne with t axes. and for several was bedfast, with high fey with symptoms of appendiciti 1 called in three physicians before I called you In, and T got worse under their treatment, T received great re lief from your first treatment if you will remember cor Iw able to come to your offices f i treatment after you had given four treatments at my hous | gained 12 pounds in two weakw white treating with you. I feel better to- day than I have felt for year Vraternally REV. D, W, TOWNSEND. Consult me in regard to your all ment, and If Tenn help you 1 will teil you #0; and if T cannot help you I will not take your case. If medt cine or surgery In what is neoded in you o, Twill tell you #o, and ad ck to your phy Dr dd Nerve | Npeclalist, Bank Hidg., Second urs oa m, to 6 p.m. Consultation free, _ SEATTLE WILL the | For a folly, time, attend) Vasa Orden'’s Grand Picnics at Fortuna Park next Sunday. Music, Rev. D. W. Townsend |\of nearly the same size and age as DON GALA DUDS FOR SHRINERS Seattle will donning (ts clothes within the next 30 days “begin to get ready for the coming of the thousands of Shriners who will visit here during the middle of July. The first building to be dec orated, the Alaska building, will be all dressed July 4, and the others will follow rapidly At the same time the street dec rations will begin under the direc by tion of Nile temple On First, Second, Third and Fourth aves, as well as on Pike #t. and around the railroad stations, the cluster light poles will be dis tinetively decorated with American \fags and Shrine emblems, with hanging baskets of flowers under. neath, The designa will represent the | Shrine colors of red, yellow and green. Along some of the thoro-| fares will be pyramids, bearing the names of different temples and the slogan, “Smile with Nile | On others will be Shrine selmi |tars, sphinx heads and tiger claws, together with the traditional | crescent. | Overhead along the streets will be ropes supporting strings of streamers, pennants and American flings, 25,000 American fiage being used in the downtown district At night all of these will be {/lum- inated in the Shrine colors, the city and electric company having each donated special electric current to. make the illumination beautiful | during the week ‘LOSES BY GAMBLING, \WIFE SEEKS DIVOR DETROIT, June 11.—It is not be- jeause Harry Swaton is a poker player that his wife wants a di- | voree, but because he {s such a bad jone, When she married bim four ago, she sald, she told him |he wae one of the best men and! worst poker players she ever met,| jand Must proceed to forget what [little he knew about poker. | He couldn't see anything In cards anyhow, he replied, he'd quit poker. But after t honeymoon waned, she declares, he got the his first experience he was thrown out of a cellar for questioning the legitimate acquisition of four aces }a man held against his king full. While still using crutches, he | went to @ card party and lost all) he had except his crutch, and later his Qm—O> by wrecking the room, lost friends also. The host has not spoken to the Swaton family since. So, if she has her way, be is going to lose ber, too, now. SILVER SPIKES MEND FRACTURED HIP BONE FOND DU LAO, Wis., June 11.— George Mulbollan, South Byron, who was taken to the hospital six weeks ago suffering from a frac- tured hip, will leave that institution with his limb in as good condition as it was before In the reduction of the fracture the surgeons performed a rare op-| eration, the first of its kind in| Fond Du Lac county. Two ten-| penny spikes, silver plated, were] nallod thru the hip bone to bring |the broken parts together. The| bones have now knit and Mr. Mul-| hollan is able to walk about as well | as ever before. | | | ‘HEN MOTHERS BUNNY | GENTRY Mo., June 11.—A} young 1 it found by Arthur) Keen who lives east of here, a few days ago, was,taken pome and placed in a nest of young kittens the rabbit. The mother cat quietly} adopted the little stranger, se ing to think as much of {t as she! Aid of her own offspring | ‘BLIND, HE’S LAWYER| PIERRE, |the successful applicants for ad-| | mission to the bar at the recent | before the supreme lcourt was Ole H. Flow, a native of the Black Hills, who has worked under the handicap of blindness from birth For years he made his way in the world as a plano tuner, but] aspired to the law, and securing al copy of Blackstone, had his sister read the work to hi. | examination | A great many applicants have been rejected because they are un- |der the age limit of 20 years. estimated between 2,500 and 3,000 Italian reservists will leave Seattle for New York to embark for Italy for war consul Lyon building, ese $17 $35 e Used Ranges And we advertise them as such. Most of them are in perfect order and will give the best of satisfac- tion, and several of these are standard make Ranges, insuring long-time service. The prices are close to half of what you would pay for them new. In all, there are about twenty to be sold right now. 12 Used Gas Ranges Are Priced $7.50 to $28 Here’s a Big Stock of Used Buffets That Must Be vibictbonn hered Oak Buffet; new slight!) $ used. Special 7.50 Fumed Oak Buffet; new $27.50; Special... DL 7:50 @ Special Early English quarter-sawed Onk Buffet; new $32.50; slight- ly used. sei $18. 00 celal Golden Oak Buffet, all quarter- sawed oak; new $15.00 27.60. Special at Golden Onk Buffet, very large; new $20.00; slightly used pen tee 91700 Waxed Oak Buffet, solid | Extra large Early English quarte’ wed oak; new $37.50; | Buffet; new $40.00; slightly slightly used, Spe oo a $20.00 | ci $25.00 Fifteen Vernis Martin and White Enameled Beds Have Lowered Pricés | G.R. Furniture Exchange 511 Pike 511 Pike side points. Within the next two weeks {t is service Dr. A. J. Ghiglione, acting royal in the Ni 1332-34 Second Ave, and 211 Union St. cee eee Store Open Saturday Evening Till 10 Suits A tailor-made Suit from the “Eastern” gets special attention for it must uphold our excellent reputation We are showing new, summery colorings besides blue and black worsteds and cheviots. “Today's styles today” never meant more than it does in our Tailor-made Department $35 $37.50 and $40 Dress Well on Credit! Why shouldn't you buy proper apparel on credit? You are just as much entitled to good clothes as the wealthy. It don’t cost any more to buy on credit from us; in fact, it don’t cost as much, as the easy payments would most likely be spent for things not as appropriate as good clothes, Don’t hesitate. Come in tomorrow. Clothes That Give Satisfaction In fit they are perfect, in style they are abselutely correct, in ser- vice they are unequaled, in unob- served details they are thoroughly reliable, in price they are no higher =e =< On morpzZ mACwH > mM than others. They will fulfill every promise we make about them. See that your next suit-is a $20 BRADBURY $22 Others at $15.00 to $22.50 ! by applicants for examination dur- ling the last few days and by hun- dreds of letters received from out- - Ee -