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DO HOUSE DRESSES TO GO AT 49c APIECE ze OREMOST among tomorrow’s offerings is this lot of House Dresses at forty-nine cents apiece. They're made of good gingham and percale in stripes, plain colors, black % and white checks, etc. 4 They've never been sold in Seattle for less than a dollar apiece. Seventy-two will go on sale tomorrow at 49c each. All sizes—plenty of extra big ones. " R'Sor- near by there’s a lot of twenty F ge and lawn dresses in small Twenty-eight waists of chiffon over white net. Low neck, short sleeves, collar of brocaded silk, with plain “Windsor” Tie to match. Choice of brown, gray, navy, cream. These were $5.00 to $7.50 each. While they last you can buy them at $1.95 each. EN White Chinchilla Coats are also underpriced. These are the finest | quality “Worombo” Chinchilla, and many stores have asked twenty dollars F Very pretty. They were $3.50 to $5.00 apiece. If you can find your size, you may buy them for a dollar apiece. Twenty-eight very fine silk dresses for afternoon and evening wear are also marked for speedy riddance. a These were $22.50 and $35.00 each. And they’re all new! Plain and figured silks in beautiful colors. for such. ; Some of fine chiffon in white and, They're all this season’s newest «rose. styles. All sizes. We have cut the price to $8.98. Choice at $10.00 each. iE. OURTEEN handsome tailored suits 9 in serge, gabardine and wool pop- lin, that were $25.00, will be sold at ten dollars apiecc. i Choice of navy, sand and black and And they'll all sell at that figure. Also we have fourteen dress skirts in the new flaring style at $2.98 each. They're made of all wool serge and cheviot, in navy, black and white, etc. The original price was $6.98. Now they’re less than half—$2.98 each. TOURIST TURBANS 29c A smart Turban, made of straw braid, in navy, red, purple, green and black. About a hundred Trimmed Hats, sailor shapes; trimmed with flowers Fits on Ideal for motoring and and foliage. Originally produced to a." sell at five times 69c Flowers—all kinds, to close out, 5 bunches for 5c. Not less ‘than five to a purchaser! GEORGE FRANCIS ROWE & COMPANY Merchandisers and Financers Business Institutions. PANTON DEPARTMENT STORE "LEVEN SEVEN TO ’LEVEN ’LEVEN SECOND AVENUE ROAD CONTRACT Gy L GRAPPLES gees Seemncs en) WWI TN ‘DRY’ CIT Y | oe "| FINANCE PUZZLE in Charge of the Redmond-Issaquah road, 10 Budget making is about to step to stepicity’s 1 revenues appreciably, the| jinto the limelight again at the city| mayor points out hall All departments except the police | Mayor Gill late Tuesday wrote announce they probably will be able! to reduce their estimates Police Chief Lang, however, wants jthe heads of city departments, ask ing them to submit thei stimates for the coming year #8 soo sible The mayor Station at Fourth and Pine the force hasn't five years, and that the coming too vy The mayor doesn't think another substation is needed, and say chief will be lucky if he ge more men CYCLONES HIT SOUTH DAKOTA He says that |penses be cut to the minimum is anxious ex work Is be. The lopping off of $35 in liquor license fees, by reason of the |state going dry, and the decrease in police court fines, also as a result of prohibition, will decre SLAYER OF AGED. PAIR ACQUITTED 0,000 DR, L. R. CLARK Dental War Is On! _ There has been such a lot of! Ming and walling in certatn| = since we made the an cement that this office employ ly dentists who have certificates | tenn, Sve eet Sword of) = widest guilty,” wae the verdict ABERDEEN, 8. D., June 16 ’ | returned by a jury in Judge [Several persons were killed and Here's Why We Do It | Gilliam’s court late Tuesday in | $200,000 damage was done by twe the first place, {t's according jaw—that ought igh for any one. ace, civing a writ the case of Henry Schmidt, the | tornadoes young Des Moines rancher, charged with firet degree mur der for the death of Henry A. Stok Mrs. Stokes w: which swept this section during the night A heavy hafl storm accompanied, the tornadoes, leveling crops and |prostrating telephone and telegraph | to be reason also killed in wires the fatal quarrel, when Schmidt | ee ; felled Stokes with an iron pipe | Th* Storms were distinct. The after the latter had attacked [first swept over tho village of him on May 14. Brunt, injuring several persons.| rather than take her kind, and for this rea- | m Our business is growing faster in that of any other office in this ‘section of the country To be sure that your dental oper- | itor is competent. demand to see is certificate. In our office each} rator’s license hangs right on! clamation, “Gott sei dank! tl Wall in front of his chair, so Fou can see st without any trouble if he doesn't approve « of running a dental office . willing to the public be the judge, and from | the way our list of patrons ts In- ereasing the public seems to be put- | fing the stamp of approval on our | way of doing it You get a written guarantee here, signed by the operator who does the When the verdict was read Mrs. Schmidt, carrying her 3- month-old baby, rushed to her husband and theew her arms about his neck, with the ex- The second struck early today north of Highmore, and devastated a path | 40 miles long. East of Highmore | the two storms met, and there the| |damage was greatest YARDMASTERS SEE THE TOWN A long atring of automobiles left the New Richmond hotel Wednes. day morning, carrying nearly 100 jovial yardmasters, delegates to the A romance which had its begin ning when the company was first organized in Seattle, culminated in | Skagway, Alaska, June 3, when} Patsy Henry, comedienve with the Juvenile Bostonians, a Seattle the- atrical troupe, became the wife of Work and by Dr. L. R. Clark, D. D.| Mathew V. Lermer, the company's |second national convention here, for ®. manager. Our prices are the| scenic artist. Papers from Skag-|a trip over the boulevards way, which arrived Tuesday, tell| This afternoon the same crowd Teeth Pulled Free of their marriage there on June 3./will be taken over the Milwaukee for a tour of the city’s railroad ter BE wsoraing trom gel TWO AUTOS COLLIDE minais. The day will ond with a Midenstrate our pain short business session this evening - John Mehan, of Proctor, Minn Regal Dental Offices Judson Smith, 12, of 1902 Jackson|grand vice president of the Yard st, 18 in the city hospital recover-: masters’ association, entertained OR. L. R/ CLARK, Mgr, ing from injuries sustained when|the body Tuesday afternon with 4405 Third Ave, N. W. Cor. Third| Fraser-Paterson and Seattle Butter. |rocital ot the meoweh ut vy with and Union ‘milk Co. autos collided, Tuesday. ization, giving most of the credit to mine Grand President Murphy of Duluth AMUSEMEN T S |Grand Secretary W. H. Streeter and itary eontecneesaricgeesapeennenenetcnpeeeenee- \Frank R. Hanlon, former general MOO Fri. and Sat. | manager of the O-W. R. & N. Co. Nights METROPOLITAN Jalso spoke MATINER SATURDAY TONIGHT—ALL. WEEK Hamplon.JubileeSingers Chauncey Olcott OFFICERS ELECTED 19, We, The. Matinee, 250 he follow Washington Children’s Home so. clety were efcted at the annual PANTAGES Empress Theatre meeting, Tuesda John Sehram president; D. A. Duffy, J. KB. Gal TOM LINTON Direction Sullivan & Considine |braith and E. Shorrock, vice presi AND HIS JUNGLE GIRLS Big Comedy Show, Including dents; 8. D. Wingate, James ¢ QUE QUON TAI “BVERYRODY” ana |Cunningham and Lewis F. Lowe cage ty rig eR ae MME. JOMEL secretaries; EB. L. Blaine and W, D gh Shoteh Matinee—2:20. Night Shows, 7-29, 9.10.) Vineent, treasurers, and L. J. Cov 1c nnd 206 | Summer Prices—Mat, 100, Eve, 10c, tbc |ington, state superintendent. additional men and a new sub-| STAR—WEDNESDAY, JUNE 16, 1915. Announces Wonderful Discovery Immunity againet tuberculosis by | vaccination! Dr, Enrico Castelll of the medical {faculty of the University of Genoa Italy, traveled 7,000 miles to Seattle to make this announcement of } dinee to the medical profess and rr If br. ¢ telli and his colleagues Jof the university at Genoa can ac complish all claimed night at the convention of the Na ttonal Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis, ¢ | white h he ts aw de then the jnews is of greater world-wide tm portance than was the announce ment that Jenner made years ag he [DOCTOR WHO DECLARES HE HAS WAY TO INATE AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS: Tuesday} that he had found a vacetne inimical | to smallpox } Apply Method Successfully ; Dr, Castelli ta a ble man in own country of the hin but ma dele afterward expressed a desire shown | "We have applied successfull said Dr. Castelli, “the hod of vaccination againat tuberculosis |which was conceived for the first jtime by Maragliono in 190% We Jare now able to apply this vaccina ition on a large scale among humar beings and animals, and we have | shown that an vaccinate nant women and animals and obta prod showing fo onception maplete Immuni« Cows and Mothers We have vaccinated babies,” he declared, “during the first six | months of life, when the body shows fa natural immunity againet tubercu losis infection, and we have obtair Jed an immunity which in some cas jhas proved to be still active fo years after the first Innoculation of the vaccine. | The greatest use, Dr. Castelli be to which the discovery can t Ia the vaccination of mothers and milch cows ¥ eding babies mil sand vaccin hima tn the source of Infection of th e In my opinion a ba « made immune thru the vaccination of the mother and self va jon, and] |kept In a condition of active reac: | tivity against a possible infection by |the feeding of immunized milk, is a | victim stolen from tuberculosis. He said that in the province of Genoa are a number of farm- ers whom the professors at the university, who have been working on the discovery quiet ly for years, have trained in the technique of immunization of cows, and it has been demon. | | | | strated to them that the milk thus obtained does not change, either in t ing qualiti SAYS PHYSICIANS | ARE CARELESS IN | ite or in ite nourieh- been increased for} ROME, June 16-—Powerful de trians have halted the Italian ad | vance upon Trieste from Monfal | An attack on alleged careless | cone. and indifferent methods on the) ‘This statement was made offic t of practicing physicians tn |iy from the war offic ta aling with tuberculosis was! Vat) these wor an be reduced made Wednesday morning by Dr.| progress of the invading army is ex James 8. Ford, assistant physician \oeted to be slow of the Gaylord Farm santtarium,|" phe fighting about Goritz contin allingford, Connecticut, in a pa y, re ° | per read before the clinical section |U0® With unceasing fury, reports t of the Nat | Study and ‘ovis, in em General practitioners, he coi jtended, are on the whole remiss in their part of the fight on the great | white plague, and said it must be part of the association's work to impress them with the Rravity of the situation al Association for the Pre mtion of Tuberew. convention at Pilgrim 1,000 patients, examined by 1,940 | physicians | “Only of these physicians took temperatures,” he said, “altho this may frequently be the only sign present in es pulmonary fore ulosis | A report on 18 |trom pulmonary treated by compression of |lung, or artificial pneumothorax was the subject of a paper read by | |Dr. C. H. Vrooman, of the ae ual Sanitarium at Kamloops, B. C Real Relief. from euffering means true hap PAGE 2. VA Or. AUSTRIANS FIGHT ON RUSSIAN Enrico Castelli TERRITORY PETROGRAD, June 16.—Ave trians have the nvaded Bessarabia, Russian province north t of Czernowitz, it was of ficiaily admitted today On the extreme end of the southeastern front the Austrian forces are pressing their of- fe conjunction with the general AustroGerman attack extending on a line from the north of Przemysi south and tward to the rontier. An official etatem war office today said: “Be tween the Oneister and Pruth rivers our forces retreated be yond the Russian frontier and the enemy followed.” AUSTRIANS CHECK crossing of the Iw patients suffering |at Stuttgart ITALY’S ADVANCE the war office sta Bombardment of the Austrian po sitions continues, while desperate efforts are being made to force a o as points. Along the Carnia front the Italians are progressing slowly, but are forced to carry all positions at the point of the bayonet fetuit See COUNT ZEPPELIN 1S REPORTED ILL BERLIN, June 16-—-(Via_ The} Hague.)—Count Zeppelin, admiral of the German aerial navy, ts fil He in reported to be tuberculosis and | suffering from bronchitis and con the | fined to his bed CUNARD DIRECTOR | ON WITNESS STAND LONDON, inquiry June 16.—When the into the torpedoing of the Piness. The trouble duc to indi-\}usitania was resumed today be gestion and biliousness, is remove fore Lord Mersey, A. A. Booth, quickly, certainly and aeiety te 7 BEECHAMS _ PIL Largest Sale of Any Medicine igi World MGs trerywhere. "tm bones, 10e-+ 26a When You Wash Your Hair Don’t Use Soap allents it the dries the maken sealp and The beat thing to plain mulaifi pcoanut thie im pure and entirel lens, It's very cheap, and beats soaps anything else all to pieces, You can get this at an drug store, and « few ounces will t the whole family for montha Simply inten ft in, me wit! a ten dirt and dandruff <<< ——_______ Use Star Wants Ads for Re- Its. FINEST MEATS Lowest Prices Frye &Co. Markets Thursday Specials: Choice Washington oice joul- 12:c der Pork Steak . Choice Steer He 18¢ Shoulder Steak 18c 10c Choice Steer Pot Roast, Ib.. Choice Steer Round Steak Choice Loin “ork Chops... Choice Spare Loi EEE Cee Fresh Ranch Eggs ....... . for 45¢ Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp It signifies purity and quality Shope Open Until 6:20 >. M. several | of directors rrobora Turner that 25 boilers wero Ww r last trip. 1 “In said Booth, “the company considered the advisabi! ity of discontinuing the setlings of {the Lusitania and Mauretania. Be leause of the war, there was a | decrease in travel. We de to continue the veasels in |nervice, but at reduced speed, in |order to «ive operating In view of the warnings ker from submarines, Booth said [he recognized that speed was es rential If the Lusitania was to es-|latest note | cape | It may be three weeks or more But I concluded,” he said, “that before the American rejoinder ts [it made little difference whether answered, according to latest re the Lusitania was making 21 or 25| porte | knots, 1 believed at either » An indication that the president the abip would be too fast for sub marines.” BRYAN DISCUSSES _ WAR IN STATEMENT WASHINGTON, June 16—For Secretary of State Bryan today ed the first stallment of his | coomiihed three-part statement Headed “The War as It In and Its Injury to Neutrals,” the state. ment said in part War is an international nui sance, Nearly every pation finds new domestic problems thrust jupon it and problems made more difficult No American citizen can note without deep concern the manner in which war questions have in truded in our politics—overshadow old ing economic issues and stimulat ing agitation in favor of enlarged appropriatic for military and naval purpor Neutrals are put to greater ex pense to preserve their neutrality }and are constantly in danger of being embroiled unintentionally If nations are determined to | fight, they should, so far as pos |sible, bear the burden themselves jand not be permitted to transfi It to nations avoiding war by re. sorting to reason instead of force. "In all history, no such oppor tunity has ever come to any nation as is destined to come to America, the statement continued. “No oth er peacemaker was ever In the po- sition to claim so rich a blessing as will be pronounced upon our | president when the time for media- eae comes—as come it must DECORATE MAN WHO | SUNK LUSITANIA | LONDON, June 16.—The subma | marine U-21 sank the Lusitania, ac. cording to the Elsinore, Denmark, | correspondent of the Evening Star | “I have learned here,” the cor respondent cabled bis paper today that the order of merit was re-| | ce ntly bestowed upon Lieut. Her. zing, commander of the U-21_ by |the kaiser in recognition of the |sinking of the Lusitania ‘ASK PARLIAMENT TO ‘ADOPT WAR PROGRAM ATHENS, June 16 | |paper Herta, organ of the war | party, today called upon the ‘gov Jernment to convoke parliament to| Jearry out the war program approv Jed by the people in returning For | mer Premier Venizelos to power in Sunday's elections. King Constontine has suffered a The news-| TO GRADUATE CLASS Bishop O'Dea of Seattle will give the graduation address to the fourth {class to be turned out of the Ca |thedral school, and a varied pro- gram, including a playlet, “The Tri umph of of the Pixtes,” will be given by students, Wednesday even ing. that « t 5 a quarter-sawed finished golde i lo be sure, it w it in the least. $ seat and back pecial 50 other Chairs that sé uarter 4 11 PIKE as used some, but not enough to hurt lid oak, with imitation Spanish leather Very large and comfortable. Extra ; Re $3.75 priced $1.50 t $12.00 Id new, each, $3.00 to $10 Used Rocker Spel $5.50 awed oak with genuine leather pad led seat; very | anc roomy. Rocker \ at $10.00, Extra sp: 85.50 Other used Rockers are priced $1.00 $15 Regular prices, new, $1.75 to $35.00. TWENTY-FIVE $12.50 USED DESK TABLES writing Large $8.00 Fireside Chair Spec $3.75 G.R. Furniture Exchange 511 PIKE WON'T ANSWER U.S, FOR 3 WEEKS United Pr WABHINGTC BOND P. GE June DOES many and the United States are to be given a This ‘cooling oft” is the construction placed | Ws awarded the contract for in- period today upon Berlin reports that some time will does not expect an early answer te| elap’ lover July 4 Officials were silent today garding the charges of the Tribune that this government was declared really to be Dr. Alfred was declared to really be Dr. Alfred Meyer, and whose mission was that of a munition purchaser and spy Dr. Gerbard visited Washington jonce during his stay in this country re. New Staff Correspondent. and at that time conferred with Red 16.—Ger- ‘ees officials. The Cascade Gas & Electric Co. stalling light fixtures in the new court house by the county commis- fore a reply wilt! sionera Tuesday on a bid of $25,000. forwarded to President Wilson's the plan of the executive to leave |Gecq pewed Work. Best Oak Leather week Best Productions and Most Noted Stars WE OFFER Vall Valli ite Musical STAR, Late of “THE CHOCOLATE SOLDIER” and “THE PUR- the Role of Mary Page, the Fiery Heroine in the Sensational Dramatic Surprise As an Added Feature—PATHE’S NEWS With All the News Worth Seeing The Exqui |Washintgon the middie of next| eau 68, Lower Floor Pike Place Market He is is expected to be gone TT TT ITiTgit Always Catering to Those Who Want the PLE ROAD,” in THE HighRoa One of the Greatest Triumphs of the Stage and a Most Attractive Production aie COMING—SUNDAY, JUNE’ 27—COMING “The Birth of a Nation” D. W. GRIFFITH’S $500,000 PRODUCTION ‘CLEMMER: 10¢e—Seattle’sBest Photoplay House-1e © PP Ser es —~* SS