The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 7, 1915, Page 3

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STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT, 7, 1915. PAGE 3. FATHER TIME ANI NEVER FAILING 3S WILL SOON CUTYS REMEMBER THE DATE - SATURDAY SEPT 2DS'! WE (LOSE OUR DOORS FOREVERD 915 SEPTEMBER 191 MON TUES. WEI 1 678 91 1415161 ZL £e20'2 Al > HIS Y Tt vQWN: —— WILL AL There still remains thousands of dollars’ weit of high-class, seasonable merchandise for men and young men that must be sold by September 25th. Why hesitate? Why delay? Come to this store, take advan- tage of this opportunity ‘that comes but once in a lifetime. America—Manhattan Shirts, Lewis and Cooper’ _K id Stetso: in the beginning of the Fall and Winter phe woodearndlgg: aap hy bargains not mentioned here almost given away. st $1.00 Choice of over Just think—what the finest Clothing in Hats, mean to you right season at these prices. Bear in mind there are thousands of other 250 paire of Men's Pure 200 paire of patterns; laun- Light, medium Hf dered or soft or heavy weight HAND TAILORED SUITS a3 OVERCOATS ALL SIZES OUR $35 VALUES THE NEWEST $1.50 Shirts, laundered or soft cuffs $2.00 and $2.50 Dress Shirts, finest quality Choice of our entire line of $18.00 Suits, Overcoats and $12.85 line of $15.00 Suits, Overcoats and - PUBLIC NOTICE |” Our sale is bona fide. We will:positively end our business career September 25th. The same high class merchandise we have al- ways sold is now offered at these astounding re- ductions. We guarantee the same satisfactory and courteous treatment that we have always given during our many years in Seattle. Sweater Men's Worsted and Cassimere Pants, our $3.50 and $4 vaiues | plain serges and | cassime $5.00 $5.00 and $6.00 Borsalino Soft Hate 's $5.00 Coats Silk and Liste Hose Choice of our entire line of $30.00 Suits and Overcoats $16.85 PUBLIC PULSE FELT IN U.S., BILL SHEPHERD DISCOVERS By Wm. G. Shepherd {United J ates, of whon the presi (United Press Staff Correspondent) tions Yt Ia iitle waren he et WASHINGTON, Sept, 7.—It 1*| gray and a little thin. Of those whe here, at the heart of the United come from Kuro he will « States, that I completed the discov What are the people of France ory of America. The discovery had | (inking Fred. Bh iad on Ah gs gh begun in Europe where, in the war. ae ersans king? ridden countries, | heard Amertea » doean't ask what armies are praised and flattered and saw fta|doing, or ¥ g ments are Kood opinion sought by all the|doing. The tlon armies and chancellories. | had cor What are eople thinking tinued my discovery of America in| It is this © question he ash the weet and east of the United whenever opportunity afford States where | found Americans |In regard to the Ame un people usy, happy, unworried and confi-|/BUT THERE 18 NO RULER IN dont EUROPE TODAY APPARENTLY And now in Washington I dis.) WHO CARES WHAT THE PEO cover, at last, what makes the PLE THINK, 80 LONG AS THEY United Staten different from every FIGHT. And there ts no country in other country in the world Europe where it is safe for a mat President Wilson is grayer and to way what he thinks, providing thinner than he was when | saw/he thinks against his goverament him as governor of New Jersey iy di This year of war in Europe, andthe About the White House you see other years of trouble in Mexico, newspa men in throngs They have left their mark on him; there don't # © president every ¢ is the same old boyish winsomeneas|!t inn't necessary. Hut they are constant and daily touch with the representatives. What the president doe he thinks what he's trying to do—they know all. This is not said to boost Woodrow Wilson, Any man fn the esident's p' would ha the thing This thin keeping in touch of the wonde United which you dis after you return from warring Europe It doesn’t seem wonderful to Americans. But after you've seen millions of citizens of va rious nations in Europe march- ing to death, willy nilly, with out being consulted, without even being requested, only un- der orders, you begin to appre ciate the marvel of there being a nation on the earth where the opinion of the people counts. bout his emil often but he doesn't smile he used to, . president's { at | “What's the differ between you, Mr. President of United Staten, and the mighty masters of the warring countries of Europe?” ta a Question you can find yourself silently putting to him The difference is that Woodrow Wilsonand any other man who might be in the president's chair at this time would have to do the same thing—1» constantly to discover what is best people of the United States and what they want him to do. But the) rulers of the nations in Europe all are asking, “What shall I order the people to do for me? | You can stand on the Whit House lawn and see them going into the White House, the men and| women from every corner of the TIRED OF ILL HEALTH, WIFE OF LOCAL MAN ENDS LIFE same government he th public nts «about ate seeking for [since she was separated from her |husband in 1% "You know what the cause of my death is, so | forbid an ad be len’s $3 Hats, the latest styles, either soft or derby shapes, $1.95 Choice entire stock B. V. D. or Porosknit, two- piece Underwear, 39c VEITH-CAMMACK CO. eattle Hotel Bid . 2nd Ave. at James Free Fare to Purchasers of $25 or Over JEWS RAISE FUND | An attempt to raise a greater sum than heretofore for the relief of suf Jews in the European war fone will be made here next Sunday | CONFESSIONS OF to have a voice in the affairs of THE IRISH CAN’T KEEP OUT OF Je Ji POLITICS the city and the nation. Enterprt petatio Dick looked up in surprise. “Harry Symone always does the| “Are you a suffragette, Margie?” right thing, Annie,” said Dick as} “I am not; in thinking that ‘the he heard of his beautiful gift to|vote’ will give a woman all her Margaret Anne. “We're thinking |rights, but I think she should have of running him for mayor next|the right to vote if she wishes spring. Tell Tim that {t would be|She Is a citizen and as such should a good thing if he would pass the| participate in forming the laws of word around among bis friends.” |her country.” “It's mesilf that'll do that, Mr.| “But she can't fight.” Dick, and I'll tell the women about] “Oh, can’t she, though?” Inter. it, too. Ay course, you won't give |rupted Annie. “You just come down ft away, but down in our ward, Mr.\jn our ward some evening when Dick, most of our men vote the Way /the Stultzes and the Flanigans are their wives want them to. Most of |having a set-to and ye'll find that us know more about what the boss |+he women in the two families are {s doing for the ward than do our | holding their ends up and are lay husbands, They do be talking big |ing just as many out as the men,” about who they are going to vote Mercy, Annie, do you have free for, but f notice last fall they de \roray fights down there like your feated that rascally lawyer for the | gogeription?” judge's place, altho they say he is} a good democrat’ and promised @¥-| son why I am anxious for Tim to RHEUMATISM Cured to Stay Cured Torturing, grind ing, rasping pain Jerything to the gang, and by the\14 transferred, so that we can same token it was because of those| nove into a Ketter locality jsame promises that he was beaten cst inset A We women have decided at our} | mothers’ meetings that we'll beat up that gang. We don't want our lward to be run by liquor dealers and men who own the houses of iI $2.5 tame | Last fall we commenced and| we did up that would-be judge| all right.” | a ‘What do you think about giv . ing women asked Dick * Well, you see, Mr. Dick, 1 don't Yl now much about tt, but I'll tell mbi-|ye one thing, it ‘ud be good for our thy ward if the women could vote, for) ak | some of the men still cling to that barrel house gang, notwithstanding tall their wives can say.” | their the franchise, Annie? | LZ Z women to perfer| “Do you think would have courage enough to vote) For 10 days we will fit a gold BEAGTIFULLY ILLUSTRATED against their husbands, Annie? filled frame with spherical lenses Wouldn't they? Some of the and leather case, complete, for women down th would be so This inchides a careful ane 4\giad to vote against them that [| curate examination belleve they would craw] on their 14 and knees to the polls if they t there any other way | about your ha couldn't “How does Tim f voting?” Vite it y Ottice hours: 9 @ Maturday evenings, 7:40 . The Elect M0 6:00 pon % " uty Optical Parlors H. C, and M. Curry C ra-VitaCo. “Well, ve know Tim's got ense.| — eVeSiGHT SPECIALISTS DEFT and he says if he can trust me to| Room 206 Kmpress Theatre Bids. | riyn his house and his baby and 3064-66 Arcade Bidg. Second Ave, Cor, Spring Beattie, Wash. Bring This Ad With You himself, he thinks be can trust mel “Sure we do, and that's the rea-| She had been living in New York and the city 1 system for smaller cities will occupy a large part of the time the delegates to the sixth ¢ wal conf |League of Washington Municipall \tles, to be held in North Yakim |October 6 to & Announceme the program has just been made b y the bur of municipal reseach at the bureau of municipal rch at which is the headquarters for the league (Corrected daily by J. W. k autopsy. My reason 1 am | A book she hi tired of fighting ili health. | jopen at a page te have had 10 years of it and i | wan discussed sure | ca r be weil and have no more courage lett LEAGUE OF CITIES With this note on a table beside the bed, the body of Mre. Ruth N TO DISCUSS 4 0. Mould, wife of H, 8. Mould. me we at the Butler bh 1 here 8 for — in bed, with a bullet wound in her| Public utility problems—especial temple, in a New York apartment,|ly municipal ownership, public according to word received here health uinistra . public water today supplies, municipal milk su s t of rence of the | | * o- | 14] TOOTH TALKS: ~~~." 3. | Cal, erapetcutt, 3.50 and | 1.0 10 1% Imitation Dentists ‘ 18 @ By EDWIN J, BROWN, D.D. 8, |< 713 First Ave, Union Bik. ; 1.00 @ 1.2 Seattle's Leading Dentist senegal The Largest Dental Office in the | Graves ayer a World, Imitated by Many—Equaled | 40°" pom * by None. Hone ue When you read a Dental adver-|¥ cata “@ |tisement and recognize phrases in It ene pene « “But 1 must be going now which have long. ago been pted | Nave . 1% @8 “Give all the sick ones Annie’s|#nd used by some other Dentist, | Pereley es 4 respects, Miss Margaret, and tell/¥OU must admit that the imitating | PracPer hf te PN them I'm saying a little prayer for| Dentist who {s so low, unprinctpled | piums ss @1 | them every night and morning.|4¢ Ignorant as to steal his phrases |iowr es ees Good-bye, Mr. Dick. Wave hand to/#%4 advertisements from another ae the gentleman, Margaret Anne, and| Dentist, Is too low, too dishonest, x D .40 ‘Sake waar gokmothac |too unprinctpled, and too ignorant erving toma - "And yet they way that women|‘ be trusted with the care of your is have no influence tn polities,” mur.| ‘et? 1 mared Disk as Annie went out of A DENTAL HAM «a's rd . Do you know what a “Ham Den-| Gravenstein 126 @1 gia ie igen eet ‘eet 8 cdl IR ea Ble cl ppaartee bo opens 7 appointed leutenant, That Irish-|ON® who ie too lazy to study |Oroun’ atone Tan has the stuff in him of which|%2d Work to master his profession; | onions, gr a Jeaders of men are made. Ho wili|"¢ thinks he is wise and cute and |Cautornia . ee: expects to imitate others. He| % © ¢ we 'vIwAL make a fine chief of police ten Potators lyeare hence." Then Dick sighed,|2&"s® on the rear end of the Den-| xew spuds, red on | What is the matter, dear? tal protee mene upying the same New spuds, white, It 1 @ 01 1c WAG) (HINA OF SEC, ee ne eee nod the bee Int Sica wala Beadiedis. fer Maan |had so much—could have made so|‘® ham occuples on the hog | try, Veal and Pork much, and—well—it’s all over,|_ } lke to Nig apelin eae a os \Nothing at last well and prosper, but when one Belgian eS For the first time. since the|S* tes to the station of a ham 10 trouble Dick broke down. \h unworthy of recognition by ‘ Hy “We were pals as boys,” he said,| Honest men and ove 1 “and I can't tell now when we| YOU cannot afford to allow a n @ grew apart.” |young, advertising ham Dentist to| Hens And tinder <. 10 | It was then I read him Kitty’s|@%Periment on your téeth, with his| Sprine Geckvage: prer ‘ letter, and after I had finished he|fresh damp green diploma and) oia roonters, live oe | said, “I guess she is right. We are) state certificate. Why take Ghandes | Fork, good Viook hess . 2 oi not made good of bad or weak or| With this kind when you can have mS i ‘ a eu strong in a flash. We have to train|Your Dental work done at my of s| up or down to tt.” |fice by graduate Dental specialists] ¥ | vere: Gentinited: Tomorrow) | | PO ane Mature men of from 1 to cm te Retain tart | | |}25 years’ experience, and regis Butte and Cheese | | jtered not only in Washington, but| @ o | ARGUE ABOUT WAR: in New York, Massachusetts, Ili | 9 |nofs, Indiana, Michigan, Minnesota ve | | RUSSIAN Is LICKE Wisconsin, lowa, Ohio, Missourt . | |Texas, California and Oregon? oy ’ | econ |When your Dental work is done by SNOHOMISH, Sept. 7.—Follow-|#uch men as my associates your tim ot aan * ty {ng an argument over the Eurepean| non 4 | ke . ations and give| Wisconsin twins 17 war, Gerinan laborers returning to} , whos be po Heme <j Blve | Wie trigiete ww | Three Lakes in an automobile hurl-|You ® pr ‘ 1M CAN) Washington twins | ed William Malayska, a Russian,|*fford to have the best Dental] young Aimeriva an | ; ork in the world. I inspect yo Tews to the road, following a strugg ¥ a if we tinish@@. 7 ‘i yew Sitact veneh rem Lying in the road, he was later run| York when avis sf Pay e! Jover by another auto. He ts now in/only safe mh SOF fhe and it ta] Country | hospital here with a badly sprai plain that yave all to gain and (Prices bP ps : "\nothing to lose by giving you the|@ °| % < best Dental work in the world and| Altnite, No 1 add guarantee it for 15 years, because] t Washingt ate r | BANK STATEMENTS this is what has made my offices sound timothy 14.00, | the largest in the world | Bane, tea. s.0. sso | WASHING ON, Sept. 7.—The Edwin J. Brown, D. D. S.| wnat’. 32.00 | controller of tue currency today is Seattle's Leading Dentist | sued a call for a statement of the} Open evenings until 8 and Sun-| Extension division of Bert! condition of national banks at the close of business Sept. 2. >} days until 4 for people who work Phone Main 3640, of Washington to organize class in advertising. SECOND AVE. AT VAMES ST. Double Inducements Tomorrow and Specials Like These on New Fall Goods $1.25 Cotton Blankets at 89c Blankets, size 54x74 inches, and come in tan, white or gray, with fancy border; a regular $1.25 value at, the pair 89c Men’s $1.25 Shirts 98c Fall patterns and colorings in neat Golf Shirts, made with attached laundered cuffs, coat style; good quality, fast color materials, and regular $1.25 98c values, at Men's Work Shirts, in blue chambray, with plain lay- down collars; regular 50c values, special tomorrow at Boys’ School Shoes $1.79 Pr. For the boy up to 15 years of age here’s a good offer on School Shoes that are both dressy and durable; made by a well-known Seattle concern, of glazed colt-skin, with solid oak tanned soles; sizes 13 to 5%; $ 1.79 $2.50 values, at Women’s Pumps $1.79 Women’s Patent Leather Pumps in Colonial style, new stage last; sizes 24% to 5; regular $2.50 $1 79 * e grade; the pair eeeeswe Children’s Hose 2 Pairs 25c You'll save yourself many an hour of darning if you put sturdy- wearing hose like we sell here on the children for school wear. Good, fast black Cotton Stockings for boys or girls, with dural heels, toes and sotes; al! sizes; 25c 2 pairs for CHILDREN’S HOSE, in black or tan, heavy or fine rib; also In black, white or tan, In fine rib; priced, 3 pairs: for : ...50c ALASKA PAPER | OF OUR FAIR CITY been Cotton Sheet AMUSEMENTS oly High ¢ Ctreul | | A disposition mani has _ | Devin fested on the part of several Alaska) Brown newspapers to resent the interest | Albert taken in Alaska affairs by the com- mercial bodies and newspapers of} says The Fairbanks Times MeCormack od Irving Seattle,” of August 6 “This is somewhat difficult to un-} thinks the Iditarod Pio- derstand, ne p. cat neer, in View of past events. | bag pe: Aside from the commercia laos. teanseveee dani wate aspect of Seattle’s relations with ” Convict Ship “Success Motion Pictures are reminded by there this territory, we our downriver contemporary, is the natural one of propinquity, SIX BIG ACTS which tendency to inspire an nterest in our affairs, and which have not hesitated in the past to take full ivantage of. The business men and citizens . of Seattle have worked igh nly) T—JOLLY ATURES—7 and consistently for interests, and many of ctivities have been of an en Matinee Daily, 2100, 10 cem Shows Night 130, 9:20, 10 and 15 Cents, frely disinterested nature. It is only natural that they shold. s-| r this interest in behalf of peo. NEW PANTAG ple with whom their business and ES ons are so close. | MADAME ZENDA more, to do § ttle jns- and t erest displayed by its citizens has been the means of ac MERCEDES CRANE omplishing much for the benefit] “FONG CHOY” of the territory that otherwise | 10¢ 20c would have been unobtainab’ The peevish attacks on Seattle|” WATER SHUT-OFF NOTICE © and i usiness men by Alaska Water will be shut off from newspapers savors of organized a in behalf of other cities | the low service mains east of 11th ave. W., south of the canal } sttiving for a portion of|/ and north of McGraw st. on trade, and for Alaska's! | Wednesday, September 8, from so attacks should be dis-|' gq y ra fy ul it | Wiha k Try this easy way to clear your skin with Resinol Soar Bathe your face for several minutes { If the skin is in bad condition with Resinol Soap and warm water, through neglect or an unwise use of working the creamy lather into the cosmetics, apply alittle Resinol Oint+ skin gently with the finger-tips, Then ment® and let it remain on ten mine wash off with more Resinol Soap and utes be the final washing with clear cold water to close pore Re va od: tee eh will be shed how quickly the toilet For f trial of healin 8 Resinol medication Kesinel Ointment, w i soothes and cleanses the pores, re paltimere. Md moves pimples and blackheads, and sicians have pre Resinod leaves the complexion clear, fresh ment for over twenty years in the and velvety treatment of skin and scaip affections,

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