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Friday 100 White Hematitched Handkerehlet 3c Se Alaska Wool Sox extra heavy, pair 19c Sho Dress Suspenders, fine Lisle 12c 0c Police Suspenders cut to eters 16c $2.00 Flannel Shirts cut to 89c Sateen Shirts Twill cut te GOC Boys’ Jersey 63c Suits ut to hmere Wool lle Brown and Fancy ® Suite tn ater Sanitary Fleece Lined Shirts and Drawers Bult exth | ae 39c Bye en * S0e Shirts and new checks =| Drawers cut to 19c 75 -| Tbe Derby Ribbed Shirts and 11. as Drawers cut to, Sulte, finest _ garment 40c t 7 $1.80 Cooper's Wool Shirts and cngi 3 a Drawers cut to, wide wale Rarment 85c Byes $13.75 $1.00 Boys’ Unton ooo Bulte cur to 45c $2.00 Eagle Pure Wool Shirts and Drawere cut to, be Silk Ties, flowing ends and reversible, Serie 15¢ $2.50 Rough Neck Wool Gabardines 3.00 Wool Union — Suita a. Shae $2.00 Richmond Unton 98c Suit cut to anteed waterproof, HIMELHOCH 625 First Ave. STREET CAR CONDUCTOR teeeee Gter on Thomas st., between West- b “lake and Ninth aves.. early Thure- night ‘suffering from what the doctors night to “break in” on the gthink is concussion of the brain,|Queen Anne car line. He was to Ceaused, it is believed, by an attack |have returned home at a late hour “by robbers. All money had been| Detectives are working on the ‘taken from his pockets. ‘case. 1 It fs believed he was set upon| Culver's wife is at his bedside in while going home from work, and'the hospital. ARRAS RUINED OONNAUGHT IS BY BIC GUNS VANCOUVER, B. C., Sept H.R R, duke of Connaught, ' PARIS, Sept. 16.—The suburbs | riveq in Vancouver this morning of Arras, already partly in ruins, were bombarded heavily again last 4nd will review troops now en night, the official statement said trained at Hastings Park today. The French answered spir- trip west was without incident itedly, however, and succeeded in The duke {s accompanied silencing the German batteries. strong guard. He will review ad French huried hundreds of shells gitional troops at Victoria at the German munitions depots | morrow. around Roye, blowing up a number i of them. Resultant fires spread a weird glow over the landscape for aniles. {The communique reported an ar- more, no decisive results. nounced. i . 1332-34 2i1 Second Union Avenue. Street. Largest Credit Apparel! institution In the U. 8. Buy the Best Clothes on Easy Credit Terms Pay us as you get paid in small weekly or monthly payments. Men’s and ’ Young Men’s * Suits Winter Overcoats The fashions are now fully set and we are offer | ing our trade Fall Suits and Overcoats of unusual merits. Our prices are absolute- | ly right Bradbury ‘uc. $20%, We show others. $15 to $22.50 SHOES—————-HATS MEN’S FURNISHINGS ton Style 5 arters cut to c Roys Suspenders ut to, pelt 9c $1.00 Whip) Lash Gauntlet ta path. 45c Men’s and Youths’ $15.00 Young Men's Suits unfinished worsted, cashmeres seraes. $3.95 $15.00 Men's Heavy Blue Serge cut to $6.75 $15.00 Men's Worsted, Tweed moe”. 66.78 Overcoats, Slipons, Balmacaans and $15.00 Overcoat, black. melton, oo oe Sweaters $1.49 Bye cut to . $10.00 English Slipons, guar walerbroot. § 9°75 English Slipens, guar TSe Hogskin Work Stipon Gloves cut to... 39c teed waterprs Me Leather Wor! ie ib Gloves cut to 19c and sewed, cut to $8.95 MAY DIE FROM BEATING Found lying unconscious in a gut-,struck over the head. He appear ed to have lain in the gutter, which was partially filled with water, all) * His clothing was soake® -day morning, 1. W. Culver, 28, &) He was found by E. Davin, a street street car conductor, living at 1021| department employe, at $:15 a. m Sraylor ave., is in the city hospital,| Culver left home Wednesday | county stockade given bim by |tice Reah Whitehead for failing to LIVERPOOL, Sept. 16.—Lying at , the Johnson liner Quern 302 tons, today was mystert tillery battle thruout Woevre, Cham-|ously set afire. No details of the pagne and Vosges regions, but with origin of the blaze have been an Is the Day AT HIMELOCH BROS., 625 FIRST AVENUE Our Store Will Be Closed Saturday Until 5 P.M. We are going to make Friday the big day this week of our GIGANTIC FALL OPENING SALE Come early Friday. You will be greeted with the finest display of High-Grade Merchandise bought for this Fall’s trade you ever beheld. Fresh from the factories. No shelf-worn goods here. HATS $3.00 Mea's Stitched 63c $2.00 Men's Beaver Haw, al orgs $1.48 $1.00 Boys’ Mate, al $1.00 and $1.60 Chlidren's Tames, all colors, b0e and Men's and Boys’ Caps, all colors, cat to 23c PANTS eats. fie $2.50 Men's Dress or $3.00 Men's Drone Pants, tweed worsted and $1.65 $1.95 $3.60 Wool Berge Pants cut to Boys’ Suits, Pants and Shirts $8.00 Roys’ Norfolk Suits, with 2 paira Pants, fancy mixture Pants lined throughout. Clos rice: $4.50 $6.00 Royse’ Norfolk Cashmere sults, with 2 pair Pants; Pants Closing out price.. SdedD $5.00 Corduroy Oliver Twint Suits, In brown or blue. Clos prices. $2.75 $1.00 Boys’ Corduroy Knicker bocker Knee Pants, all sires. t price 48c Shirts cut to. 10c BROS. Foot of Cherry St. 25 Years In One Location WOMAN ASKS GOVERNOR NOT | TO PARDON MAN support bis wife and child his support Meinharts’ child she says in her letter. of his child the Commercial Club. The committee, of which Col M. Hawthorne was chairman, after several weeks of active se: the cause of the delay thus far, re sported thet the city, and not federal government, is to blame the fact that the canal ts not further along. It is urged that every means pos sible be taken to insure the opening] } of the canal on April 1 for small jeraft traffic between the Sound and Lake Union. SPRECKELS WEDS SEATTLE WOMAN’S SISTER AT FRISCO AN FRANCISCO, Sept John D, Spreckels, jr., millionaire, divorced recently, wedded Mins Sidi Wirt, a beautiful blonde, who claims to be of Egyptian de- lecent | Spreckels’ wife was married Honolulu directly after she obtain jed her freedom from Spreckels. {Miss Wirt has recently studied op- leratic singing in New York, but has} recently come Bere to live with h sister, Mrs. Seward Griggs of 8 Ue. George E. Wright, president the Municipal le prod ceremonies, Richard Meinhart has appealed to Gov. Lister for a pardon trom the sentence of six months {n the chief reason ix that bis wife been convicted as an immoral wom-| an, and that she is not worthy of | Europe,” the letter said, and much of it was not recovered by failures! Miss Whitehead has written Gov.|Which made the foreign collatera Lister, asking him to disregard | worthless. Meinhart’s plea. She brands Mein hart as indifferent and shiftless And she pleads for the cause of the If the misconduct of the parent could relieve the other parent from duty existing in him toward child, certainly the child would be a pitiful and innocent victim of the jaw, rather than a beneficiary, She contends that the guilt innocence of the wife has nothing to do with a father's non-support BLAME CITY FOR BRIDGE DELAY An urgent request that the city! hasten the construction of bridges jat Ballard and Fremont, and partic wlarly the Latona bridge, in order| | not to further delay completion and opening of the Lake Washington canal, Is contained in the report of a special investigating committee of gue, which snoops around and keeps city and county officials toeing the mark, has ap-| Watch for th pointed for the coming year mem STAR—THURSDAY, SEPT 16, 1915. PAGE 2. FROM CHURCH T0 STAGE FOR JEAN | Miss Jean King | five year Henry Savag going Into an.” Lates uhe « ent quartet, cos of the offering and booked for a tour of the circuit Miss King studied volee with Oscar Sanger of New York has a brother in t owns the King Harmony Trio layed a local theatre three ago WAR LOAN HIT BY SEN, LEWIS CHICAGO, Sept. 16—Opposttion| to the proposed billion-dollar loan! jn our opinion, a mighty to the allies was voiced today by | Senator J. Hamilton Lewis, in a let ter to the public. He contended that the loan would “invite a repett| tlon of the 1873 and 1893 panics.” |He had already objected to Secre-| y tary of the Treasury McAdoo, the letter said lavatlable cash from America,” senator warned, The 1873 and 1893 panics were caused chiefly by the be wi et that America loaned her money) to bolster the failing fortunes of} au at that we lend it to America. There is a c bulld up trade and get collateral) esting on emplres of valuable land CHOCOLATE MAN Y.M. CA the Silhouettes. Star Friday. |well known all over the States, He has made hia little pap all who behold it | guessers |German forces are bitterly battling HERLIN, Sept Pinsk, a elty for control of Dvinsk, Dispatcher) |, 98,000, it . Pe Nar oie Begs indicate the Russians a walning! fallen into the hands of the Ger ‘strength, while the tons are| mans | finding it more difficult to progress.| Pinsk 1# 146 miles southwest of |Heved, will have a decisive effect| Brest-Litovek, It stands at the june Jon the fate of Riga and Petrograd |day reported the Germans had suf-| Minsk province, Its population was | dications point to an apparent slack slening of the once dynamite Teuton| the forces under ( advance ter about a new attempt to take|no line, toward whieh th much see-saw, bloody fighting In the, is only 30 miles distant from this ‘WE HAD AWFUL (WOMEN WAIT Jean King, the prepossessing }young soprano of the mixed quar. jtet at the Empress this week, left the Presbyterian church choir St. Louts, where she was soloist for it the behest of the late » one Week after she had resign her position with the church.| She has since followed the lights, playing, among other things, the part of Beauty, in “Everywom ‘Kanized the pres ched them and pre- sented them for the consideration! of the booking agents of Chicago, where a representative of Mr. Con sidine was quick to see the value THE DENTAL LAW Isa Good Thing for the Protection business, | state, which provides that a dentist, in order to prac- | tice, must have passed the lexamination of the state dental board and have a certificate from them, is, | good thing for the protec- tion of the people. practice dentistry, why shouldn't he know his bus- The loan would take “halt of the! iness, and if he knows his business, why shouldn’t he amination of the state den- tal board does not require a man to have more knowledge than he ought to have, or answer any 2 ties, and our freedom (what little | treatment that one questions that he ought ce to, Not to be able to answer if he is going to practice den-|that no further efforts will be| one method, how- “Our business men and farmers need all available money,’ said the letter, “to initiate and sun-| tain home enterprises, to employ Ja bor and to increase commerce. we don't need the money at home, 1/ tistry and take money from the people for dental ser-|[)M 0.0 ic) feoy us who are. eco vice. nor would we hire any, who has not passed the exam- 01 society.” ination of the state dental board. The people are en Hershey chocolate fiends witi| titled to that much protection. Were there no such re have a chance to see how ft is made} when G. C, Phillips, of the Hershey] WILL GIVE TALK quirements, what would there be to prevent any one | Pored ek the university: dttensa [Co gives a movie show for the| carpenters, lawyers, plumbers, laborers or any one})!s suit nefit of the boys’ department of| else—from hanging out their shingles and proclaiming vat Toclock Sarl themselves dentists? these men might be experts in their own particular lines,| 4 | still you most certainly wouldn’t want them to work) to pay the fee and shows evidence |for free samples, Dept. 3-R, Rest on your teeth, even tho they charged nothing at all for! {ic toc may be eliminated, te not | it, would you? well worth while and distinctly to your advantage to demand] but this does not release them| |to see your dentist’s certificate from the state dental board. This is your evidence that he knows his business and knows| not apply to the new student how your work ought to be done. | man, who has graduated from the best dental colleges and|more are par | ; has passed the examination of the state dental board. Every | ‘a a free scholarships are given | who receives an early training oprator in this office has his certificate from the state dental] self-supporting, or partially so,| Will acquire a habit that will board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair. then what becomes of the other/make it natural and easy most up-to-date and scientific of painless methods, which enable us to perform the most difficult dental operations PEACH PRIZE GOES without hurting the patient a bit. we will not be underbid in price. Above is the picture of Prof. M 8. Bellamy, the famous silhouette artist, who is making the pictures of the prominent business and pro- fessional people of Seattle who will be represented in the guessing contest to be run in The wotk, signed, not only by the operator who did your work,|'he sreatest number of cases of but also by L. R. Clark, D. D. S., owner and manager of|has decided to award it to neither a this office, who is thoroughly responsible, of the highest contestants, the UNION The work of Prof. Bellamy !s r pietures of somo of the |best known people in the country NAMES COMMITTEES ¢" + lifelike way in which he is able| © reproduce the image of on with a plece of black paper and| a pair of scissors {8 the wonder of methods, sold on the 3rd were included in lake market | T SHERLOCK STUFF N. B. SOLNER, REGAL DEN AL OFFICES Seattle's thieves, :t now appears, Vice President and Trust Offled? are going into the detective bust. » page tomorrow, | will contain twenty specimens of bers of the 20 standing committees! prof, Bellamy's work. Liberal {who will conduct the snoop and|prizes will be awarded to good DECISIVE BATTLE FOR TWO RUSSIANCENTERS NOW ON | |G. R. Furniture Exchange LonDon, sor 10—russion ana! PINSK HAS FALLEN | 511 Pike—Easy Terms ANOTHER LOT OF USED 9 100d heavy metal Beds, all thorot | Minsk and about 100 miles east of The struggle now raging, it ts t tion of the Pripet and Pina rivers, Dispatches to Petrograd yester-|and is the reat of government of ished sale now, each $2.95. One Lot of Used Bedsprings, Priced 75c and Up ALL ARE GOOD VALUES $8.50, On fered a check in this region, and in-| 28,000 at inst fgures Pinek’s capture was effected by n, Mackenzen |The capture is important as mark Operations on the West front cen-|ing progress toward the Vilni-Rov whole elty Hartmannewetlerkopf, the scene of| German line is moving, Th past year front TIME FOR SPELL ON PRESIDENT “Bellevue, across Washington, Is in flamer marked a little guy who drop- ped in at The Star office orning WASHINGTON, Sept. 16.—Preat-| | dent Wilson's formal stand on the tion is expect Sept when USED DINING ROOM CHAIRS, EACH. . . JOC | woman suffrage q od to be registere (eS! Call up his home state, New Jersey, votes the Anderson Steamboat Co, (6, the momentous question of quick!! Whazzamatter y'sleep ye oe a shall kaee: te there, Red?” spake the city ed. | SNalher woman a ae Only one of a kind. Cane and wood seats among itor mov All efforts to get him to take al these exceptional values, each 75¢, Other Dining Red, the reporter, has asllv |etand for national suffrage have | ers in his right ear from aiid - sue been unsatisfactory to the suffra-| ing for the phone. gets, His position has been that “Gimme Beacon blankety- (us titular head of the democratic | blank blank, he yapped. “Hey, j party, he could not act until his! le neigh Pi = about | narty platform provided for such Chairs priced $1.00 to $2.50; worth new $2.50 to $6.00. LOW-PRICED USED ” | etl uh?” asked the gentie | *°ton. _ se ONG | Se te | HEATERS t'e L. L, | German Count Von Reventiow, — chi naval writer, says Londoners ‘ua fi A 4 ee | lis Ger Those looking for an inexpensive Heater—and 7% caught fire—boat burned, thas. | should evacuate city and man airship raids “legal.” we have many of them—will find some unusually good values among a lot of rebuilt Heaters now on sale in our Exchange Department. Most every wanted size can be bought. All are in good condition LEGISLATOR HANDS HOT ONETO ‘U’ DRILL OPPONENTS TACOMA, Sept. 16. these young hotheads like the way this state is being run for them they can go somewhere else.” This wi the answer of James H avis, chairman of the house appropriations com- mittee, to the agitation begun by University of Washington students against compulsory | Students against compulsory military drill, tary training at the University “Right now,” he said, “when the| Washington has been taken great national problem is how to} of by the Seattle Central lincrease, rather than lessen, the| Council, which lest night iustrec number of men who have a ground|@d its public affairs committee for military service in time of/™rge the counctl's protest drill, with the regents. The mas meeting of the anti-drill students, | 6 5 scheduled for Washington, has g| been postponed pela statin Te The Hollywood Lunch and Sods SCHOOL SYSTEM | °* ir’ stin-treabe | Eczema, ringworm and other This law is the first blow to our| itching, burning skin eruptions are distal aie _.' |free educational system, our liber-|so easily made worse by improper of the People The Dental Law of this If |need, it certainly is not time don’t |4ny backward step “I think it very Ikely the lature will pass an act that |leave no room for argument al | military drill hereafter if this tation goes much further.” i LABOR COUNCIL ¢ OPPOSES DRILL i The agitation begun Monday If a man is going to ng to prove it? We believe that the ex- DR. L, R, CLARK we have left), and we intend to| has to be very fight it thru to a finish, to the end| careful. There ts made, by a rotten and vicious leg-) ever, that you need never hesitate to nomically unfortunate, from secur-|use, even on a ing an education tending to equip | baby’s tender skin , FH +4 us in the fight against the forces|—that is 5 For our part, we haven’t an operator in our office,|\? ‘teins and the human vultures | mot teammene "esinot is the sf scription of a Baltimore doctor, In these terms, Mark M. Licht-| put up in the form of resinol oint nan, a lawyer who started the/ment and resinol soap. jfight against the $20 tuition im-|proved so remarkably successftl posed by the last legislature on|that thousands of other physicians jhave prescribed it constantly for over twenty years. Lichtman says in part | Resinol stops itching instantly, Everybody Soaked and almost always heals the erup And while The statements that the law tion quickly and at little cost. Ree works a hardship on no one, and |inol ointment and resinol soap cal that, where the student is unable | be bought at any druggist’s. Write Nothing whatever. {of a desire to obtain an education |nol, Baltimore, Md. stating it correctly. The law pro-/| vides that the regents may grant| Union Dye Works And when you need dental work done, you will find it|‘ree Scholarships to not more | than 10 per cent of the students, | (Inc.) 2 from the payment of the $10 ma-/} |triculation fee, and hence it does EVERYTHING IN CLEANING AND DYEING Plant and Office 10TH AVE. AND B. UNION “The public records in the reg-| Jistrar’s office show that of all the students 30 per cent are entirely self-supporting, and 35 per cent| TE CHILD ally self-supporting Every operator in this office is a graduate and registered to per cent of those who are 20 per cent, and the other 35 per 1 F later ‘ jcent? Is this helping the deserv-|Save larger amounts in We use only the very best of materials here, and the! {ce hoy girl?” i Sf ’ ing boy and girl?” years. The clerk who saves 50c a week will soon have & fund that will start him in ® To THIRD PARTY | business of his own. Our prices are the lowest, as it is our invariable rule that! | The committee of the Chamber : P of Commerce having in charge the| Furthermore, we give you a written guarantee with your | awarding of a prize for the sale of Interest Mf Per Cent | peaches the last day of Peach week Lucky ®trike Fruit Co, and Mr. Cin- ors because he had the only signed Het of purchasers. The committee co TEETH PULLED FREE..." TRUST CO. customers “had been tampered OF cEATTLE Each morning from 8:30 to 10, to demonstrate our painless! with, and that some of the cases the sales of the 4th,” so the com 000 mittee gave the prize to the Weat.| Capital and Surplus $000) JAMES D, HOGE, President . ness, One of them climbed over " the transom into the otfice of Dr. HOGE BUILDING M. M. Parks, Wednesday night, and tn the Heart of the Fi stole a $50 microscope. District Dr. L. R. Clark, Manager 1405 Third Ave., N, W. Corner Third and Union. EEE