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STAR—FRIDAY, FEB. 11, 1916, PAGE ¢. BY CHARLES E. RUSSELL) A normal, average $10,000 worth of Men’s Clothing, Furnishing Goods, Hats, etc., will be sold at a sacrifice, REGARDLESS OF COST About the only chotce a nation} would has in these days fs to get a bis! ences or former prices. Hereafter we will handle Shoes exclusively. Our Clothing stock consists of all new patterns and styles of 1915-16 models, and will take a great loss to close it out. army of hired men, get a big citi; At Sale commences tomorrow morning at 9 a. m., and will continue till every dollar’s worth of goods is gone. Sale Starts 0 A.M Tomorrow |" ses stand tho risk of jhe would continue six years, passing mommy $4. nd $5. BE HERE EARLY meer 94.00 nnd 96.00 7 Boys’ READ THE FOLLOWING PRICES / igh Top MEN’S SUITS Shoes $15 to $20.00 Men’s Suits, Good Sizes $5 95 American boy then go thru these expert:| the age of 12 he would be ® automatically a member of the j chose to have the| citizen army in} the name of de > we arrive at. man:| Would include the rifle and target hood, are athietic,| !" ®alleries, again not less than robust, — aupple,| 2° hours # year trained to whole.| , At 16 he would enter the third some outdoor ex.| “Vision, and have, in addition to 90 ercises, familiar | hOUT® other drilling, ten whole days with their duties! {2 camp with field exercises and in defense of j 8 Set _ practice. thelr country and|. Im thes two divisions he would expert therema. | have a uniform | We can have in| .,At 18 he would become a momber the United Atates| °* the clititen army, and every year all the great bene.| £0f Six Years would bave not less fits of the Sweice| (282 120 hours of drilling, of which ant Avstraltan| * least ten whole days must be in hee system if con-| At 24 ne would beco em-| Bress will pass the Dill introduced |yer of the citisen Tesseeng | Dy Senator Chamberlain of Oregon, | “ye } : | and known as Senate Bill 1695. yo weaterred, 1 She beatantig.! aus abisehehae male Aumietanne: to enter the navy, that would be except those exempted, ander eer | 2TanKed, training on shipboard be 6 eagle tobe une of religious | 4K substituted for the camps oe getimige ew hie bill aubsect| , TB® Dill provides that youths who te military training from their 12th do not take the required tralaing Sear to their 2éthy Then, witbout| *All be Hable to fines and imprison ferther trainieg, they ane mete: | went and employers are stringently 2 been forbidden to interfere with or lam- bers of the citizen army reserves. | ner the training of their employes. Thin Folks Who Persous of bad moral charsster are excluded and intoxicating liquor Want to Get Fat is rigidly ruled out. im Weight Tea Pounds or More. Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Shoes thenics, physical deveiopment, and military exercises without arms, for at least 90 houre a year, at his mocracy, with the | ®°heot or tn an organization like the leather —the fa- mous “Chippewa” Shoe, and also the Big Z, made result that thetr| Boy Scouts. youth, when they} At J4, his second division training in Seattle. Sale Price— Girls’ Shoes In lace only; all sizes; sold regularly $2.00. Sale Price ... $2.50 Misses’ The citizen army and navy do not take the places of the reg- ular army and navy, but are to be ided to the reguiar forces 'n time of war. The president can mobilize the citizen army and navy, when they pase at once into the regular service. When they a training they i | “Ta certainty give most anythin to be adie to fat up a few pounds an Atay that way.” declares every ox- tvely thin man or wor Such Fesuit is not imponsible, des ures, Most thin people a: Guaranteed all Light Colors, Closing-Out Sale .... $3.00 Misses’ f mal-nutrition, a condition vente the fatty elements of ken up by the on the powers 1 i of the elements intestines until they receive no pay; when in regular service they get the pay of reg- ulare. Every congressional district is made a training district in charge of an officer of the regular army, and from the start the training ta under the charge of the war depart-| ment. The president ts to appoint offi cers of the citizen army, citizen navy and reserves, but under reg ulations as to examinations, record) for ef{ ciency and promotion, fo that} service as officers shall be open to} all. the from the body as waste. To correct this condition and to nutritive processes must 1: ppited with the denied . gombination of #ix Omimilative agents. Take: you ff jahex mix with the food to turn ‘| ats and er po what iz - ave eaten into rich, ripe nouris The only other plan now offered Sipent for the tissues and inod. any | for national defense {s the continen-| Gases reported remarkable Report-| tal army scheme of the war depart-/ Tiidecie onthe 30 to 25 pounds in| ment, now being urged upon con-| { - ~ clon is wertectty | Sess. It would give us eventually! Apaterel one sheolutely a 2 | about 490,000 men, at an enormous es Se Sens teat, ee teny Dew expense to the nation, peace or war, rmacy and other and that’s all, The Chamberiain plan, tn its full working, would give us about 8,000,000 trained me ready to mobilized in 24 hours with all their arms and equipment, and yet In times of peace costing the nation very littie, These in times of peace would pursue their regular vocations and in time of war would be efficient soldiers. It is one thing or the other. The president's solemn warnings as to em your system, or the real situation of this nation! rust tS gd ge Aad eeret rh 4 4 Le pe had rr iuene eee we bet 2 | get of ut besides giving us a| O07 Food, Test and wet * © | better and a 20 times larger force take one after each meal and THE CITIZENS’ ARMY WOULD! one before retiring at night. HAVE TREMENDOUS SOCIAL, ny Eh Fourgelt once « week [|MORAL AND NATIONAL AD- Fellable method this 1s forre- @| VANTAGES. It would m: moving superfluous fat from vice for the republic the equ any part of the body. of all, rich or poor, big or little, It costs littte, ts absolutely fortunate or unfortunate, and thus) harmless and Tam sure & establish that idea of team work| any one that it is unnecessary and communal interest in which to burdened with even a this country has been so conspic- single pound of unsightly fat. | yously lacking Bartell Drug Co. can supply It would augment democracy,| " make us better acquainted with one another, and improve the averag health. If you think these things} are important and believe in pre-| erving the nation, LET YOUR) CONGRESSMAN OR SENATOR) KNOW WHAT YOU THINK, and} the bill can be passed! Shall the blessings of the re- public be for all and the duties of the republic be for a few, hired by the rest? THAT'S THE IDEA! IT OVER! ARREST HOTEL MEN ‘ — Sargol only as a flesh builder, and while Ment results tn cases of less a gain of weight ts dest: vertisement. o> HOW TO BE SLIM 3 If you are too fat and want to rétuce your we pounds, don't starv * i 3 b ee THINK ge Rainier BAKsRY Ee RESTAURANT | tires aticged bootioezers were 913 2 AVENUE & MADISON ST. [arrested at the Cadillac hotel Fri- ____. |day night by the police prohibition} ‘squad. They are A. L. Port Imanager of the hotel; H. Zinsm Iter, a carpenter, and Jay Carrolly. la chauffeur. Ben Amundson, at the O. K. ho- tel, 212 Railroad ave., was arrested after selling whisky to a plain clothes man for 85 cents a pint SALE Sones jock of Coats, Salts, Dresses Millimery going at Auctio: Prices. Note New Location. Now « 1207 First Ave. | $295 IN CASH PRIZES || By a simple suggestion, taking five minutes’ time, | you have an opportunity to win $100 for the best original suggestion for a feature of the Automobile Show; or $75 for the second best original sugges- tion for a feature of the Automobile Show; or $50 for the third best original suggestion for a feature | for the Automobile Show. H For conditions governing prizes see earlier adver- tisements. For the guidance of the persons competing, we make the following suggestions: If a person com- peting should suggest that the Studebaker Gold Chassis be a feature, this would not comply with the terms has been exhibited in Eastern shows, and the feature be an original one. that it was suggested that the first car This of the competition, because this chassis would not Suppose that ever came to Seattle be made a feature. car has already been secured for the Show by us. What is wanted is something new and original, suitable for an automobile show, that will be of inter est not only to the owners of automobiles, but to the public at large. SEATTLE AUDITORIUM COMPANY jij 1311 Fifth Ave. Main 1929 | Shoes A large variety of Men’s Cassi- All the highest grade Men’s Suits, $3.00 Ladies’ Shoes ....... $3.50 Ladies’ Shoes mere All-wool Suits, in all sizes; heavy weights, suitable for winter ,|Involves the loss, $4.00 Ladies’ $5.00 and $6.00 Ladies’ Shoes, all hand turned; the best makes in America, including Hamilton-Brown “American Lady.” Special $2.95 500 pairs of Ladies’ Gunmetal, Patent Leather; button or blucher; small sizes Sia 4B to $4.00 ..... All other goods, too numerous to tention, cut to the same prices in pro- portion. W. L. DOUGLAS SHOES All our $6.00 and $7 Men's Shoes, advertised lines, such as W. L. Douglas, Boston- ians, Big Z and other well known makes, Sale Price Stockings $2.00 Wool New Fall Hats..... W. L. DOUGLAS wear; sold up to $20. Closing-Out Price ... TAKE NOTI $7.95 All Our OVERCOATS At Your Own Price They Must Be Sold 25¢ Men's Neckwear 15 Black and Tan Sox .. $2.00 Union Ssite . $3.50 Men's Pants... J.B.ROBINSON 1424 Third Ave. Jclean breast of it and admit the }counctl majority, led by him in | 1912, made a mistake of judgment when ft finally ordered the dam built after solemn warnings that the north bank of ft was a gravel | bar and would not hold water. ERICKSON FLOUTED | MR. ICKSON, WHEN AD- DRESSING THE DEMOCRATIC clu SOUGHT TO SHIFT RE SPONSIBILITY | TI AM SORRY TO SAY HE Cedar river dam. A question that | SOUGHT TO CLOUD THE REAL or not-—no one , — . ncn CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ) years’ interest at 4% to 5 per leent per year, amounting in all to THAT at least $2,800,000 | BRICKS IMPOSED HE UPON | } WOULD] BE DISBARR Mr. B confidence wise he straight! “Knuckle down, four fingers on the ground, no fudging.” Otherwise he would kwon occasionally lack®| Mr Erickson says any one who in the people. Other | sayy he fixed the dam's location would play the game)\,°, “liar”; that the location was fixed by Mr. Thomson and Mayor Gil ‘ So far as I know, no make ®/ said Mr, Erickson fixed ft a maet Be ' | Mr. Ericksén covers up by say. OU H! [| ine the dam 1s solid, and will not ry] | ash out | Griffitha Gets Sarcastic | No one expects the concrete | It may crack and fall apart, 1k Jother concrete dams have done SORE,LAME BACK rm but it will not wash off its base and land right side up on the town Rub Backache Away With Small Trial Bottle of Old of Renton The grave question is, why did “St. Jacobs Oil” Back hurt yc the council majority, under Mr.| Erickson’s confessed urging, order} the work begun and money spent] up without eling sharp aches r leten! one has after the board of engineers sald all work should stop until the Can‘ north bank of the proposed dam Cant atraighten | va further examined? den pains, | “4 n? Now| They said the rock bottom | That's lumbago, aclatien or |*¢TO#s the river in the gorge would | from a strain, and you'll get | 201d concrete If poured there, That | the moment’ you rub your| 48 simple. But they said, what| back with soothing, penetrating | W@8 the use of pouring money and | St. Jacobs Oil Nothing else |Conerete there if the north bank | takes out soreness, lameness and | of the basin, two miles long, would stiffness so quickly. You simply |let the water thru into the Sno- rub it on your back and out comes | qualmle river? the pain, It is harmless and doesn't| Mr Erickson, in his explana- burn the skin tions, assumes the people are not Limber up! Don't suffer! Get a| sufficiently intelligent to know the small trial bottle of old, honest “st. | difference between a dam site and | Jacobs Oil" from any drug store,| a dam bank. | and after using it just once, you'll | Says He's Flim-Flammer | forget that you ever back-| 1 believe they are. ache, Iumbago or solatica, because| ! belleve they will hold him ac your back will never burt or cause | countable at the polis for trying to any more misery. It never disap-|“fiim-flam” them over who fixed | points and has been recommended |tho dam site, instead of manfully for 60 years ing the real issue of who spent ma relief blue serges, fancy worsteds, the very finest hand-tailored Clothing on the market; sold up to $30.00. Closing- Sizes 1214 to 514, Gunmetal Calf, the best Shoe the factory can turn out. Made in Seattle. Every pair guaran- teed. Sale .. $2.85 so DT45 $2.00 BOYS’ Shoes . $3.00 BOYS’ Out Sale $11.95 This Store does not carry a cheap stock, there- fore do not expect Suits for $3.00, Shoes for 40c or Hats for 35c. It is impossible to sell GOOD merchandise at such prices. Following Is a Partial List of My Prices 25e Children's 13c $4.00 MEN'S SHOES ......... SHOES .... 1,000 Pairs of Men's Shoes, English lasts, cloth top, in rubber bottoms, rubber heels, hand welt; all new arrivals. Were to be sold for ena $3.95 Sale Price.. Big Z Logger and 16-inch French Veals, double sole, waterproof; retail for $8.50 and $9.00. : $5.95 Open Saturday Night Till 11 o’Clock 75¢ Men's 75¢ Silk Neckwear .. $2.00 Flanne Shirts $10.00 Men's Mackinaws. $5.00 Men's Pants .c19e¢ Between the Postoffice and Pike Street the people's money without fairly knowing whether two mil of gravel bar would or could be made to hold the water to be impounded back of the dam. The folly of spending the money first, and finding out afterwards, must be apparent to all persons not daft or blind Mr. engineers suggested another site. They DID suggest a site nearer the mouth of Cedar Lake and free BREAK A CHILD'S COLD BY GIVING SYRUP OF FIGS Cleanses the Little Liver and Bowels and They Get Well Quick. When your child suffers from a cold, don't walt; give the little stomach, liver and bowels a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When cross, peevish, listless, pale, doesn't sleep, eat or act naturally; breath {s bad, stomach sour, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the clogged-up, constipated waste, sou » and undigested food will gent ly move out of the bowels, and you have a well, playful child again, If your child coughs, snufftes and as caught cold or is feverish or has a sore throat, give a good dose of lifornia Syrup of Figs,” to evacuate the b what other tres nt is given In't be coaxed to take this harmless “fruit lax ative.” Millions of mothers keep it handy because they know its ac tion on the stomach, liver and bow els {@° prompt and sure. They also know a little given today saves a sick child tomorrow Ask your druggist for a 60-cent bottle of “California Syrup of Figs,” which contains rections for ba bies, children of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Be- ware of counterfeits sold here. Get the genuine, made by “California Fig Syrup Company,” Erickson says the board of| possibilities suggested in this report shall have demonstrat- ed the best plan to pursue, and | that such investigation be com- from danger of run-off |north bank Why? | Because they said if the dam were built where it since has been| menced at once.” the waste basket. . butlt, in spite of their warning and| Thus for the second time in| Now the council is hiring three the warnings of other engineers, | their report they said work should | experts to find out what ought to the cost of sealing the long north | halt until further information was| have been found out before the bank was utterly unknown, and if| obtained, council majority took the responsi- it could not be sealed, the certain When I came to that last para-| bility to spend our money on @ waste of water into the Snoqual-| graph in their long and painstak-|seepy basin and a dry dam. mie valley would not only lessen|ing report, 1 saw the point and| Dry ba our water supply, but fatally erip-| joined in calling a halt before we | dear utillt ple the primary use of the dam for|spent all our money on a big! Nevertheless, I would like to see light and power purposes. |selve. I put my reasons in writ- Mr. Erickson stay on the council, thru the THIS RED FLAG OF DANGER. I voted “no.” Mr. Erickson urged the council jon. |{ng, where they are on file. The report was pitched into” Charged Up to Light Mr. Erickson says we must not! TO ply purposes, and the dam is use-/ ME, e up Cedar river for water sup-| FOLLY TO GO AHEAD AGAINS | for he is useful there for more pur L.| poses than one, mistakes or not, iT AUSTIN E. GRIFFITHS, IT WAS CRIMINA it) ful for that purpose, Nobody tn tends to give it up for any pur. system Insts j pore But the gravel bank will act ) Just the same whether the water, | is stored to drink or for light and | power. If the water runs away from Cedar river, we lose it for all uses. However, the dam was built for | ght and power purposes, and the expense has been so charged | But Mr. Erickson does not, while | trying to excuse himself from this |mistake of judgment, state the final and permanent recommenda: | | | tion of the board of engineers con j tained in paragraph eight of their | conclusions, namely: “Our chiefest recommanda- tlon, and this without modifl- cation, is that constructive op- erations In connection with the building of a dam at Camp 2 | hans be suspended until such time | . ‘ | as a thoro investigation of the | | _ | ° * . GREENWALD HOUSE Relief Awaits You! Instantly Stops Dyspepsia,) | | ABATED BY GoURT ses, Sourness, Heartburn--Get Some Now! Mrs. Jonnie Greenwald's home, at| You don't want a slow remedy;a large fifty-cent case from any 318 Columbia et., where a burglar} When your stomach is bad—or an] drug store and then if any one alarm had been leq | UBCertain one-—or a harmful one—} should eat something which doesn’t 7 your stomach {is too valuable; you| agree with them; if what they eat |to protect the place against raids, | mustn't injure it with drastic drugs.|lies like lead, ferments and sours | was ordered abated Thursday,-un-| Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its| and forms gas; causes headache, |der the redlight law by Judge Gil-| Speed in giving relief; its harmless-| dizziness and nausea; eructations | |ness; its certain unfailing action| of acid and undigested food—re- court assessed a fine of|in regulating sick, sour, gassy| member as soon as Pape's Diapep | #200 against the premises, owned | stomachs, Its millions of cures In| sin comes in contact with the stom= by James Campbell, ordered the| indigestion, dyspepsia, —gastritis| ach all such distress vanishes, Its house closed for thtee months and|and other stomach trouble have] promptness, certainty and ease in issued a permanent injunction| made it famous the world over. overcoming the worst stomach dis- against further practices of immor Keep this perfect stomach doctor| orders is a revelation to those whe ality there, your home—keep it handy—get! try it, | lam The Nin a 4 s make high taxes and — $