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a FSS Ann Economical, Delightful Place to Trade r Style nd pp fo The Upstairs Shoe Store We stairs exp strength ur p of a chain Our buying have rent ow Up moderate stores office ts ft of the style the East; § $6.00 to $8.00 values here. $2.95 to $3.95 Three ultra models at $4.95, and a host of the more conservative styles at 50. SPORT OXFORDS White Canvas, $2.50. White Nubuck, $2.95. White Buck, tan, green or black trimmed, $3.45. Sport Boots White Buck, banded, $2.45 White Canvas, $2.95 White Buck or ¢ vas, !vory or leath- sole, $3.45 and Two-Tone Boots And all Kid Boots of champagne, ivory and gray, priced $3.95 and $4.95; also Patent Vamp, white kid top, $3.95. Of all-white kid, $3.9 turn or welt soles, $3.45; Nuback, $2.50 and $2.95. white buck canvas and tans or gun- metal, $3.45 in all sizes for Men, Women and Men's Oxfords tn all the wanted Boys, in black or leathers and styles, $2.50, $2.95 and white, 49. $3.45. Mail Orders Delivered Free by Parcel Post OSTONQHOL(O. [i's SAMPLE DHOP \ INC. 10 9 Second Ave at V HEAT KILLS 44 IN CHICAGO IN ONE DAY GO, July 28.—Twenty-six Persons died here during the night as a result of the terrific heat wave which has been sweeping prairie states the last two weeks, reports to the coroner's office ypc ee tal mural deat te Cnicege, an result of thet Thousands of tons of ice were t 24) 6iven away in the poor districts in og ie hee et an effort to bring relief. At El Paso, Tex, and Browns. ville, the thermometer registered 88 and San Antonio showed only 86, while at Freeport, Ill, the mer. cury climbed to 101 in the shade, beating he: records for the last 25 years. The lowest temperatures for the day were recorded at Boston and San Francisco, their thermometers registering 66 “BERMUDA HIGH” IS KILLING OUR BABIES bitet Bul DiNG SECOND LOOR he close their stores an hour eariier. So Intense ts the heat that con tractors would not let laborers work for fear of heat prostrations. The health department tesued bulletins warming mothers to watch the milk served their babies. The total number of victims was swelled to 47 with reports from Minneapolis. Rock Island and Phoe- nix, Ariz, of one death at each Place from the heat Storekeepers are planning to If you want to keep your hair in good condition, be careful what you ‘wash it with. Most soaps and prepared sham- poos contain ton aang 8 a WASHINGTON, Jnly 28.—The adil Rae banter Just | esther bureau holds out little hope jto the Middle West that the ter- rific heat of the past few days might soon come to an end—but plain mulsified cocoanut oil (which is pure and entirely greaseless), is) much better than the most expen-| sive soap or anything else you can use for shampooing, as this can't) ‘There is 100-degree po oc tag iuumees sour the hair p |Blaht along the coast, it is declared Simply moisten your hair with/ and this will mean greater suffer Mater and rub it in. One of twoling than has been felt in the Mid Ae a eek und |dle West, where, for the most part, es » |the humidity has been low. Cleanses the hair and scalp thor-|"'4+" the weather bureau the prnctgell The lather fos gpg aed | blame ts placed on “Bermuda high.” and removes every pai ve atl. ‘The | That 18 a way of saying the area of dirt, dandruff and excessive oll. The| high pressure air over Bormuda sa hair dries quickly and evenly, and|tne surrounding Atlantic ts largely it leaves it fine and silky, bright, | responsible tor kbentag the weather Mlufty and easy to manage. elsewhere hot. This area af high You can get mulsitied cocoanut | pressure air has prevented the ae oil st most any rug store. It ts /currents from the mainland from enough to last every one in the fam- wren © fly for months.—Advertisement. expense of the Atlantic seaboard MOTHER AND BABES | 8T. LOUIS, July 28—When wil Ham Ritscie’ broke into his own home this inorning, after sleeping Jon @ veranda all night, he found |his wife, Sarah, 23, and his two |children dead. They had been as phyxtated. The bodies were lying on the floor in front of a bake over from |which gas from four burners was pouring. | OKUMA TO QUIT? TOKIO, July 28.—Resignation of he Okuma net is sald to be im d Marshal etka Terauchi is generally believed to FRANK J, SEXTON, MANAGER|||\be slated to succeed Count Okuma as premier Dranoradnace =| any hope for that section fs at the| | ARE DEAD BY GAS, SOME GLAD This is the seventh article on gubernatorial candidates The next will tell of Robert T. Hodge, of Seattle | @ Taking into account the exigen cles and necessities of the case at hand, we make bold to modernize one of the favorite quips of our co ‘ateur, W, Shakespeare cordingly, we refer to the most pulehritudinous of our varlogated gubernatorial aspirants, and thus we declare and set forth: Some are born hand shakers; j others acquire the art, and still oth ers have it thrust upon them,” | George BE. Lee belongs to the first clas He's a Handsome Man George is comely—aye, some. The blackness of his hair glistens hand Geo. Lee like Poe's raven. You might say his was @ ravenous beanty. His dark eyes beam bountifully and beautifully He talks glibly And his ds are equipped with automatic springs. They jamp hither and thither they fairly fly tn a crowd and there is no man in this great com has any Itch or the faintest desire to shake hands with a gubernator. fal aspirant who will not be clasped to his heart's or hands’ content if George ever meets him. He Knows the Game | behind his back and at that beat his rivals at the glad-band art. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 WIRE TO WOMAN COSTS FREEDOM complete escape from the pursu. ing agents of the law Bound for Honduras It would have taken him from Key West, Fia., to Honduras, where extradition laws are unknown and unrecognized. Yet with ‘all his ingenuity, with all his sophistication, with all the “wisdom” of a sharp, active, vivid imagination, Gillies failed at the critical momept, failed at his own game, failed because he lacked a paltry $20. Gillies escaped from jail here with Henry Roberts, another prie. oner, on the night of July §. He had not been heard from until Miss Trott received his message. Girl Ie indignant Miss Trott, at the time of Gillies’ trial, was active in caring for Mrs. Gillies She was indignant today at Gil- les’ assumption that she might at- tempt to aid him tn escaping. Altho Gillies signed his message \"J. H. Penfold,” by which name |Miss Trott would not have known the sender, the words “Love to Bird” disclosed his identity. Miss Trott had been much interested in a canary owned by the Gillies. She immediately whom the telegram came. | According to word from the Key West police, “Penfold” admitted | shortly after his arrest that he was ilies -HANDER, IS GEORGE LEE, WHO WANTS LISTER’S JOB various and! monwealth, or as the orators say,| ambidertrous skill with the “glad: there ts no one In this great and) slorrrrrious commonwealth. who/ guessed from | ¢ STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 28, 1916. PAGE 12. CHEASTY’ ut fullsteamahead . on your way here— these Clearance Values need quick action. And You'll Not Be Disappointed Ho has mastered tt to scientific prectaton | He knows ft from soup to nuta, as Councilman Dale would say, speaking cafettertally But, tn all fairness, let tt be said | that the joyful mitten ts not the Jonly valuable possession of Lee's He ts an able orator and has held | weveral tmportant public offices. | He ts a lawyer by profession | Lived In Spokane | Lee is a graduate of the Univer:| jaity of Nebraska. Shortly after ward he came to Washington. lo cating tn Spokane. He lived in Spokane continuously | until the past two years, except for the period of officialdom at Olym:! nia. | Almost immediately after arriv ing in Spokane. Lee got into public work | He became deputy prosecuting | Values I ell attorney. made speeches for Taft in 1908, and was appointed anstat-| ant attorney general serving in 1909 and 1910. He was also counsel for the leg-} islative investigating committee in 1909, At all times, but now It Is simply gold dollars for 75 cente—That's the meaning of thie 25% Off He’s Partner of Murphy In 1911 he was appointed by Gov. | Hay as chairman of the atate tn which was then organised for the | $11.25 for Suits cundesty $1800 first time in the country Shortly $15.00 for Suits regu ly 0.00 flerward he resigned to accept the A penition of phic eon of the alia $18.75 for Suits regularly $25.00 win April, 1911, Leo resigned to rei] $22-50 for Suits regularly $30.00 sume the practice of law. He asso $26.25 for Suits regularly $35.00 fated himself first with B, 8 : ool <del adie cor. $30.00 for Suits regularly $40.00 poration litigation before the state public service commirsion. Later he moved to Seattle, where he has offices with Former Prosecuting Attorney John F. Murphy Record is Spotted Friends of Lee “point with pride” to his record—as regular old guard” politicians always point They say he t# able and they let it gO at that While this does not include an unrestricted cholce of every garment, it does give you the choice of a thousand of the smartest and best yet produced SHIRT SPECIAL $2.00 and $1.50 Smart Shirts - $1.15 Come and See the Underwear and Neckwear Specials opponents, however they may regard his ability. point to a few spote on that record which, they say, reflect somewhat on Lee's real love for the “dear peepul.” They even say he has been “handpicked” by a few corpo- rations who have business with | the state. | Be that as it may, Lee goes cheer.) fully on, beaming love and friend-| ship upon all, and shaking hands from Mukilteo to Poerfd Oretile, and from Oroville to Humptulipa. If Lae fails in his ambition to be governor it will not be because his HAVE A LOOK Don’t Leave Town Without An Oshkosh Wardrobe Trunk—$25 to $85 stuff has become par & They’re the World’s Champion Guessers! Who? Why, U.S. Weather Forecasters! They Hit It Right 9 Times Out of 10 Lae ofls every joint in his arm and digite every day, ft ts satd— Sundays and holidays included. ARREST DETECTIVE, The police arrested BE. M. tin, private detective, Thursd & charge of engaging in the bus ness without paying a licepse fee of $190 4 year and posting @ $2,000 ond. ; Martin was hired by Howard S.. King to investigate the murder of FROM BIPLANE, Mrs. Corinne Wheeler and Kate Aviator T. 7. Maroney re- | Swift. King himself is now in jail, leased a trap door In hie aero- Peers Nie ee. meter, plane 1,500 feet above Harbor ’ and Thuredsy afternoon and GERALD SUES GILL Charles Broadwick dropped | out of the bottom like a rock. One hundred feet below the aeroplane, a parachute, d on Broadwick’s shoulders opened up, and he floated te Clarence Gerald wants his bar | Island | ] fixtures and soft drinks seized by the police June 20, or $1,000. He brought suit against Mayor Gill and Chief Beckingham to re the soft. sande of the cover the stuff, Thursday. wtyrrbe sy gprs Mayor Gill and the chief say an aeroplane will be the fea- ture for several daye in the fu- ture off Harbor island, as flights will be made when the weather Is fit. they will turn the property over to the sheriff, if the court so orders, WINNIPEG.—Rudolph Bach, one of the most widely known German ie fie editors in Western Canada, and ono former editor of the Northwestern COLORADO SPRINGS.—Women in Winnipeg, committed suicide and senatorial candidates will be last night by drowning in a si placed tn the field by fall tn all nthe coo mnt twelve suffrage states if both President Wilson and Charles i. | Hughes fail to take a definite, sat-| isfactory stand on the Susan B. Anthony amendment, stated Mins Anne Martin, chairman of the na-| tional woman's party, today Guessing the weather! This m en ne scence 5b | caste that were verified, or “came t Cy rength| age of verification for the whole Un WORKING: Did you hear Arthur E. Reimer, | the Socialist Labor Party nominee | for president of the United States? His explanation of the European war, and the present trouble In Mexico, from the dpoint of the workingman’s material interest, is beyond question, jows for each state in the Union the percentage of weather fore- during the period of one year ending September, 1914. The aver- ited States was 88.4 per cent, or about 9 out of 10. The heavy black n of “weather hits” of 85 per cent or below and of 90 or above. ndown| lines on the map Indicate the regio 0 ry 7 “ WASHINGTON, D. C,, July 28.—)whole, and averaging the forecast; the California border, the percent Mba tells you what a job means in many ine WHO ARE THE BEST GUESSERS|Tecords for year, wo find that/age of “bullseye hits” in weather | When bag ionaee ani geet 100 forfelt if r ep c 5 v | forec: 9 4 $190 cortett i IN THE UNITED statist about nine predictions out of every | forecasting runs above 90 per cent eile a8 ten made by our forecasters are The fellows who have the |*Y8 by undisputable facts. FORFEIT Crelele sqam ton Baseball umpires? No, double} veritied,” said Prof, Charles F. Mar-| toughest time of it are In the etonp wa tonight at. m near tn thi paper |ving vin, obief of the weather bureau. sep lll: a ee a \Owi Drug Co. Bartel Deus te | Who, then? Why, the weather| “The average percentage of veri-| Canadian border. and Fine. . free see Bwitts Phafmacy always carey |men! Those in the employ of Uncle| fication for the United States for} United States weather moves n atock. See Dr. Edwin J.Brown, D. D&S Sam are the CHAMPION WEATH-|the year ending in September,|from west to east. Mrs, Giilfes 1s still under bonda| |charged with alding her husband in| |inis escape from jail here. She was |sorry, she said, that,he had been recaptured |Not a Dollar Need Be Paid Till Cured | Ma | ER FORECASTERS OF THE|1914," he continued, “was 88.4 per| The cold waves come out of west a BULL BROS WORLD, for they hit tt right nine/cent. It has been running pretty|ern Canada and the Pacific states, H I M Ss E L le | times out of ten regularly for some time now be-|and move east, Warm alr currents just Printers And year in and year out, at that.|tween 88 and 90 per cent.” move northward from the Gulf, DENTIST "23, 57897) av. | If you have been in the habit of| It's easier to predict the weather! And when the two meet, MOST gene Lace Lidia 4 MAIN 1043 )lreading your local weather report|in some parts of the United States |OF THE WEATHER HAPPENe | 00, "or a —— ae ——— in the morning and then “doping” {t|/than in others, he explains | That's why the Mne northward of ae. r Ph tes out Just the opposite way, why, take| All along the Southern border of| Arizona, New Mexico, Texas, Okla-| extracting without LAWN MOWERS lnote of the following the country, up the Atlantic as far|homa, Mississippi, Louisiana, Ala.| palm Called for, sharpened on our “Taking the United States as alas Delaware, and up the Pacific to|/bama and Georgia is the area where} .T am now making Ideal Automatic Grinder and most of the storms occur. et A alll Sh ol oe xcvory work. : “There is this feature about | cial low price, and re«- SHARP SHOP vy R our rules of verification—the | iat $10.00 and $15.00 104% Pike St—Tel, Main 2089 tendency hes. bach as hae old VC wine and oe them more exact,” said Prof, It 18 admitted by the | Marvin, beat dentis in Seattle TAK | ny forecast can be phrased to | Bridwework equal the ~ | admit o tous interpreta. | ‘°"” Pa 7 | ILKES PLAYERS | tlons. We are changing our ure and come to @mpee Nes wie J. Brown, © WINS 56: he strike RB, Horn, a strikebreaker, was kill-| up surface cars in/ed and two plain clothes men and| NEW YORK, July 28 which has tied rules so as to make forecasts Grekhervm the Bronx and Westchester county, another strikebreaker seriously in-| ¥ tH S and Sunda) “ELEVATI A HUSBAND” {|.14 which threatens to extend|jured | to get too high a percentage, unthi 4 for people who work. Tel Wek sts Eee eine thruout Manhattan, claimed its first’ The accident followed minor) => 4 seal aniston eat Piliges--100, S00, bee. | lite today jclashes, in which many cars were Sonday—“THE DOLLAR MAnK" When brakes on a car at 177th|put out of commission and fifty or H ee ae st. and Boston road fatled to work,/more men recelved minor injuries ome of G las ses ee soitnd the car and a trailer plunged eral hundred police res »ALACE HIP “e0"4 down hill and were splintered were on duty today, while national the Best et! on Earth Matinees 4 Qe Events 15¢ against a subway pillar, Motorman offi ials of the Amalgamated Asso . Any Sent * - — —_—— ——|ciation of Street Railway Men A ~ ee poaay threatened to tle up surface lines " : ALL AIDS FOR EYE SIGHT vay as vor.” | PYTHIAN SISTERS of Manhattan Lone . SQ Should be very carefully chosen, Only the rtoplay MEET IN PORTLAND WASHINGTON.—President Wil "y ‘lection will insure the proper to 1 son has instructed the state depart 4 ee hen Belvet ote ae <=) PORTLAND, July 28.—Pythian| ment to make representations | ti 4 » here, after scientific examination of Sisters from all parta of Oregoa your eyes and their needs. To select glasses ig ACaoae 8:80. Tonient ag {Dual state sathering at the Pythian | the British ambassador at Wash-| . ’ 7 , mF ere temple, This conclave is prelim. | ington, looking to the relief of Mr eyes. “Bri ‘dd inary to the sunreme lodge Pyth-|and Mrs. Thomas H. Kelly and Jos Brides of the Desert Mah RSCTA CUETS Sia a UDINE ELA totick CuAtlce ne AG are Bok ee MARC OPTICAL CO. 917 First Ave. i And Lots of Comedy delegates will come from all see: | der technical arrest and ordered de-| AR UM ° Near Madison, 3 A Splendid Dill, 100 and 200, ‘tions of the United States, I ported from Liverpool, 2