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The Randalls: * {UXATED IRON An Economical, Delightful Place to Trade | | Portland Newest Fall Fashions Smart and Most Di The new models for Fall are shown elsewhere from $5.00 to inctive Styles that are display at the arriving daily $8.00, are on UPSTAIRS SHOE STORE at our uniformly low prices— $2.95 .. $3.95 Others $2.50 and a few ultra models $4.95 Two-tone Boots with vamps of 4 tan with white kid tops. Very special at All black kid lace or button Boots Boots, with white kid top. Special Black vict kid lace Boots, patent Boots, button or lace ... Dark tan English last Boots, also tn gun metal, Priced at....... with leather or rubber soles. MEN’ questionably the Priced VaTor Ave Second Crupnenin “THE SONG OF SONGS” A Dramatic Sensation. | LLoYD- SABINE AND COMPANY tm “The Third Floor Front” and Steadm: Florence; Emma Lincoln Feature | Phowpts: 7 | Selig-Tribune We Any Seat, Eve and Sun. ie we oo strength O00" ORFEIT per full planation in lerge article soom to ap- this paper ___ SOUTHEAST CORNER OF FIF OSTONR HOE SAMPLE, DHOP | Somme front last night, ark gray, dark blue, mahogany Aes coves, $4.95 and patent vamp : $3.95 $2.95 $3.45 and gun metal Shoes combining both good style and comfort, un biggest values in the city $2.50 . $3.95 0. rh INC. IVE NING 10 9 St EITEL SUILDING at Pike Ralph Casey, University of Wash- ington graduate and Seattle news paper writer, will leave for M soula this week to become assist- ant professor of journalism ia Mon-| tana state university. He will succeed Carl Getz, who {has joined the journalism faculty of Ohio state university. Getz ts a U. of W. graduate. Casey was editor of the U. of W. Datly when in college, and wrote university news for Seattle papers. He graduated In 1913, and joined the Pl staff, where ho; wrote politics, city ball m and Sunday features. LONDON, Sept. % southeast of Ginchy the only activity on Artillerying | constituted | the British} Gen. Halg reported today At Richebours La Voue the British raided enemy trenches inflicting severe casual ties. NO CITY FORESTER The council has decided not to create the position of city forester,| as was urged by a committee of cit- izens, unttl Caldwell Corporation Counsel determines planting of shrubbery and trees. oF FIFTH rH AND P: PINE. CRESCENT MEAT COMPANY — MAIN 2899—“QUALITY” OUR MOTTO—MAIN 2899 Give Us a Trial and Be Convinced Fresh-Dressed Chickens Choice Steer Pot Roasts Good Steer Steaks LARGE CANTALOUPES 5e EACH STALL 29 Next Crescent Meat Co. | Cottage 13c Butts Picnic Hams Choice Circle W 1 pei Cc hops oo | how Heltdelberg Pickles, quart . 10¢ JOE FISCHER, Stale 19-20 Eastern Oysters, doz... 25e The Olympia Oysters, at LUCKY STRIKE, Stalls 21.22 mn Beat Them All Our Specials Good tor a Week 25c | 3 cans Carnation Milk 25c Suga Any of above four articles with \¢ nae Crystal White TS icaiiass: epéctsia’ cxctuaed 3 LBS. BEST 40c BULK COFFEE.........95c All Brands of Flour at Cut Prices M, J. P. Cottes Hill's Feed Can Cotte . 4 lbs. Head Rice 6 lbs. of Japan Rice 5c can of Lipton'’s Tea 2 be bars Toilet Soap ... 1 at Queen Olives 10 Se bars Laundry Soap 4 foe pias, Corn or Gioss Stare he WHITE reamery Hutter MARKET AND CO § lbs, Corn Meal 4 bo boxes Matches... | 2 Sc wacks Malt 6 10 rolls Tolle cana of Pine Apple ic cans of almon NER MARKET Be Ih. 3 Ube. JONES—STA " STONG’S MEAT MARKET Choice Steer Pot Roasts, Ib. Fresh Killed Chickens, Th. 10c, 124c 17c 124¢ Sugar Cured Corned” Special Prices « om All Other ELBERTA FREESTONE PEACHES, 50c BOX TOMATOES, 3 LBS, 10 Corner Fruit Stand Corner Fifth and Pine | Fresh Pork Back Bi 10 Ibe. for ......5 Fresh Ground Bone, 10 Ibs. f Fancy Veal Roasts per Ib. Fresh and Smoked Ment ‘15¢ Reliable Butter Store Stall 26 Fresh Washington Creamery Hutter Me, 2 eee nut Bu | Prean Buttermilk, cup whether or st about it./not the city has authority to create acy local improvement districts for the |™ BLOODY SHIRT IS DEATH CLUE Murder Mystery Hinges on Identity of Garment KILLING| | WAS DOUBLE HILLSBORO, Ore., Sept. &— A bloodatained shirt formed the principal link today In the chain of ciroumstantial evi dence by which the state is at tempting to convict Bennett the Gore ranch, Helen Jennings and Fred Rist: man, a jitney driver, were kill- ed last May. It is alleged that Thompson, a ranch hand, hired Ristman to drive | him from Portland where Mra. Jennings was slain as she slept by a blow on the head from a sledge hammer. The prose cution claims that Thompson then killed Ristman to keep him from telling smashed with a monkey wrench | The bloody shirt found near the murder farm, according to witnesses, was originally given by Mra, Ethel Clark, of Lents, to Mrs. Clara Lyon, her elaterdnlaw. Mrs. Lyon gave it to Mra, Jas, Thomp. son, who is also the accused man's sister-in-law Thompson lived with bis brother and sister-in-law before the killings. | ‘There was a break in this line of testimony when Mrs. Lyon refused to say whether the shirt in evidence was the one she recetved from Mra Clark and passed along to Mrs. Thompson. | H. X. Johnson, one of the most important state witnesses, fled Thompson as the man he saw talking to Ristman, the jitney driv- er, in Portland, the night before the murder. | On cross-examination, be admit ted he might be mistaken In this j{dentification MARGIE FEARS SHE HAS LOST HER OLD LOVE R HER PRACTICAL HUSBAND Yesterday I began to walk! 1 feel 1 am going over on my head every time | take @ step. But, oh, little book, I know noth ing in this world can make me un- happy again. 1 was wheeled down the corridors of the hospital, and | saw many unfortunate ones. Ev ry one had pain writ large on er face. The drawn looks shock- ed me, and I went back to my glass. Yes, there it was—the little line lat the corner of the mouth that tn dicates worry due to bodily fils. My eyes © grown larger, or at least they seem so. Dick said yes} terday there was a look of mys tery in them, as tho I could see more of life than most people. “I shall have to be very good in deed, Margie,” he said, “for I am sure you will be reading my very soul every day Poor old Dick! read his soul for years! not, we would not be Hving to- gether today. I know Dick is not bad. He does not mean to burt He just forgets, that is all- forgets every one in the world but |himself, and everything but the pleasure of the moment. He is lvery devoted to me—now that I am getting well Little book, that sentence is not as brutal as it looks on paper. When Dick could do nothing but see that I was wanted to put the disquieting [thought of me out of bis mind as Lmuch as possible that there is a certainty bat I vin soon be “like other women, any more. As tho I had not Sometimes, little book, I think that fs one of the reasons | why most men are successful |Hardly one of them allows himself | | to dwell on the disagreeable things of life, Men seem to realize life is too short to waste in vain re (greta Sometimes, however, {t looks as |if they were hunting trouble, not |for themselves, but for the women | who are interested in them, You | see, little book, most women take |men sertously—very, very serious- ly—and men only take one thing in this whole world seriously—work, No, little book, I am not trying |to make excuses for Dick. I don't |want to make excuses for him, for |L am afraid when a woman tries to |justify the actions of her husbana she does not love him any mo | This, little book, is the secret gnawing my heart. I am not par pHetleny interested in Dick today pt as a type. When he takes |me in his arms to lift me from bed to the chair, I am not conscious \of the old thrill | I like him, lttle book, but, lestly, I cannot get up jtonal Interest in him, REGISTER VIEWS SHOWN AT MOORE Friday night, at the Moore the- ftre, Seattle will have an oppor: tunity of seeing for the first time |the wonderful kinemacolor and hand-c Cah Rogister company. The entertainment will be devot- ed exclusively to instruction in the art of successful and proper plant- ing of flowers and shrubbery. | The National Cash Register com- pany has sent P. O. Warren, one of its experts, here with the slides and film. He will tell the story of the experience of the company in Dayton, and what {t has meant to that city to give attention to plant- ing flowers and shrubbery In the ards, along the sidewalks and bou- levards, Admission will be free hon- any emo EEN NRE NS TPT HE to the house) The chauffeur's skull was/ state) identi-| room and looked at myself in rad It 1 hed |¥ comfortable, be | I do not get on his nerves | red slides of the NationaN make any one on enthusiast on in- STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 8, 1916. ; OF RUMANIA ATIVE KI KAISE RS REI ) a Pas vs King Ferdinand, who ascended the throne of Rumania October 10, 1914, on the death of his uncl King Charles, belongs to the Ho | henzollern-Sigmaringen family, and is, therefore, related to Kaiser Wil | helm. Thus he has been held between loyalty to his family or war with) the allies, and loyalty to his people or war with the central powers. “See How That Corn Comes Clear Off!’’ “GETS-IT" | Loosens Your) Corns Right Off, It’s the | Modern Corn Wonder— Never Fails “tt ra to could act like that 1 Why, 1 just with my | | wee recgre you don't have to fool and putter! |around with your corns, harne: |them up with bandages or try dig them out GETS- & liquid. You put t ds It regular shoes. You won't Ii he @ corn “twist” in your |The corn. callus of wart will } from your toe—off it comes. ballel nt ‘GETS-IT" te t |meat selling corn remedy world. When you try it, yo GETS-IT" 19 sold and recom- mended by 4ru orywhere, ibe a bottle, or sent on receipt of e by BK. lawrence @ Co, Chi- ©, Of 4 in Seattle and recommended * world’s beat corn remedy by Th @ Owl Drug Co. || WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS | OF HOT WATER | | Wash the polsons and toxins from system before putting more food into stomach. | Says Inside-bathing makes any- i} one look and feel clean, sweet and refreshe Wash yourself on the inside be-| fore breakfast like you do on the outside. This is vastly more im- portant because the skin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, causing illness, while the bowel pores do. For every ounce of food and drink taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste material is not eliminat- ed day by day, it quickly ferments and generates poisons, gases and toxins which are absorbed or Jaueked into the blood stream, |through the lymph ducts which should suck only nourishment to sustain the body A splendid health measure is to drink, before breakfast each day, a gla of real hot water with a tea- spoonful of Iimestone phosphate in {t, which 1s a harmless way to wash these polsons, gases and tox- ins from the stomach, liver, kidne: and bowels; thus eleansing, sweet ening and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting| more food into the stomach. A quarter pound of Imestone phosphate costs but very little at the drug store, but is sufficient to side-bathing, Men and women who are accustomed to wake up with a dull, aching head or have furred tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, sal- low complexion, others who have bilious attacks, acid stomach or constipation are assured of pro- nounced improvement in both health and appearance shortly BULLBROS. Just Printers 1013 THIRD MAIN 1063 TERETE verre PAGE 6 SATURDAY THE 9TH (Tomorrow) GRAND FORMAL OPENIN FRYE'S NEW OLYMPIC PUBLIC 1422-1424 FIRST AVENUE FIRST DOOR SOUTH OF PIKE ST. MUSIC FROM 2 TO 9 P.M. Floral Decorations by Hollywood Gardens Each purchaser of one dollar's worth or over has the privilege of purchasing one six-piece Kitchen Set as illustrated below—all ix pieces for seventy-five cents ($2.50 value). Now on display for inspection at the new market, First Avenue, first door south of Pike Street. itt Net a Hy Kn i it ee i OPENING DAY SPECIALS FRESH MEATS Choice Steer Pot Roast. .10¢ of Choice Short Ribs Choice Steer Shoulder Steak .............]4¢e Fresh Spare Ribs... . .9c Legs of Spring Lamb. 18c Choice Veal Roast. . . 14c Pork Roast ........15¢ BUTTER Washington Creamery, Wild Rose Brand... .31c EGGS Strictly Fresh Ranch . 35c CHEESE Fine Old New York Full Cream ............23¢ POULTRY Frye’s Celebrated Milk- Fed Fowls .........17c BOILED MEATS Hams, half or whole .30c Picnic Hams .20c Sandwich Hams... . 18c New York Shoulders . 20c BREAD Two 10c Loaves... .15¢ CAKES Three-layer, each. . COOKIES Home-made, 3 doz. .25c FREE One Dozen Cookies Free | with each 25c¢ purchase in the Bakery Depart- ment VEGETABLES at Farmers’ Prices SWEET CORN Per dozen .... Fancy Home-grown Tomatoes, per Ib.. .5c WATERMELONS Per pound ..........le Large Cantaloupes, 2 FOF 65. 5c FANCY PEARS 10c doz; 3 dozen. ..25c Fancy Elberta Peaches, -25c | -10c | Sugar Cured Meats Anchor Bacon .....12¢ Hams, half or whole. 18¢ Picnic Hams .......13¢ Fancy Strip Bacon. .19c Lean Breakf’st Bacon 18c New York Shoulders . 13c Cottage Butts ......18¢ Cottage Rolls ......16c Boston Butts .......15¢ PICKLED MEATS Boston Butts .......13c Belly Pork ........17e¢ Beef Tongues ......16c Pig Tongues .......12c Lamb Tongues .....15¢ Pork Hocks ........12c Pigs’ Feet ..........5¢ SALT CURED MEATS Loin Backs ........15¢ Plates .... ae ( * Fat Backs .........13¢ Bellies ............17e LARD Wild Rose Brand Large Pails ......$1.60 Medium Pails ..... .80c Small Pails ........50c Bulk, per pound... . . 16c We are now located in our new quarters, 1422-24 First Avenue, first door south of Pike Street. The old location has been abandoned. Your patronage and inspection of our new quarters are respectfully solicited. Cordially yours for Quality and Economy. FRYE & COMPANY