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STAR—WEDNESDAY, M AY 9, 1917. PAGE Woodhouse-Grunbaum Furnitur 'Here’s Story of America’ mmed Hats ‘T 2 Ae . e 416-424 PIKE STREET we t L t Ri d | That Are Spring WE'LL TRUST YOU OS e ion” x! Vim lage Styles TH Y zt y g R 3 Untrimmed Panamas, $1.25, $1.45 i taitbea tr» ane | Regular $3.95, d $1.95 os Gartetecs ne ee he ine. El BY J. W. PEGLER hallow trenches, without dug-outs.|watches, One Amer | $5.00 and $7.50 oe : extra charges, tuterent ' Press Start ' we kept as low as we could while/came running to m | ° ’ % ec E gust Youn worp AT YOULL Pay LONDON, May 9.—The “lost [the whie-bangs came over, Some land asked, ee Special m legion” of Americans in the |plunked into. the mud harn YET? He held } | 5.50 d 5 seer weet Ul] Canadian army got ito chance [Others gave un a fow casualties] but had not found aay of the enemy | 00 an ° ool Sweaters Week at Vimy ridge, and made good while we crouched where his buneh went in | Week A lot of the fellows will never The signal to advance was the| “Just as we got started digging | e +f b dpe tell about it, because some of explosion of a mine down on ourlup ahead a runner came up Ww pecia ° the German machine guns held [left at 0a, m word that Maj, Harrison's thigh b id out to the last, and peppered | “I stood up and waved my hand,|been smashed by a chunk of high Upper Main Floor i the advancing troops. But Lt nd sald, ‘Come on, fellows.’ Over|explosive shell. They had put hi A. H. Pannell, of Chatham, Va., we went, We just walked ahead.|in a shell hole, where he w con thirt ter ed for a descendant of President Zach It war no use hurrying, The guns! parativ wa When the job wa THESE quick sale it n ) desir- ary Taylor and of Confederate [played onthe German first line for | fintshed | went back to report ‘ t at weater we Gen, James E. B. Stewart, told jabout three minutes, giving our first being in command, On the wa Pisled ; 4 it with enthusiasm today wave a chance to get up there and|got hit with a piece of shrapne ccommend the ¢ c Pannell is convalescing from ajdrop in the minute the shelling lift That wax about a.m, Mond } The assortment cor f Sweaters taken from shrapnel wound in his left arm,/od, to prevent the Germans from|At 3 p.m, Tuesday [ was relieved i] ij stock, and include ipon les and ted style ide of woolen ' \ } 1 his story, told with occa-|>ringing up their machine guns|to go to the hospital , oes / arns, and displayed in Purple, Green, Copent Hlue, Brown sional reference to a map of Vimy | from the dug-outs “A great many of our dead | ™ * , faroon and Co The sizer jude 40, 42, 44 and 46, but not each ridge that was smeared with rain Our Shells Kill were scattered everywhere | ze in every #tyle and color Jand mud—the same map he carried| “The first wave took their trench,| 1 ecame back. In one shell hole | \'% , lover with him and we passed thru them, following} | found four or five who had | \ by THE RHODES CO. | “Our battalion, the 8th, con-|the barrage, to take the second line.| crawled there and died. Their | r — ss i jtained about 10 per cent Amer-|We were losing some men thru our| heads had sagged under the : ° WwW i jeans,” he said. “The legion hasjown shells, but only @ email per-| water, and other wounded fel. | Sizes for Misses and Small Women } SIBLE GO-CART wi ne to reinforee other battalions,|centage, We always figure on a| lows kept away from them. | : “Den: ” ee . so that there ts no all-American|number of defective shells in a big] One dead man wae eplit wide || [ that B Ul B k Wi | C D $e. force remaining. We were in the|strife, Our shrapnel was breaking open, apparently having been | \A el tantial mete urke 00 repe resses + reserve trenches, slightly back from{lover our heads continually, but | hit squarely by a shell 1 € on tyle ; Bh nny $6. er the first line, when the time came.|that’s all right for shrapnel, be-| Pannell went to the hospital be-|| 4), Y S ° | I did not notice the time slipping |cause it throws forward fore the casualty lists came tn, but|| that are appropriate for pecia é ; by, | was so busy issuing rum to} We took the second line without |the others of the legion have heard treet and outing the men and everyone was taking|much of a fight. The Germans|that Abe Walters, formerly|, wear I r Upper Main Floor. ‘ | Yelled “Come On” holding their hands high, shaking|killed and Lt. H. D. Gossard of! nly reason for Happened to Jones is} “There was just one danger about /with nerves and calling ‘Mercy. Council Bluffs seriously wounded.|) P™S¢ this | THE | fuset ae which the Seattle Dra |waiting. Fritz had been throwing |kamerad, Mercy, kamerad.” Pannell was formerly manager of|| been sele 6] F piecnsp ap nl apa ee 4 at at the Press quite a heavy load of stuff every [emptied their pockets trying to give |the General Acrustic Company ot|| ular 5 vored Dresses i ziie evening, May morning, and we waited in eee presents; pip uttons, | Pittsburg itself w range of sizes is restricted to 14, m ayer apes. sue “16 and 18 xe 3 ” 2 | of value o 16 and 1 rh : jurke z |} ' ‘LUMBERMEN T0 R STARVING WiLL Pay GERMANS rent 8 Dress continues to be one of the 3 |); j tH : =z most desirable of spri tyle m ji ; bis jal selec tii: sine kant iA fe le Alber ansen | AMASMINGTON, May 9 —Thel| tion compriner Bulors, Mush. els selected for this sal } i Jeweler and Silveremith PARIS, May 9. — Staggering the eran» tice an Geran eee O88. Pakeds. that SA pai oe cls 8 3 101 aa Near | . o. tnters ferman made of fine nd Price 5 ° bag oo ve, Ne losses were inflicted on repeated ships at Boston, Philadelphia and] Trimmed with the season ; son assaulting waves of Germans des U $ DEMANDS ARE PILING UP N w Orleans are to be interned on|| yored adornments and shown in y ate made of fine 4 500acre tract between Asheville} p i eat a wool crepe , tyle, with large . oe nat) ‘ | Black, Rose, Blue, Natural and repe in 5 style, n lare! perately attempting to reta Os 5 FF Jand Henderson, N. C. The men. | Parpis on dou: collars, deep, fancy cufts eloenees positions on Chemin des | with 1.200 allens now held, will cul are button trimmed and very eff Mames, today’s official statement — ate es. They will receive! embroidery trimmed belts ” declared. All attacks failed | The lumbermen of the North. | Manley, in New York, Finds| vil of noldiers | 36-Inch Jersey embroidery nm , 2 west will run every saw in | rhey are : Northeast of Chevreus the war| reir mila'an gevertments or. | Traders See Danger in | - || Cloth, a Yard $1.00 || scrninn saan” itt? SMM office reported taking of a first| ders, according to telegrams Speculation They'll Raise Pi igs | " Rose, Tan. Ci ok Brcwh Ghd Aimer who are neglecting your | Main Floor, Rear. . im, Cinnamon Brown, Goi, Aimer ‘ 1 line German trench over a front of| dispatched to federal buyers “ COLUMBUS, O. May %—Any ican Beauty Red, Gray, Dark Green, Navy ‘] teeth, will sooner or later pay after a meeting held in Seattle IS NO JUSTIF. ICATION | Be , a t " penhag Size the penalty! Good teeth | three quarters of a mile, with 160| 4, consider tentative specifica tuckeye boy or girl who wants to Pause.) uew Cotton fer and Copenhagen Blue. Sizes 14, 16 and 4 . ' ralne vie ceive substantia | 18, Reg. $19.50. Special, choice } mean good digestion—which Mj prisoners tions for 740,000,000 feet of (Maitor's Note—Baail BM, Manty,| Paige © Dig will receive subetantiall) | THIS | sey Cioth’ is cia dehenn hid, ferns means ueually good health timber, to be supplied to Uncle [special writer for The Star, WhO) dreds of children are planning to||) W—— adapted and very THE RHODES CO. q and long life. WILSON iS BACKING Sam for shipbuilding and for started on a tour of the vital NEWS) nave pigw for pets, taking them at desirable the making of 7 { the construction of barracks. centers of the country to find out\tng age of 12 weeks or younger and ‘ ' | The specifications received this |for our readern what ts the matter |reaging and caring for them until), -POrt and mweater ? M y BILLION SHIP BILL | wei) aie ie argent amount | with food and food prices, hax been |(eouln& and caring, fo cither for misses or women omens Summer Weig t jot tum’ r supplied one buy-|im New York city for several days | ~ -|| The fabric is highly reer nes = gg BER er by the mills of the Northwest. |{nvestigating conditions {n the na % a se nates t M will examine your teeth free; | , WASHINGTON. May 9 One hundred and forty million feet |tlon’s biggest city. His telegraphed eres ene tere een Ate anton , if they nee! attention there ton gata «Acco tte will be long, clear lum for shtp-|report from the metropolis follows.) | lustre after washing. ie no better place in the |0rratic and republican members of | uiiding, valued at about $5,600,000, 1 = i Northwest than ours to get he senate appropriations commtt-| , the remaining 600,000,000 | BY BASIL M. MANLY | Cotton Pongee uits ? dental service. Absolutely |'¢* to urge immediate considera-| 11 would sell for about $14 NEW YORK, May 9.—Pres- Yard, 25 d 3 first-clase work guaranteed— | tion of the billion-dollar appropria| oh, oay ent food conditions cannot | ard, 25¢ and 35c Upper Main Fie work that cannot be better, | 10" for ship construction |. Seventy ships can be built w th| continue very much longer | | | summer weight materi Pp a . j We have the equipment and Va oan eeRRC AG the amount of shi Iding lumber | without an explosion that may [9 Will do well to get our terms fi! eae e F of the men—dentists of high { LYING? called for The mills will nd be a serio0s menace not only before making a state A favored for the vantage of the complete stocks now on| 3 standing with valuable expe. HAVE YOU EVER SPENT AN EVEN-|levery effort to turn out this lum-| to the United States, but to the loan LL ¢ of summer d TAKE, hand and secure “A ead Summer's supply of rience and knowledge. Prices || where they handed you hot air? ber first success of the great war for | on, skirts and waists } Union Suits at s moderate price. The moderate. Cavith filled, |] And you took it for @ compliment How much of the timber needed democracy in which we are now | We do not sell our notes Displayed in a wide range of Suit we suggest is made of cotton lisle in low neck, sleeve- 50c and up. Consultation free And was proud that you will be cut in the Northwest can engaged. and *, and are able novelty patterns n_colored tess style, with tight knee or umbrella knee. The sizes estimates cheerfully given. | Have you ever told « hostess jnot be ertained until the gov I have tried to be as con- to off lowest rates of grounds 10 inches wide * ae oe g nee u a nee. That an evening was sublime jernme isaues detailed ene | | Servative as possible in esti |B interest because we demand yard and 35 range from 34 to 44 And the hontest wae elated? on and calls for bids mating the situation, as typified [ff the best security jr Were you tring all the time here In New York, but | cannot | ies cine fateaioae 20he 9 escape the feeli e | study | NO COMMISSION th ‘BAFFLED BY STAINS i \| conditions that | am standing Absorption Process ; | Wage increases for bakers’ em-| on the rim of a volcano that y ||;oyes ranging from $1 a week to| may at almost any moment \ age ps ge ahr Makes Faces Young | | | e }'$2 have been granted to the un-| break its crust in an eruption Washington Savin $ imilarity of pig's blood and * EMPRESS BUILDING | Dress||jon, and contracts have been nig. There can be no dental of the big g | INC. | human blood peg ie success has at last come to Second and Sprit | ORENe we ed which minate the danger of |outstanding facts tn the situation A Z ome hod of remo: 5, ? =sera/ i ORENCE UPSTAIRS STORR.|) ceattle going breadiess on account |! have talked to men of conserva and oan ASSOC ation | | which stained trousers and |Noll of ‘tact Tele iy 1 - ‘lof a strike tive temperament who are author! oh shete of ee Te partner plextons ee — a —-~-- -——___— —_—————__—___— on various aspects of the food WASHINGTON, ay 9 ne | of Frank Camard, Kent rancher, one A problem, and have found no disa-| 810 Second Avenue |state department has evidence | who died from shotgun wounds Condes tae so Som greement on the essential facta. hy |eathered recently that Germany is; Saturday t has Poor Starve; Profits Pile Up Established 27% Years Jcontinuing her plots in Central Tomas says Camard shot him- 1 find in New York that the poor 6,300.00 }America. What countries the self accidentally, and claims packages) are on the verge of actual starva Assets $6,300,000 |plots affect or how ex ve t stains found on his clothes were kentle absorption, the |tion after months of underfeeding, lintrigue is, the depart would| received two weeks before Ol oe the middle classes are feeling the} be say while assisting a butcher. j pressure of famine prices keenly eee - - ‘ in fee | while at the same time every factor ie aye gece tg ed gr ee mn ECONOMIZE! Whenever you can buy what you want, when you want it, at a saving, buy it Snappy, new lines of Furnishing Goods and popular sized Clothes for Men and Young Men, from the REDELSHEIMER STOCK which have been combined with a new, up-to-date PIKE STREET STORE AT 322 PIKE STREET Specializing in Bradford Clothing and Hats, afford discriminating men and young men every opportunity to practice real economy in maintaining their ideas of good taste in dress and personal appearance. BOTH STOCKS GO ON SALE THURSDAY, MAY 10, AT 9 A. M. Men’s Suits Hats Shirts 15.00 Suita for. 00 : 50 Hats for + BESS $1.00 Dresa Shirts $18 ” nite a 3 $10.00 00 and $3.50 Hats $2.15 $4.00 Silk Shirts $ q 00 Suits for.. $13.65 Hi 50 Straw Hats SOC $1.50 Negligee Shirts 00 Suits for..... $16.65 $2.00 and $2.50 Straw Hats 9} $700 Manhattan Shirts for del ree tor 85 $4.00 Panama Hats $2.00 ‘Sport Shirts Ose Youths’ nny ‘Vou $5.00 Panama Hats ms <3 Men’s Suits All Prince Albert, Full Dress Gas $12.00 Suits for $8.00 and Tuxedo Suits go at i $15.00 Suits for $10.00 HALF PRICE. Sox. for. . 2 2.00 Suit 10} 2) emai ashmere Sox Bere ats fr Underwear Silk Sox B. VY. D. Underwear Whe $2.50 Wool Union Suits for leckwear , $1.85 Ne $1.00 and $1.25 EF 1808 Wool Underwear for Wash Ties and $1.00 Neckwear Neckwear We and The Shirts for $1.00 and $1.50 Boys’ Pajamas for Union Suits . Underw: Pants tor tbe Boston Garters.....15¢ g $300 Pants for 82.15 $1.00 and $1.50 Be $1.00 Suspende Ane ff $8.50 Pants for $2.65 Matis for 50c Suspenders Qe $4.00 Pants for $2.95 BER these are all up-to-date goods, the store on Pike St. having REMEM been established but four months ago, and the Redeisheimer stock being heavy purchases of new, seasonable staples, left on hand when the old store vacated its First Ave. home a few weeks ago. Any purchase proving unsatisfactory may be returned and money will be cheerfully refunded. H. KESSLER (26 years In clothing business in Seattle) 322 PIKE STREET in food production and distribution, | except the smaller retailers and food peddiers, ARE MAKING! GREATER PROFITS THAN EV BEFORE Speculators, taking advantage of the extreme uncertainty and the near panic which must ac- company deciaration of war, have run away with the market. A few speculators, it is true, who! sold short on th pectation of early peace and low prices, have been caught, and in their frantic efforts to get supplies to meet the contracts of their short sales, have | helped to run prices up to the pres: | lent fabulous figures 1 | Thave been amazed at the frank {ness with which brokers and com {mission men admit the speculative |} control of the principal food staple: In ordinary times it is hard to find any trader who will admit that prices are made except by the work ings of that grand old fraud, the law of supply and demand, but now, in |epired, | believe, with real patriot liam, the majority of the responsible | lfood traders feel that the existing lconditions are too great a menace |to the nation’s security to be al lowed to continue unchecked, and| |many of them advocate immediate lintervention by the federal govern. | Says Game Is Rotten “We know the people are being forced to pay much more than there jis any justification for, and that the whole situation is rotten,” a butter and egg dealer said to me to: lday, “but what can I or any indi vidual dealer do about it? | “We are simp! sin the ma |chine PLAYIN( GAME the lonly way we know and short of it, an agreement of all the traders to |change the rules of the game—and ‘that would risk indictment under \the Sherman act—we are powerless |to stop it | The most unscrupulous deal- ers set the pace, and the rest of us are carried along in the current.” THEY'LL BUCK LINE Six Seattle men chosen to take training at the reserve of. ficers’ camp at the Presidio already know something about They were trained to le on football fields by Coach Gilmour Doble at the University of Washington, They are “Wee” William Coyle, famous quarterback, captain and drop kicker; Fred Spargur, former halfback; Charlie Smith, quarterback and drop kicker; Elmer Noble, half. back; Willis Bryant and Joel MoFaa, sousd man rt f DR, J. R. BINYON FREE Examination BEST $2.50 GLASSES ON EARTH are of the few optical in the Northwest that really lenses from start to fint and we are the only one in & o Firat Avenue, Examination y graduate optometriat, Glasses 1 prescribed unless absolutely neces- nary BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVE, a St. Phone Mato tle Annual GRAND BA Given by the Truckers’ Union 3812—1, L. A. —At— DREAMLAND TONIGHT Prize Waltz for Cash Tickets 50c Includes Dancing All Evening LADIES FREE — STEAMER AFIRE, | TOWED T0 PORT BOSTON April _ The Br itiah | |motor steamship Sebastian, which Itook fire f Nantucket earl \day is ing towe by a lwegian steamer to Newport, R. I lelosely followed by several patrol boats, ready to t off the Seb: tian’s crew should the fire get be lyond control ‘HALF ‘LIBERTY’ LOAN NOW SUBSCRIBED Nor WASHINGTON, May 9.—Nearly one-half of the $2,000,000,000 Lib. erty loan has been subscribed, it was learned today Among the larger individual sub- scribers is a former United States senator, who has telegraphed a per. sonal subscription for $3,000,000 of | bonds | 'NO FEAR OF GERMANS RIO DE JANEIRO, May 9 Stories that German colonists in lthe three southernmost states of azii are organized to dictate at the bayonet's point were made to appear ridiculous by the publication of statistics showing ithat the total number of Germans | immigrating to Brazil since 1828 1s less than 150,000 | ‘In Again—Out Again | “In again, out again,” is the po: lice record of pter Raske in two} weeks, Raske was sted Tues: | day when a lot of r wire and plumbing fixtures were found in| his possession, He was in Jail two weeks ago for carrying concealed [yeapons, when he paid a fine of | chool gardening and war fi-; nee were the subjects of ad-| at the monthly meeting of attle High School Men Teach. club at the Good Kats cafe. Tuesday night. R Chap-4 , agricultural expert in the eity Is, and Kdwin Selvin, editor of Business Chronicle, were the] eneakere | organic iron—Nuxated Iron.” ered pores, increas breathing capacity tone, color and natul beauty of the new skin. A simple and harmless wrinkl remover which has proved quite exsful can easily be made at in a jiffy, All’ one need to dissolve an’ ounce of powd saxolite in a half pint of witeh and bathe the face fn the solution: lay for a while. After the rst application the finer lines arand the deeper ones soon | United States government is urging ‘ increased raising of pigs The meat supply of the country must be increased, and the quickest way to do it is by raising hogs THE LODGE Fourth Ave, at Westlake For Ladies’ and Gentlemen's High-class Entertainment and Dancing 8 P. M. to 1 P. REFRESH MEN M Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York Physician and Medical Author, says: “There can be no strong, vigorous, iron men, nor beautiful, healthy, rosy-cheeked women without Iron—Nuxated Iron taken three times per day after meals will increase the strength and endurance of weak, nerv- ous, run-down folks 100 per cent in two weeks’ time in many instances. Avold the old forms of metallic iron, which may injure the teeth, cor- rode the stomach, and thereby do more harm than good. Take only It is dispensed in this city by the Owl Drug Co., Bartell Drug Co., Swift’s Pharmacy, and all good druggists. Three Shirts for $2.50 (All new patterns and complete sizes) No odds, no ends, no fakes or misrepresentations allowed at GOLDBERG’S Profit Sharing Sale 323 Pike St. Joshua Green Bldg. (Our Only Store in Seattle)