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. STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 29, 1917. PAGE 7 Germans Drop Bombs M “Dougall - fo sina in London to Draw FREDERICK&NELSON Second Avenue and Pike Street Banded Felts and Straws $2.95, $4.95, $6.95 Each a Special Price HESE Hats rior to any we have shown are so supe so far this season at the price that we are sure you will find this a most delightful surprise even though you may be quite critical Sailors, large and small, en felt as you see sketched, tirely of and straw; sail ors such in plain colors or bright shades to match the sports garments Southwick, He’s apie New--Keep HimSo LITTLE in town MEN’S l'ry it to will HE } Shoy morrow and you try it always kind of boy Everything for every Boy's Corduroy Suits, $6.00 and $6.50 Boys’ Corduroy ers, $1.75. Boys’ Wash Pants, $1.00 and $1.25 Boys’ W. $1.95, $2.65. $4.95. Boys’ Straw Hats $1.50 and $2.00. Boys’ Wash Hats 65 and $1.00. Knick $1 Boys’ Sport Shirts 65¢ $1.15, Boys’ Sport S5e and $1.15. Boys’ Bathing Suits 65c to $3.00. and Blouses 60 —MacDougall-Southwick, Third Fleer. Swimming Suits OR the very practical purpose of eliminating all encumbrance to women who delight in the exer- cise of swimming New Suits of wool Jersey with trimmings of fiber silk and bandings of colored wool range in price from $2.95 to $7.50. They come in plain shades of «ray, cardinal, navy, kelly green, Copenhagen and also black Made plain or fancy with lac- ings of ribbon, etc. . Third Floor, . Accessories Rubber Bathing Caps in all colors, plain and fancy, 25¢ to $1.00. Bathing Shoes, high laced models or sandals in white, blue and red and white stripes. 25¢ to T5e. Garters of rubber in colors, trimmed with bows or flowers. 25¢ to 50e. Wings (white only), 25¢- Suit Bags, lined with rubber, black or cretonne effect: to $1.00. Lissue Handkerchiefs 25c Each HE guarantee which the manufacturer makes is " very important. You can tub Lissue Handker- chiefs in the ordinary way, and if one fades they give you six free. Fancy borders, plaids and large stripes, in pink, blue, heliotrope, tan or green; 30 designs to choose from at 25¢ each. —MacDeougall-Southwick, First Fleor. He —MaeDougall-Southwick, First Fleer. Tailor Made to Order by an ex-Ship’s Tailor Exclusively for MacDougall-Southwick For Little Girls and Boys For Big Girls and Boys For Women and for Men $1.50 UST the proper caper for out ings—comfortable—service* able—washable. All-white with red watch mark on left shoulder Made of standard diagonal dril! according to Navy Regulations We feature al] kinds of Mid dies, Skirts and in wide range of styles and prices When ordering Middies by mail give exact hip and chest measurement Ties a —MaeDougall-Southwick, Third F Mail Orders Filled Glasses SUPERIOR SKILL Up-to-date metho enable us to grind complicated Lenses in thirty minutes. Kryptok Lenses in four hours, ordinary Lenses while you walt THE MARCUM OPTICAL CO. 917 FIRST AVENUE Established in 1906, Near Madison The Oldest Established Firm on First Ave. That Grind Their Own Lenses Home of the Best STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS | Planes From Front ‘ ~. 7 goomt RESSTEND >/_ Srusce1 DORP FOAL TT ROGNE This map shows WHY it is fu German cities than it is from the shows why Germany has ail the ad on undefended towns. BY MILTON BRONNER WASHINGTON, D. C., June 29.—The object of the German js just made over Eng- is to destroy the aerial supremacy of Great Britain and France on the western front, by forcing @ large num ber of the British planes to be called from the fighting front to protect English cities. Such is the opinion of mill tary authorities here. It is admitted that in this plan all the advantage les with the Germans. erman planes are strike any city or any «res trial center in England that choose, and no can predict in advance where will fall . Planes Needed at Front protect Great Rritain thousands of fighting pla would be required, and th only be procured by withdra them from the French front, whe every plane is now needed to main tain the supremacy in the air re-/ jeently won by the allies. | The second great advantage | of Germany ties in the fact that it Is very much farther | from any of the allies’ flying bases to any vital spot in Ger many than from German flying bases to London and other big English cities. This doesn’t sound reasonable it seems it ought to be far in one direction as it ts in t the but look at the map and you ove WHY ft is true, and realize what an enormous advantage this jsives Germany | | Go Only 130 Miles | The German airplanes start their| raids from bases on the Belgian coast, principally Ostend and Zee |brugge. It is only 130 miles from Ostend to London; the round trip | ir an easy flight of two to three | hours. | Of course, it is only 120 miles | from London to the Belgian coast, | and Great Britain bas any number { machines capable of making re taliatory raids at this distance. But what is the The scattered German fiying and submarine bases could not be seriously dam aged except by a concentrated campaign on the most {mportant, And there is nothing else in Bel eatin ieeanideonenliaanian: E the blow To raids, fro ean wing in ‘POLICE SEARCH FOR | | SEATTLE WOMAN Following the of Mrs. Pauline in Seattle in the her ht murder in Boston Keyes, who lived fall of 1916 with ree H. Keye New ce are searching for Helen R. Provan, a former wi of Keyes, also a 8 the case * mother, Mrs L. Hobart, resides at North | 83rd st. Norman Provan, a brother of Helen Provan, is married to Mri | Hobart’s daughter, and lives at 751 S3rd st. Seattle detectives are not work ing on the ca Helen Provan's relatives in Seattle declare she is| here. They do not know her| whereabouts, they say. ! Tornado Good to Him WALTOON, Il.—Silas has a perfectly good Jersey that he didn’t use to have. It blown into his yard by the big tor nado and he hasn't found any own er. T gives 30 quarts of al pure cream a day thinks it is a bad wind that blows good to Several have | offered to buy the animal, but Sila can't that way. He wants to keep his luck, he says, | WILSON NAMES TRIO IN EDUCATION WORK Jenkins cow 6 cow most and Silas nobody Vreee Leaned Wire HINGTON, June 29.—Presi Wilson t ent to the #en- the following nominatio 0° the federal board for education Arthur E jowa, for a term of three years; Chas. A Greathouse, of Indiana, for a term of two years; James Phinney toe, of Massachusetts, for a term of one year. J WA jent members 0 vocational Holder, of tus RECRUITING RALLY Recruiting for the Second Wash ington infagjry will continue next ment made Friday This week's drive will end with a rally at the Armory Saturday at 8 p. m., when Col, W. M. Inglis will speak Seattle men who are registered for service have been requested to at-| tend. A Toronto dairy is to have a 25,- 000-gallon milk tank, grancro xm B rther from the British lines to German lines to London. it vantage in the matter of air raids gium worth raiding the British airplanes om Ostend, what would Nothing, except that the wi moved to the coast Id decide to bombs on German city, she esto start her British territory and of Germany's great in such as Duessel or to start from fying bases back of the French front and hit one of the two near est German cities of any conse Cologne and Frankfort Dover, England's nearest Duesseldorf and Essen, more than 230 miles over German territory fleet of raiding planes would ually attacked by German fighting machines and inthaireraft guns. Germans on Watch Similarly, while it only 160 miles from Verdun to Frankfort hich well within the flying range of the British machines, all this distance is over German terri tory and the German planes are continually on watch What mai the German alr raids serious not the dam- age and loss of life they cause, for more people are killed at the front every hour than Ge man air raiders have suce ed in killing In all their at- tempts. The danger to the Gritish lies in the possibility that so great a panic will be created among the people at home that they will make an overwhelm. Ing demand on the government that enough British airplane: be withdrawn from the front to protect British cities. Even the withdrawal of 100 airplanes from the French front would be serious, and any larger number would al most certainly end the allies supremacy in the alr. base other If Great retaliate some important two ch planes from trike dustrial cities, dort and some point Britain dropping has some From point, to howe tly hal tn ‘ont “Diamond” Lawn Mower $4.25 A WELL-BUILT and re featured liable Lawn Mower an unusually at for Saturday at tractive Cuts knives of good quality price with four revolving steel and is very easily adjusted Price $4.25. IEARS, 25¢ x» Grass Shears with keen blades tempered steel bows, GRASS and 25¢ SPRINKLER 15¢ ' 1 ized iron stoany sprinkler, bot hose ‘ALIFORNIA WEED LLERS, 35@ and 50¢ i er, easily op ickly uproots and other " weed Two 50c Rasement “ % j esi a Glass Butter Jar 40c pictured Jar right of butter A anitary.gla I just sutter with cover the two pound 10¢. size for Price Basement Salesroom “in the picture” Take Your Do" be satisfied to be just yourself, for the picture-taker has Kodak any Kodak owner With You 1 Pler more than will tell half ou the fun, a Here are Kodaks to fit every notion of investment, from the inexpensive pocket styles to the very fast “Special” Kodak est-priced can be depended upon for good results, if ty of fresh Film all sizes of with range finder. Even the low- Prompt serv ice in developing, print Mail enlarging filled in the simple directions are followed. First Floor ‘Basement Salesroom | White Millinery $5.00 $5.50 $6.50 HE Hat sentially the Millinery What pleasing effects can be monotone all-white is ¢ of Midsummer. trimming complished in this effect can be that cen in a display feature shapes of hemp combined with satin and Well-Prepared for Summer Requirements in Women’s, Misses’ and Children’s Apparel THER the summer is spent at home, camping or traveling there are many special needs in apparel which must be satisfied if one is to enjoy the season to the fullest. Good style coupled with moderate price is the magnet that draws hundreds to these dis- plays: Women's and Misses’ Silk Poplin and Gaberdine Suits, $13.85 and $16.75. Women's and Misses’ Wash Suits, $3.75, $4.90, $7.50, $9.50 and $15.00. Women's and Misses Coats, $3.95, $5.09, $7.50, $12.50 and $15.00. Women’s and Misses’ Duster Coats, $1.75, $2.95 and $3.95 Women's and Misses’ Silk and Poplin Sports Skirts, $4.75 Women’s and Misses’ Voile, Gaberdine and Linene Dresses, $5.00. Women’s and Misses’ Two-piece Sports Suits in crepe and linene, $3.95 and $4.90. p Lingerie Waists, 95¢ and $1.25. Tub Silk Waists, $1.95. Crepe de Chine Waists, sizes up to 52 bust measurement, $3.75. Wash Skirts in white and striped effects, 95¢, $1.50, and $1.95. Middy Blouses, 50c, 65c, 95c, $1.25 and $1.50 Flannel Middy Shirts, khaki-color, $3.95. P.N. Lene aint Corset, $1.00 AS sketched, Lace-front Cor- set of strong coutil, designed especially for the average figure. It has mediunr bust, long skirt, and boned protector under lacing. Equipped with two sets of hose Sizes 21 to 30, Price Georgette crepe, fine Milan and Milan hemp, idorned with feathers, daisies, grapes, wheat and ribbons A very interesting collection $6.50. $5.00, $5.50 and Basement Salesroom. | Boys’ Wash Suits, 95c HESE Suits are for lit- tle fellows from 3 to 8 years of age. They are in the becoming Junior of cham- Head and Canvas Play Sandals (As Pictured) 75c, 85c, 95c A STURDY vas Sandal, with ex- tension leather sole; gogd for vacation and play wear, Sizes 5 to 8, 75¢; 9 to 11, 85¢; 12 to 2, D5¢. Misses’ and Children’s “Bare. foot” Sandals with tan and pearl calf uppers and heavy leather soles. Sizer 6 to 8, $1.00; 9 to 11, $1.25; 12 to 2, $1.36 pair. Norfolk style, bray, Indian galatea, with long or short sleeves ; white, blue, gray or tan, also striped patterns. Price 95¢ BOYS’ CORDUROY KNICK- ERBOCKERS, well-made and cut amply full, dark drab-color, sizes 7 7 y Price $ BOYS’ ONE-PIE ING SUITS, trimmed red or white, sizes 28 to 34, Oe. BOYS’ BLOU Tan Can- APELESS SPORTS S$ of gingham, per- cale or chambray, in plain colors, and striped patterns of light and dark colors, sizes 6 to 15 years, 2D¢. —Basement Satesroom. Many Styles in Neckpieces 25c VARIED assortment of Neckwear styles is Girls’ and Boys’ Tan Lotus Calf Play Oxfords in lace style, with leather soles. Sizes 5 to 8, $1.95 pair; R% to 11, $1.50; 11% to 2, $1.75; 2% to 6, $2.26 pair Misses’ and Children’s Patent Leather “Mary Jane” Pumps with white soles and heels, Sizes 6 to 8, $1.40; 8% to 11, $1.60; 11% 2, $1.80 pair Misi and Children’s White Canvas Lace Shoes in high: cut pattern, sizes 6 to 8, $1.50; 8% to 11, $1.75; 11% to 2, $2.00 pair WHITE CANVAS TENNIS SHOES in sizes for Women and Children, Boys and Youths. Basement Salesroom. bed featured at this price, in- cluding Lace - trimmed and Embroidered Organ- die Collars; Colored Col- lars and white with col ored edges, also Pique Collar and Cuff Sets with colored embroidery, and embroidered Organ- die Vestees. Price 25¢. —Basement supporters. $1.00. Little Tots’ Wash Dresses, 50c OOD quality plaid gingham fashions the pretty dress sketched. It is trimmed with small pearl buttons, and the col- lar and cuffs are of plain -color chambray. The skirt in full- plaited style, topped by a scal- loped belt. Choice of blue and pink with white, or pink, blue or green and white. Sizes 2 to 5 years. Price”) 50¢. —Basement Sales: Salesroom, Women’s Union Suits, 35c W weight, knee Summer OMEN’S Cotton Union Suits in low neck and sleeveless, with tight or lace-trimmed Sizes 34 to 44. Price B5¢@; 3 for $1.00. Basement Salesroom. TOMMY, SLINGER OF SLANG, CALLS A SHELL A 4 ‘PLUM PUDDING’ AND MACHINE GUN ‘EMMA GEE’ Canadians. The Scotch call him|which turn the razzledazzle on) his wind up.” he means he suffered an “Allyman |French “Allemand”), but he is no- body to the Irish but a “Jerry.” er, is called a “traveling circu: A British staff officer is a “brass-} A battle, a raid, or any operation BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS | United Presa Staff Correspondent WITH THE BRITISH ARMIB IN THE FIELD, June (By Mail.)—Amertcans think are }one part of the line, then at anoth-| ties. 10. ds they Big Guns Are “Grandpas” The guns of largest caliber are “Grandpas.” The next largest are “Grandmas.” Of course “Daddy” is next, and “Mother” next, and “Un. cle,” “Aunty” and the “kids” fol. low down the scale plumb down to “Emma-Gee.” Great War Will End in August, Prophecy ROME, June 29.—The great war will end on August 28, 1917, ifthe prediction of St. Malachi, an Trish monk, who lived about 1250 A. D,, te fulfilled. Two of St, Malachi’s predictions regarding the war already have says “Fritz got ~ be some bears when it comes to sling-| ha perhaps because of the gold/against the enemy of a similar na- ing slang, but the British Tommy|praid on his cap. mmy's own|ture is a “show.” A “dud show" ian't so worse himself when he sets| headgear, the steel helmet he must} means that the stunt did not “come his to working along slango-| wear {inside the shell area, is a/off’—in plain English, the attackers logical lines tin hat.” pulled a lemon What Is patter than “Bmma-Gee"| Another name gtven the When ‘Tommy for a machine gun, for instance? Or| ficers is the “lilies,” suppo: —— O-Pip" for an observation post? | the theory that they toll not Dud" Is a Dead Shell | A “blighty” {s a small wound NEED MORE MEN IN A “whiz-bang” is a shell of such) meaning “over the seas,” and Tom: | high velocity that its whiz and {t’| my has adopted {t as a synonym of| GREEN LAKE GUARDS | bang are almost simultaneous, A! home | dud” is a shell which fails to ex “Resurrection Ward” Organization of a Home Guard plode, A bum handout fs a “dud”! A “Blighty” {fs a small wound|company has been begun by the heal, and a gink with a bone head| which invalids you home. A seri-|Green Lake Business Men's asso: is a “dud” bo. }ous wound is not a “blighty,” for| ciation, The tip you got on the filly that/the reason that it puts a crimp in The men have been drilling ev was backed off the boards by the| your traveling capacity and gives/ery Friday night, under E. L.| other nags on the back stretch was| you billets in a front sick bay Wolfe, former army sergeant. Any | 1 “dud,” and the piece of rope the| If the wound is very bad, so bad|one interested is asked to report andidate for reelection handed/that stimulants are necessary jat Woodlawn Hardware store 2nd | Sie ‘ you was a “dud” smoke fore your are operated on, you will|st. and Woodlawn ave, at 7 y,{date of Rumania’s entry {nto tie A trench-mortar is a “Joe-Emma,”| go to “Re ction ward,” Friday. The government will|“®™ a and the big black ball of high ex Ack-Emma” is morning. “Pip upply the company with army | y eee plosive the Germans reply with is a| mma” is afternoon, Apd night is|rifles and haversacks. The Home| PARIS, June 29.--To cease shay plum puddir An aircraft gun is|not infrequently calle’ “Sawer,”|Guard will serve for home protec-|ing, because soap is becoming in “Archibald” or an “Arehie,”| which is one way to pronounce the| tion, in case of invasion |searee, is what economists are urg: while the German shell which| French word “solr.” When a thing —_— ---— ing in France, They estimate that bursts with a yellow puff of smoke/is all gone, it's “napoo"—another| Third-vear men at the United|a large amount of soap would “woolly bear.” jassault and battery, with mayhem,| States naval academy at Annapolis |saved if barber shops were po «lish Tommy a German|on the Francais iwere graduated Thursday, to pro-|an dall shaving soap were and “Fritz” he is tothe A group of batteries, vide officers for fighting ships. mobile (probably after the] Fritz, or Jerry, or Allyman, first at] an attack of frapped pedal extremi- _ been fulfilled, it is said. One was — the date of its start, the other the — tioned for washing purposes ealy,