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JA PH —getting ready for fall? Well, this is your range opportunity . For quick selling we have pt the price way down. Only forty.in the lot—so come early. All you need bring is $5—; pay the balance in small monthly payments. —exactly as pictured; beautifully nickel trimmed; large fire box and warming ovens; panels and splasher back enam- eled in robin’s-egg blue or in gray; 16x18-inch oven; six &inch lids; concealed pipe. Armco rustproof steq. ENOMENAL VALUE! we bought them quite special and price them even more so! $792 regular price $102.50 ttle Man Heads {Mother Asks Permit Judges of Poultry Visiting delegates will be a reception at the New hotel tonight. Wednes- they will take a trip to Alder. d Manor. WENATCHEE.—Invitation of Se Ue Chamber of Commerce to Inter- Apple Shippers’ association, i Meeting in Cincinnatl, to hold Seattle next year, indorsed ber of Commerce and Com- Club bere, | to Wed for Girl, 13 VANCOUVER, Wash., Aug. 9.—A marriage license for her 1}-yearold daughter was denied a woman who did not give her name, here today. The prospective groom was 26 years old. Council Continues Its Budget Session Budget session of the city council was to be resumed Tuesday, with po- Hee, fire, water and light department schedules up for consideration. ABERDEEN, — Three logging camps of Polson Co. and one of In- ce CO resume operations, giving emplbyment to more than 200 men, VANCOUVER, B. C-—-Mutiny re ported aboard Canadian merchant marine steamer Canadian Observer. Double Inducements Tomorrow Girls’ School Dresses — $ 1 98 Up Mothers! Dqn’t waste your time making school dresses for your girl. Enjoy these summer days while they last. It won't pay you to make them when we offer such dresses at $1.98. They are in nifty new styles, and made from good quality ging hams. Trimmed with good linene and fanck gingham. 10 to 14. Specials at 98c You can't believe what Sf¢ will buy here. For less than a dollar you can purchase a house dress, hat, Tam O'Shanter , percale waist or a white blouse. All are high grade merchandise, cut to a bargain price. Ages Boys’ Wash Suits Special $1.10 $2.00 values of serviceable one-piece Wash Suits, made from heavy galatea and madras cloths; smartly trim med in’ contrasting colors; stripes and plain colors. Ages 2 to % Misses’ Lisle Stockings Cut to 35c 50e quality of misses’ fine lisle-finished hose; extra heavy sole and reinforced toes and heeis; Special B5¢. black, tan, and white; all sizes Women’s 35c Hose Cut to 19c These sell regularly for 35¢ a pair, and are bargains at the cut price. 40 dozen of them, “Buster Brown” brand; black and gray There are about On Sale Wednesday—Pair 19¢ SAVES VOU MONEY] SECOND. AVENUE AT JAMES STREET THE 57 years establishing happy, cozy homes! Only Coyotes May A a a ee meee SEATTLE STAR . TUESDAY, AUGUST 9, 1921. HUNGER AND THIRST RACE WITH OREGON MANHUNTERS See Death of De ntist Who Planned to Witness His Own Funeral ‘This te the lant of « serine of te » who ts believed to have killed Kassel, hoping the bile would think he had been Aied and that Kussell was the murderer. —Kalitor, By Fred L. Boalt ROSEBURG, Ore, Aug. %.—The status of the Prumfield case, as I is Uke this: A coroner's jury has found that the bedy found under the Elgin Six with red dise wheels is not that of Brumfield, but that of Dennis Russell, The Elgin Six ts a charred and twisted junk. ‘There ts & warrant out for the ar rest of Dr. Brumfield, cnarging that he murdered Dennis Russell, There ls a reward of $2,000 of. fered for the capture of Brumfield, And the other day four rather re- markable gentiomen left town in a high-powered car, One is a deputy sheriff. One And two are.cowmen. All four ate expert horsemen and dead shots and are reputed to be fearless, THEYRE OUT TO “GET” DR. BRUMFIELD They are the men who, In the opinion of the authorities, are best fitted to carry out a hazardour task that of “getting” Dr, Brumfield. Tt seems odd to thoxe who know that other Dr. Brumfield, the respected, cultured, esthetic Dr. Brumfield, that seach a for- miduble pomse should be seat out against him. The man-hunters say they will not return until they get him— dead of alive. I do not know where they are looking for him, but I imagine ft ts somewhere between the crossroads where the Shoemakers turned to the right to go to Crater lake and Bend. One may believe that, when the Shoomakers caught up and passed him, Brumfield did not follow them. He turned about and went the other way because there isn't any other way to £0. But he did not go north to Rend. The road has been watched at that end. And the man who went north after the Shoemakers met Brum field did not see the fugitive. LEFT ROAD, WHERE DID t GO? | And all about ts a wildernem of dewert. Perhaps he left the road. jcould be done. There is no brush lin that country; only scrub pines. [One could go far crosscountry with an automobile if he did not get jcausht In sand. | We will say, then, that the doctor has left the road and hidden his auto mobile in the wilderness. He might win thru afoot, following any point f the compass, but the way ts pertious to one unused ta the desert. If he does win thru, he stands a Local Men Among chance of getting clear away. He * has money. He drew $1,000 from Record Climbers}: sans Just before the “accident” E. F. Onberg and A. A. Kelly, of|®Md there are reasons to believe he Seattle, were Sov & party of 13}5ad between $4,000 and $5,000 In who established a new season's rec.|Cash with him when his flight be lord of 10% hours for climbing Mt, |®® : Sixt od th . ‘ ixteen start on © journey, wit pe ly “get” the | under the leadership of Henry Fuhr ler, Swiss guide, Floyd Schmoe,s of, before the manhunters do, One may viewilize him now as a Seattle, and Wesley Langiow, of Ta- COMA, were ansistant guides. ~~ Real Pai | P rm" ess Extraction Free Daily write, Dr. mam of Besides Osberg and Kelly, thone |reaching the top were; Fred G Berto and Erik Lindseth, Tacoma, Fred Shroeder, Jr, Chicago; Victor S. Risley, Milwaukie, Ore; Albert | Williams and R. A. Christman, Port | Orchard; Glen C, Meacham, Bremer ton; J. L. Kenworthy, Coatsville, |Pa; E. T. Donovan, Milwaukee, Wis; A. Y, Thlenm, Stremnoast, Nor and Forrest Hurrah, Pendieton, It Said the Wrong | Man Was Arrested chaieboney “ptats, "when Thru an error, tt was stated Satur. || a andr tn’ tert ae | day that George O'Malley, 4812 Stone ean bite corm off the | way, was arrested on a charge of nteed 15 years. reckless driving after an auto acc! hone net | dent at Westlake ave, and Harrison |$% st, Friday night, in which Miss Ma bel Fair, 25, Manhattan apartments, was injured. Miss Fair was driving with George F. Comstock, when Comstock’s ma- chine collided with O'Malley's car Comstock was arrested for alleged reckless driving. anteed for 15 years. « taken in the morn- b same day. Bxami- advice free Samples of Our Pilate Werk. We ‘Test of Time. Most of our present patro: recommended by our early ¢ ers, whose work is still good satisfaction. Ask our cus- tomers, who have tested our work. When coming to our office, be sure you are in the right placs. Bring this ad’ with you. Cut-Rate st. ing and get nation and OIL, PAINTINGS @1.00 Painted in window while you wait, CRESCENT PAINT Co, 703 Third Avenue. giving Dentists oO For New Styles and Pretty Arms (Beauty Notes) Women are fast learning the value of the use of delatono fon re- moving hair or fuzz from face, neck or arms. A paste is made with some powdered delatone and water ang spread on the hairy surface, In 2 or 3 minutes it is rubbed off, the skin washed and every bit of hair hag disappeared, No failure will re. sult if you are careful to buy genu ine delatone and mix fresh as want ed. Advertinement | DR. J. R. HINTON | Free Examinatidn ‘Best $2.60 GLasses on Earth | We are one of the few optical stores in the Northwest that really «rind lenses from btart to finish, and we are the only one in SEATTLE—ON FIRST AVENUD Examination free, by graduate op- tometrist. Glasses’ not prescribed | unless absolutely necessary. BINYON OPTICAL CO. | 116 FINGT AVENUE Between spring and Scucca PURE MALTED MILK is a timber crulser. | It} very different person from the cub! coyotes to attend the obsequics. tured professions: genteman, ta] THE END fashionable, almost foppiah habia | KLAMATHL, Ore, Aug. 9.~The |menta, who on the night of hin! olusive Dr. BR. M. Brumfield, | metamorphosis ate with relish a| once vamp Faye cltizen | aint se cre e Kand of Roseburg, now want pevhalag yer cad contr ga 7) ed Unere for {the murder of Den Ku: Pp . hat face then “eo wellroundea| “Me” 3 pene jand smoothly shaven, is gaunt now,| ‘The great hne and ery ralend In but the gauntness t» hidden by the vicinity of Crater luke, when | heavy growth of black beard. He is) members of a Mazam’ hiking {dirty and hungry and thirwty, and| party were held up and robbed by }he is dangerous, skulking thru the} «a man resembling Dr. Brumfield, wilderness, traveling, one may be subsided te a whisper today when lieve, by olght and hiding thru the three suspects, Jack Morrison, long, hot days. Glenn Reynolds and their alleged It ts 80 they wif find him--if@hey | accomplice, Lillian Bennington, find bim at all, of Roseburg, were jailed here It would be strange if he Tourtsts who were robbed iden- who planned to witness his own tified the two men as the ones funeral with a substitute corpse, who had robbed them. Jack Mor. | with rite and book and decorous risen is the man mistaken for mourning, should really die, Beumfield, officers and victims alone, and none but uninvited agreed. Industrial Storm Is Past, Declares ‘Noted Economist ‘The following article was written expectally for The Star by Halbert P. Gillette, editor of Pngineering and Contracting. Mr. Gillette was formerty © resident of Bellingham, Wash. and tater, a» © consulting engineer, made © valsation survey of the raliroad lines |e this state for the state falircad commision, He ts the author of @ eumber of standurd cost analysis books, and ts widely revognised as an authority on economics. — Editor BY HALBERT P. GILLETTE CHICAGO, Aug. 9.—The industrial storm is past. Reliable business barometers are registering “fair weath- jer.” They show we have entered a priod of stability that | Bb ee % 7 “ normal peace and prosperity. e n- ning of 1921 SRESEBRERE RSS brought the end ei? } is 23 of the unsettled business period, brought on by war inflation. Every indica- tion from thate time on pointed sw» to a “return to normalcy. 1. The whole- , | sale commodity price list. o 2The fac-, tory. employ- ment index. | 8. Tons or U cars of freight loaded monthly. Look at the accompanying graph showing the fluctua- tions of the wholesale price index. You'll see a gradual month to month decline in the movement of average whole- | sale prices. . May, 1920, represents the highest price level in our na- tional history. Then it begins to drop, going slowly until September, 1920, is reached. Then it begins to drop precipi- tately and continues. downward until January of this year when its movement again becomes gradual. You can readily see that from that time on wholesale ices have been growing more stable, more dependable. at means that business, frightened indoors by the earlier precipitate drop, can now venture f again. Right now we're at the turn of the tide in wholesale That means that retail prices and wages will con- tinue to decline. But wholesale prices will stay up. Now, let us turn to our second barometer—employment figures. The graph is based on figures supplied by the New +2 -—_e> “a | York state industrial commission, since national figures can- not be got. But these figures are based on 600,000 employes and should be significant. The number of employes in 1914 is taken as a standard |and called 100 per cent. The figures given in this graph are based on that standard. You'll see that the greatest number of men were em- ployed in March, 1920. Then, like the price index, the line begins to drop slowly at first, but gaining momentum when October, 1920, is reached. The lowest grade is reached fn January, 1921. Then, just as with wholesale prices, you see a tendency toward stabilization. We come to June of this year with lvery little fluctuation. Everything points to normal indus- | trial conditions. Now let us consider our third trade barometer—freight \ear loadings. The number of revenue freight cars loaded in the first half of 1921 is about 10 per cent less than in the | same period of 1920, but corresponds roughly with the num- |ber loaded in the same period of 1919. | So every one of our indicators show us that normalcy not only is on the way, but actually has arrived! | 4 BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT STARTING HE National Bank of Commerce of New York, in the current issue of its Commercial Monthly, says: “The United States is practically thru with the period of vio- lent business disturbance which began in May, 1920. We will, from time to time, have visible evidences of the dis- tressing conditions thru which the country has been pass- ing, but these occurrences should be regarded not as in- dices to forward conditions, but as relating to the past. * * * Tt seems a safe conclusion that business im- provement is already starting, and that this will be gen- erally realized in the course of a few weeks.” New Arrivals in Fall Frocks Specially Priced at $17.50 to $37.50 A marvelous collection of very charming Suits and Dresses in embroidered navy and brown trico- See Our Now Arrivals of “Arrow Brand Clothes”’ in Men's, Young Men's and loys. tine, Canton crepes and velours, all in the newest and most exquisite styles of the season; suitable for street wear. Final Clearance of all Summer Apparel $15.00 to $39.50 Take Elevator Whistle HOME-MADE JELLY When the winter rains fall, and dinner’s on the table, itl! be great to bave Ma get out @ glass or two of her home-made jelly to go with the roast, the chicken or the turkey, won't it? Unele Sam's directions and suggestions for making all kinds of jellies are ready for you. The Star’s Washington bureau has com- piled the information supplied by the officd of home economics the agricultural department. You can have it for the asking by filling out andé mailing the eoupon below. Washington Bureau, Seattle Star, 1400 N. Y¥. Ave., Washington, D. C. 1 wish « free copy of Uncle Sam's suggestions on “JELLY MAKING,” and enclose two cents for postage . - Name. . Street and Ne. . 260 eras abos os com scces ence ce evcceceneccccene: Clty Ge TOW. 6. be cocccccc esas snes besednastacses ecnb cotton BALE. . . 2. 20s reas oonwmw er enmnmees cece anes won coerce ceceenes TO SETTLE ALL SOLDIER CLAIM “Clean-Up Squad” About to Function Now ts the time for any former service man claiming compensation from the government for any rea- son to prepare to step forward and be heard. The “Clean Up Squad” is going to function. The squad, working on the 18th district, which includes Washing- ton, Oregon and Idaho, under the bureau of war risk insurance and directed by Col. Charles R. Forbes and L. C. Jesseph, will gather ip overy outstanding claim and have them passed upon in relation to the rights and privileges under the recently passed Sweet Dill. : An advance agent will route the squad thruout the state and will notify American Legion posta, the American Red Cross and other sor. vice organizations of its arrival in given territory. Claimants are to appear at an- nounced meetings before a medical examiner, who will have power to furnish railroad fare to those ask- ing attention. A compensation and insurance claims contract examiner will pass upon all papers brought to him and give advice and as- sistance hecessary to find adjudica- ibn. “In this way,” says George D. Hubbard, advance agent, “we hope to bring to a conclusion this great and unfinished task.” Counci -and Labor Men Almost Fight DES MOINES, Ia., Aug. 9.—Mem- bers of the city council and labor leaders nearly came to blows at a meeting of the city council yesterday in the presence of 650 street car em- ployes, forced out of work by the street car shutdown here last Wed- nesday. The council] did nothing to alleviate the transportation and un- employment situation beyond licens- ing 13 more buses, Following the council's action Sat- urday and conferences over the week end, Frank C, Chambers, president and receiver for the street car com- pany, is to leave for Chicago to offer to A. W. Harris, principal stockhold- er, the compromise proposed by Des Moines retail merchants and in- formally agreed to by the city council, Prank of Druggist Costs $250 per Lb. CHICAGO, Aug. 9%—Charies H Forbes, a drug store owner, rolled tartar emetic with candy in order to punish small boys who had been stealing sweets from his counter, By accident he sold some doctored marshmallows to Mrs. Elizabeth Hanthorne. She lost forty pounds and filed suit got $250 for each pound. YOU'LL GET RID OF There is one simple, safe way that never fails to ° blackheads and that is to disso) them. To do this get two ounces of cal onite powder from any drug stor®) sprmkie a little an @ ho! sponge—rub over the black briskly—wash the parte will be surprised how ny . Big heads have disaj Diackhes heads, little where they simply diasolve ant disappear, } he parts wi out any mark whatever, Black are simply a mixture of dust ang dirt and secretions from the bod; that form in the pores of tl et Pinching not get the black) they become hard. 0 powder and the water simply solve the blackheads so they wi right out, leaving the pores clean and in their natural cor tion, Anyone troubled with them unsightly ble es should certain ly try this simple method.—Adv tisement. : Jno. E. O’Brien | Maker of Men's Clothes 306 Unica St. Suit to Order $40 to $65 The kind you want at either Price, The best Business Suit fo) tle is a Bankers’ gra: & good one, LEWISTON, Idaho.—R. FB. Fow!- er, 64, and son, Albert Fowler, 16, drowned in Clearwater river. Geo, but Boldt's Bread is good! ‘Advertisement, Supreme Blend Coffee—the very best that grows—1 Ib, 400; 2 lbs, 75c; 3 Ibs. $1.10, Lunch with me—Best for Less. Quick Service, M. A, HANSEN—40 Economy Mkt. Seat-