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<= {cA Nationa! Trstitation | Add About 20% to These Prices It isn’t neces- sary to shop around in order to learn what other stores are asking for the grade of material and tailoring which Brownin King & Co. of- fer you at prices here. Just add 10 to 30 per cent, or an average of 20 per cent, That is the wholesalers’ profit, which would also have to be added to these Browning —. t giore — if not make all our Clothing. Men’s Fall Suits .... . . $25 to $60 Men’s Top Coats .............$25 to $45 Men’s Gabardine Coats ....... .$30 to $45 Heavy Overcoats—Every garment absolutely brand new. Wonderful assortment of styles and fabrics— $25, $30, $35, $40 to $75 Because you know us as clothiers, please do not overlook our ability to save you a great deal of money in a year on your little things—your neck- wear, shirts, underwear, hats, etc. Browning King & Co. Second at University, Seattle, Wash. STAR WANT. ADS GET RESULTS |: 527."2 the lee and happiness THE SEATT Among the New Books Cappy Ricks Retires, Rogues’ Haven, Gift of the Desert, The Rest Hollow Mystery, The Cowboy, Five Nights at Five Pines, Business. “Cappy Ricks Retires,” Peter 3B. Kyne, Cosmopolitan, In a dozen dit ferent chapters the famous old Cap: | py, Who swears “By the Holy Pink Toed Prophet,” doos hin level beat to retire, Hut Romance keeps calling | him back to business. Cappy now probably ranks as the | best known fiction character that re | cent fiction has created Among the other very real persons whose histories Mr, Kyne has woven into his story are “Matt Peaaley,” Cappy's gigantic and good-natured son-in-law; "J. Augustus Redeli,” happy-go-lucky young go-getter in the Pacific coast business world;| Live Wire Guise.” a Peruvian cross between a firecracker and a seltzer bottle, and a badly.mixed pair of hair trigger Irishmen from different and hostile parts of the auld counthry | Chief Engineer Terence Reardon and | ptain Mi el J. Murphy of the| | good ship “Narcissus.” The trouble | begina early tn the book when Ca: of the Blue Star Navigation com pany, sends these two Irishmen to} sea on the same ship in «pite of his} mingivings that they ought to be kept at least a thousand miles apart “Rogues’ Haven,” Roy Bridges, D. Appleton & Co. This novel bears the} | picturesque name of the estate of old Edwhrd Cratke, the mystery of whose | past ix deepened by the brooding at mosphere of decay which hag fallen upon his home and the terrifying jerew of some pirate ship than the |house-men of a peaceful English man. | sion. Thither the reader accompantes | jyoung John Howe to strange adven: | following the revelation of hin| the #ea and the aand blown from the | } identity as @randseon of the old man} and heir to his huge fortune. The} | frantic struggle for this wealth, the jmystery of the disappearance of | |dobn’s parents, the extraordinary | Tevelations of olf man Craike's past, | |the love that flowers even in the | grimness of Rogues’ Haven are some of the elements which go to make up this dashing novel of the days when a pirate past could lurk tn the quiet English landscape, / see | “Gift of the Desert." Randal Par. |rish, A. C. McClurg & Co. Foreed by circumstances Into a marriage that was distasteful and j full of terror fog her, Deborah Mer. | edith chowe, instead of living with | | brutal Bob Meager, to trust her lite | to the perils of the desert But she did not go alone, For, out} of the dark, from the midst of out. | lawed Mexicana and desperadoes, | from out of the cold night air, strong with the smell of drunkenness, and | laden with the terrorizing feeling of | treachery and outlawry was stretched | to her a helping hand. She setaed | it, and trusted her unknown guide! mplicity, until dawn, coming slowly | upon the desert, revealed him as the) | “Friseo Kid," a notorious outlaw and | bandit. } Then followed tn rapid guccession |& number of adventures with start! | | ing sequences, arriving at a denone- | ment, #0 pleasing that the novel wii! | de laid aside with pang of regret. | eee “The Rest Hollow Mystery,” Re. | becea N, Porter, Century company. This Is an absorbing mystery story | with @ refreshing plot. It is eet in a! | deserted mansion of an eastern po- | |tentate of wealth in southern Call. | | fornin—the kind of place tn which, jan one of the characters says, “any. | thing could happen.” Romance, mys. | tery, erime, wealth, poverty, venge ance, all these enter the great man- | sion and affect the lives of the sur. | prising people there. The central figure of “The Rest| Hollow Mystery” ie an extraordinary | young man with whom every reader | will sympathize, A cold-blooded ad. venturer, two clever women, a fa. mous scientist and chance itself play The Wise Man stocks up his coal bin before = Frost testily reminds him that Winter fast. And he bef ge it Co He eee a Mines, ts Bellingham, » while the “get- his dealer or Elliott 6017. He profits ell- ey lpreery. _— when the days are dark BELLINGHAM CO in the capacity of president emeritus | Words We Misspell in “The Cowboy,” Philip Ashton Rol ina, Soribners, A record of the “old” west which has now almost faded from existence before the westward march of olvill- zation. ‘The cowboy In here treated as the | important factor in the soctal and po- toa! development of the | States that he actually was. The book tella about the early ranchos, cattle, the horses anc thetr ing of animals, the whole cattle busi ness; the roundup, roping, horse breaking; and gives a fund of cow boy lore—-their customs and superatt tions, slang, clothes, amusements, dis wipations, fights, eto eee “Tive Nighta at the Five Pines,” | Avery Gaul, Century company. Would you or would you not mpend | five nights in an old house on Cape | Cod where “at night the foot of Tr is what a young woman New York was forced to do, ive there was to her, as to all of us, one thing more vital than her hee very real dread of the supernatural, | and that was ‘amily. But thin fe not merely the tale of | a haunted house. It ty the history of Mattle, whose last name was taken love of home and | from a ship; a woman who lived a strange and romantic Mfe ahut off from the world in a sea captain's mansion at Star Harbor is developed thru a sequence of payehic events which occur on five successive nights. Thru the book runs the sound of | Her story wjnd-awept dunes, and before we have read far we come to know tntt mately those peculiar and lovable character who are a part of the Cape Cod atmoaphere; Judge Bell, who at tendm seanc WinkleMan and Dove, who does umMer people, and Jezebel, the paychic cat. eee “Words We Misspell tn Business,” Frank H. Visetelly, managing editor ot New Standard dictionary, Funk @/ Wagnalls company. There are few persons who have! not at some time in their tives been perplexed about the spelling of some word in thelr mother tongue Boys and girls, young men and ung Women, are graduated from and universities with knowledge of English orthography The rewuit Is that when they enter commercial life, they find themaeives badly handicapped, and some of their words assume forms that approach United | The club afterward adopted a revo nt, the buying and «ell. | thing goes up and down the) ublic and business schools, colleges | inmuffictent | LE STAR voke | DYER INDORSED IN MT, BAKER | Gaines Attacked at Meeting | of Club Charges of @ corrupt county polltt jeat ring with @ plentiful supply of money, organized to perpetuate the rule of professional politicians; «l- leged attempts to befuddle the tsrucs in the coming primary election on the county commissionership; and « scathing denunciation of the tactics Jot the ring, marked a speech by Howard Waterman, lawyer, before & meeting of the Mount Baker Park Improvement club Wednesday night. lution tndorsing NM. M, Dyer for county commissioner. “One of the candidates for this office,” said Waterman, “formerly 4 bank clerk, has been for the past 13 or 14 years a political incurable, holding one job after another In the court house, and gaining each yeor lin politica: power, During the past three years he has been county |treasurer—the mont expensive one} er had, He ts not eligible for re-election, #0 he plans to step acrons the hall and become county commis I refer to William A. Gatnes. man charged Gaines with at to form @ political ring, of 6 would be the director, and cited the candidacy of two of his {clerks for county offices. Waterman concluded his esperch with a strong indorsement of Dyer |atating that his business and eng! neering record prove him to be the Lae qualified man for the office, and the only candidate who never held office and who has thé time, princt ples and experience which promise | not only a capable administration ot county business, but @ substantial re- | duction of taxes Grand Army Men to Attend Meet ‘Two mpecia! cars will carry more than 100 delegates of the Grand Army of the Republic from Seattle and Tacoma to the national encamp- ment at Des Motnes, Iowa, Septem ber 24. ———$ $$ the fantastic. This book ts designed as an aff to correct thin defect It contains 10,000 terms, showing thelr correct forms and divisions a» used In printing and writing; rules governing the orthography of Eng- Nath words and the formation of ptur- als, and tests for spelling. It ts of handy size for quick reference, A WAIST HOLD Ted—What did Madge say when you rocked the hammock last night’ Ned—She told me to hold on, and T 4i4.--New York Sun. —- “Dress Well—Never Miss the Money” With More Style i Waa young men demanded it—somebody simply had to do it. The two-pants suits had been mod- eled along too conservative lines to meet with the tastes of the exacting youn ly desirable features of two-pants suits for young men, as well as older men, Gately’s took immediate steps to put more style into two-pants suits, We prevailed upon high- standard of fashion in young men’s clothes, to make suits with two pairs of pants, designed distinctively for the young man. In cut, tailoring, color and patterns they have the fine points of quality that Some Specially Fine Values $30-$35-$40-$45 Open a Gately Charge Account You Need Not Pay All in 30 Days 1427 FIFTH AVENUE Between Pike and Union Streets men. Knowing the high- grade makers, who set the Young Men like, Donlan, Star From Ireland, Linotyper Te I Here From| Erin, Altho Born in Issaquah Distance and fiying bullets mean little or nothing to some | | people, George Donlan, Mnotype op. erator for Tho Star, han recent ly returned from a little summer trip to Ireland. Donlan left Seattle June 4, with Mrs. Donlan and thetr three young+ eters, intending to visit friends in New York and Washington, D. ©. “Dut,” says he, “after we got on the other coast decided we might just as well take « step across, #0 we did.” | About the middie of July they! arrived tn Ireland, and spent the remainder of the summer visiting the towns of Waterford, Cork, Dub-| lin, Queenstown and Kilarney. Conditions tn that country, ao} cording to the returned vacationist, | are not as bad as they sound, Bul} lots, ho says, are not flying, Just now at least, with the speed with which they are sometimes accred- ited. While in Cork Mr, Donlan met Commander Milan of the re publican forces, Commander Milan, he declares, is @ mild, calm man, who does not care to talk at length about the difficulty tn Ireland. Donian'’s name would perhaps lead one to believe that when sailing for Old Erin he sought to visit the homeland. Let it be sakl that, altho distant relatives relatives of his now reside in Ireland, he himself was born in Issaquah, Wash. 50 miles from Seattle, For 17 years he has been a Mnotype operator on The Star. HEALTH MEN CONVENE HERE Dr. Paul A. Turner, director of we ivered the leading addrens at th Opening seasion of the twoday con vention of state health officers, whieh started Friday morning in the Chamber of Commerce amembly led by Us juarantecd These Prices are the MINIMUM Prices Incinde ‘War Tex MAIL ORDERS Shipped 0. 0. D. Without Deposit Pike Street ‘Iil] Tire Shop w. Oo SHOP Man, Drops in | PAGE 9 Where Your Dollar Goes Farthest Shamek Bros., 1526 Third Ave. Have you seen our Coats and Suits for ladies? We have the most Complete Line in the city. Street Coats in Fall and Winter weights at $20.00. Motor Coats, made of double-faced cloth of high quality, $45.00. Fancy Coats, made of Marline, Veldyn, Gerona, Marvella and other high-grade cloth, self or fur collar, $45.00 and up. Plaited Skirts for School Girls, $5.95 each. Jersey Jackets for School Girls, $5.95 each. Skirt and Jacket for $10.00. All Coats, Suits and Skirts are made in our own shop and guaranteed in every respect. A fine line of Silk Underwear and Hosiery at very LOW prices. A large line of Silks for Dresses, Skirts and Linings. VELVETS CORDUROYS PLUSHES Our Prices Always the Lowest! Hemstitching Embroidering Braiding Plaiting of All Kinds AT HIS WORD | He—All great men have smoked, Buttons Insurance company, will call a West Lt ern Washington convention of the |” ge! compan Weatern representatives} She—Oh, !f you will only give up in Seattle Saturday. The convention |smoking until you are great, I shall ‘will be followed by « banquet. nt.—Chicugo Herald and Ex- 4 in Beattle Frida Silk Hosiery TO EVERY SHOE BUYER Starting today, continuing to Satur- at $4 or more will receive as a F Gat = teaeiie pel ft Silk Hose with lisle top; plone a purchase of Shoes at $4 or « receive a pair of Silk Hose FREE, $3, $4 to $6 Shoes in All Leathers 100 «pairs Ladies’ Shoes, with leather soles and up- pers; colors, brown, black and white; sixes 2% to 4%. They are a real bargain at 45¢. Two New Fall Styles with Many More to Choose ALL SIZES, WIDTHS 5,900 pairs NEW FALL SHOES for Men, Women, Boys and Girls on sale at a remarkably low price. READ PRICES A big lot, consisting of 350 pairs Men's Fine Dress and Army Last Work Shoes, former value $6.00, now $3.05; new Fall Brown and Black Shoes and Ox- fords, with new shaped toe and heavy soles, worth $7, now $4.95; Boys’ School Shoes in medium and hoavy weights of solid leather, sizes 1144 to 2, worth $4, now $2.45; 6, at $2.95; a big line of Scuffers at , $$4 to $6 Shoes in brown and and uppers, all for 45¢ pair; a big lot Pumps and Oxfords in patent and kid leathers, worth a 3 Ladies High Kid Boots with milita . now only $2.85; many hundred pairs of 4 brown one- and two-strap Pumps and Fine Oxfords, worth §7, now $3. 95; Fancy Ribbon Bed- room Felt Slippers, worth $1.75, now at O5¢; regular $8.00 new Fall Satin Slippers, with French or military heels, at $4.05. The above list is but a small por tion of the many styles and prices which we have to offer in this store, All Shoes priced so low and quality so good you can't afford to stay away. Make plans . to be here at once, STAR SHOE STORE Corner 2nd and Seneca, basement Cheasty’s Clothing Store