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AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU; FOR BETTER AMERICAN ISALE: OUTDOOR TOYS! —toys for the kiddies—the kind thac the open air—very specially pric will find in our attractive and tateresting Downstairs Toy Department, nn tired wheels Imitation leather hood. Length of body 18 inches. Regular price $6.95, Sea ee eee see eseeene rubber tired VELOCIPEDE— $395 regular price $6.25 w-biack enameled frame, Rubber tires, Height of front wheel 16 gives them good healthful exercise ed for Friday-Saturday. These you unusual value—|| regular price $8.50 91-inch rubber tired, red steel disc wheels. Le _THE SEATT E.G. DY HARRY B. HUNT WASHINGTON, Sept Edivon ts & great man, but— of folks who'll tell you that Fischer ts just as great, Nominated to Run for Legislature STATE SENATE w 4éth, Frew W B. Palmer. Plerce—26th, Dr. W. P. Hastings; 27th, B Gott. Regular $3.60; Friday Gaturday, $1.75. Guy B. Groff; Hurn. Skagit—40th, J. M. Harrison. Grays Harbor—2 Whatcom—42nd, detterson—2 William Bishop, Skamania—iéth, John A. Miller. | Sevens— 4, W, Len Johneon. | Wahkiakum—i9th, Percy Sinclair Whitman—#th, Oliver Hall. Snohomish—29th, George Murphy KB. J. Cleary. 5 King County—40th, John A. Soule, J A. McKinnon, Ira H. Case; dist, 1 Thomas F. Murphine, —exactly as pictured, very Phelps Totten; 43rd Ralph R strongly constructed, Nat-| 9) Fitz Ste” icusStwcn ural finish trimmed in red. 4ith, Charles W. Saunders, Arthur Charles H. Heighton. of bod = ins. pe sth, Fred G. Remann, price “ specia i- James W. Siayden: 47th, Jamen H day-Saturday, Davis, Peter David: ath, H.W. 29th, George C. Barlow, Frank M | Barber. Spokane—tn4, Arthur L. True, Grant | £. Hunt; ard, A. H. Collin, Daniel Morgan; 4th, Olaf L. Olsen, A. B. Stratton; 6th, F. B. Danskin, J. D Hassett; 6th, John Anderson, Charles H. Voss. | Whatcom—tird, N. P. Sorensen. An- drew Danielson; ‘Trunkey, Charles 1. Roth. |Pend Oreilio—éotn, Fred L. Wolf. ‘TACOMA: 6. SONOEPELD & SUMS Carl Morck; 30th, C. H. Richard. Funeral Services for J. F. Sugrue _ Funeral services for John F. Sug- fue, Alaska pioneer and Northwest | fruit grower, who died Tuesday, were | held at 9 2. m. Thursday, at St. James’ cathedral. Mr, Sugrue, at the | his death, lived in Seattle, | ‘was special representative in the west of the American Fruit Growers’ association. by his widow. W. C. EDWARDS has been elect ed president of the Self Bailing Lite Boat company, which plans to be gin work at its factory, 6617-19 20th ave, N. W., Oct. 1. are John Borges, vice president; D W. Guiles, secretary, and John M Dahlby, treasurer, In USE FoR OVER 30 YEARS Abregs hones right in that lunch basket Bluhill Green Chile Cheese He ts survived |Husband and Wife _ Other officers; Green, -|from Green's gun, ‘Negisiature from the 44th district Thurston—2sth, lL. F. Claude ©. Aspinwall. H Mason—Sist, Mark EB. Reed. Are Found Slain | PRINCE RUPERT, B. C. Sept |14—An inquest will be hela here} Wihite, R. D. De Selle | Friday into the deaths of George | Skamania—Z2nd, Walter G. Huttord a fisherman, and bie wite,| Yakima—20th, J. W. Schwartas, A ler, &. Frank Spencer; 49th, A. L |whose bodies were found in their) D. Dunn. 4 [home here yenterday Clarke—2ird, Fred Brooker, C. W. | Death had been caused by bullets! Ryan. Benton—48th, M. M. Moulton. and apparently | Clallam—sith, G. W. O'Brien, it is a cage of murder and suicide A S-months-old baby is left an or phan, oyer, R. R. somerville, H. Hubbard. defferson—3ird, J. D. Phillips, W. B. Satterlee. Kitsap—Sind, J. Cowlite—24th, E. E. Dale. Columbia—iith, Harry F. Kennedy Istand—s0th, Hi. P. MoCreight, Lincoln—i6th, W. O. Mansfield. Whitman—sth, George H. Arland, H. BE. Goldsworthy; 7th, Roy Jones, George H. Watt Dougias—14th, M. B. Lies, San Juan—62nd, V. J. Capron. Kittitas—19th, Hanks, Canfield. Walla Walla-—12th, W. TL Kirkman. 14th, Harry A. Reynolds, H. Mount Adams—i5th, Charlies Brutht Grant—S9th, Ben BE, Thomas. Wahkiakum—25th, W. N. Monerve. Garfield—10th, Charlies M. Baldwin. Stevens—ist, J. M. Glasgow, Herman Jonetaky Pacifio—26th, J. T. Stratton. | Asotin—oth, Eimer ©. Halsey. | Chelan—s6th, B. M. Gillette, Mrs. Landes Saye ; Women Unorganized | Mrs. Henry Landes, Seattle coun cilwoman, is of the opinion that the poor showing of wonren generally at the polla In due to Inck of organiza- |tion among their own sex Out of 12 women candidates trom |King county, only two were flomin ated. They are Justice of the Peace : Reah M. Whitehead and Mra. Maude Sweetman, the latter nominee for the | Okanogan—17th, William C, Brown. | Klickitat—2ist, A. F. Brockman, | Franklin—iéth, Logan L. Long. | Skagit—J. C. Wixeon, W. J. Knut nen, Painless Extraction of Teeth | Free From 9 to 11 ~ “~s — BOSTON _ ee $5.00 A real specialist in charge of our Plate Department. $4.00 Gold Crowns, ~~ the only 22K Radiographs method of knowing the exact condl- tion of your teeth, One X-ray free. Our treatment of pyorrhea is con. sidered the best; $2 per tooth. | In One Location for 21 Years jBOSTON DENTAL CLINIC 1420% Becond Avenue ("INVENTIVE GENIUS QUITS —_| 14.—Tom Over in the Coast and Geodetic Survey department you'll find « lot BG. Fischer has just retired after 86 King County—soth, Waiter J. Lunn: ist, Paul W. Houser; 82nd, Daniel Landon; 38rd, Wiiltam Wray; 34th, W. Conner; 36th, Robert Grans; Ralph Metcalf; 29th, Spokane—4th, Harve H. Phipps; é¢th, 7th, Miss Reba Oliver 8. Morris. }HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES P. Rude, Charles A. Moran; 42nd, Wiltam G. Cohen; 48th, Adolph Bebrens, Adam Heeler; 47th, E. H. Gute, ©. R. McKinnel, BF. Sith, David F. }Grays Harbor—tetn, H. B. Dollar, Hubbard, Snohomish—4sth, Mra. Harry J. Mil- | Lewis—27th, J. 6 Bier, W. H. Ken- Tharston—2ath, C. C, Aspinwall, L. Howard Shattuck. reliable | rrIURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1922, ANOTHER ENAMELWARE ——SALE— That Every Seattle Housewife Should Attend It Begins Tomorrow FRIDAY woos SATURDAY | TWO DAYS ONLY! At the prices we quote every housewife can well afford to outfit her kitchen with this fine, heavy, blue and white enamelware. 9c Colanders (just the thing for canning time), Frying Pans (fine sizes), Milk Cookers (if you haven't one of these handiest of cooking utensils, get one with- out fail), Stew Pans, Cups and Saucers, 29 Chambers, Mugs or Drinking Cups, etc... Cc Fine, big Water Buckets (cheap at seventy-five cents), big Milk Cookers, big Colanders, Basins (make fine baby bathtubs, foot tubs, LE STAR 'FERGUSON IS | COMMENDED Establishing a record of efficiency | that will be difficult to better, Caun-| ty Auditor D, ©. Ferguson and bis l assistants were receiving universal commendation, Thursday, for the dispatch and accuracy with which | the primary election returns were | hdndled, | By 2 @. m, Wednestay—six hours after the polls had cloned—the re- | turns from 980 of the 43% precincts in the county had been tabulated) and the results bulletined. } Tho supervisory staff consisted of Ferguson, W. ft. Faris, chief deputy auditor; Fred 1B. Phelps, chief ae countant, and Torfil Sigurdsson, su perintendent of elections | wean a — May Become First Woman Solon Here | } Miss Teba Hurn of Bpokane, win: | ner over E. A. Sims, veteran lege lator, for republican nomination for | will, If elected, be the to #it in that body in | —~, Fischer #trument maker for one of the most exacting and technical bureaus of the government On the payroll at a comparatively . 4 ' small salary, he hag saved the coun- ; Miss Hurn ts a lawyer and @ gradu. | ate of the University of Michigan fhe ts « daughter of former Supertor Judge D. W. Hurn, who is her law | partner in Spokane try untold wea’ jous i + peg ner aee sere yori | = re of a lope Veportees foe he has invented, developed proved virtually every type of scien tifle apparatue used in the mu@ne| Y. Unida and G, Naguchi, Japa- and coast surveys nese, charged with the possession of Probably Fischer's most noted in-| morphine, will be the first tnd) Yention is the United States Tide Pre-| viduals to be deported under the |dicting Machine No. 2. With it, of-| new Jones-Miller act, provided they ficials are able to predict the height|are found guilty of the charge on which they are being tried fn Yaki ma. | | the tides will reach tn the year 3022) an accurately a» they predict them! for the present year An idea of the accuracy and pre- cision of the machine is shown by the fact that It recognizes the effect upon the tides of 25 component influences —the motion of the moon and aun, | the pertodie variations of other heav- only bodies, the position of the earth on its orbit around the sun, and sims lar other astronomical changes. The pull and haul of these tnfiu- ences In the tides are reflected me- chanioally in the motion of dozens of little wheels and sprockets and eo centricn, which combine to move a pencil over a r ruled to wenle, which It recor the exact rise and/ fall of tides at any given point at any given date. Ry thie machine tidal charte are Prepared for navigators showing the rive and fall of tides tn all principal ports, for two years in advance Another recent invention of Fisch ¢r’s in an artificia! sextant, which |enables mariners to make observa |tlons to locate their latitude and |longitude when the horizon ts ob | soured. Signal ights for use of surveying parties, developed by Fischer, have made new records for long distance, | gre |low-powered fllumination, With an auto headlight as « reflector, ant Rk. & | with three dry cells furnishing the current, the light was seen for 85 milea, “The evcret ts the filament.” says Fischer, "We concentrated the maxt- | from mom filament tnto the amaliest poe sthie spot for ttlumination. The re mult Ie that ell the light rays are di-| in back or lower limbs, or if you no- | rected parailel, instead of radiating | thee a slowness of thought, nervous- out. One men read a peper by one noes or lerlesbliity onthe part of pour GIRL HAD Funnels, Cups (small sizes), Soup Ladles, Frying Pans (small size) ..... «000s seocses ONE-THIRD OFF ON WATER SETS, SANITARY PAILS AND LOTS OF OTHER FINE ENAMELWARE ARTI- CLES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. WESTER IMPORTING CO. Olympic Central Public Market 1422 First Avenue, between Pike and Union of thene lights two miles away.” Other inventions of Fischer in. DE ATICY clude: A highly accurate geodetic ie magnetometers, transit micrometers, |for your daughter to take, pressure sounding tube for ascertain ieee encod ing ocean depths accurately, tide fauges and much other tocntenl fami that Smart New Styles Arriving Daily nifty new models we are receiving daily in 2:-Pants Suits For Men and Young Men Whipcords, sport models, all-wool worsteds, con- servative styles or extremes. Whatever you want —it’s here with the extra pair of pants—‘the ex- tra pair doubles the wear’’—at our very attrac- tive prices. OVERCOATS Be prepared for the crisp Fall days! Carloads of new Over coats With fancy plaid backs; all colors and latest models are arriving daily vonderful values $25 - $30 - $35] $20 - $25 - $30 BOYS’ 2-PANTS SUITS aad O60 RUSSIAN CORD SHIRTS $1.85 The Shirts All Seattle Is Talking About! Silk-Striped MADRAS SHIRTS $2.65 Don't miss these wonderful bargains! See Our Fourth RAINCOATS of ardines and Whipcords now “The Extra Pair Doubles the Wear!” SPORT COATS Tom Wye, Thermo and other warm Outing Coats— $3.85 to $8.50 PART: splendid line Imported here for your Inspection. Latest styles To match that odd coat and vest » You can't beat these values in Boys’ Another great buy are these WINDOW fF 2-Pants All-Wool Scotch Herringbones, 1. and 2-Pants School : $3.50 4 $5 m $6 Cashmeres, Tweeds and Homespuns at Suits at ANP °c; SWEATERS Very Special } Seattle Headquarters for Be and 2Pants Suits j SWEATERS Si 7 to | All Schoot Colorst bed s pair : $5.45 pe Se ne Tailored Ready Co. FOURTH AVE. AT PIKE STREET Seattle’s Home of Hirsch-Wickwire Clothes—Finest in America—Ready-to-W car TT TT