The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 20, 1911, Page 10

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NG BIRD ON LONDON STREETS DISCOVERED BY FAMOUS SINGER CARUSO AND STELLA CAROL A girl found on the London streets, singing to support het mother, may become one of the world’s greatest song-birds. Her name |s Stella Carol and she was discovered by Mme, Amy Sher Lady Maitiand and others have taken charge of her future. Caruso heard the child sing at Lady Maitland’s home and was aston ished by her voice, He says she has a wonderful future, She will be given the proper training This picture shows Stelia and Caruso at Lady Maitiand’s houke, after the test Japs Ready to i Grab Chin (By United Press Leased Wire) ‘TOKIO, Oct -Backing up offer to the powers to send 70,0 men to revolt-ridden China, if nee esvary, the Japanese government today is concentrating a great force at Kyushu, While the object of the concentra is tion is apparently routine, no com) ® Lol e¢alment is made that Japan pro | ® Trail.” * poses to have a sufficient force|*® Alhambra—"A under arms for transport to China| Oe um _vauderille * to guard Japanese interests. | Empress-—Vaudeville. Four more torpedo boat destroy.|# Pantages—Vaudeville. ers today are rushing to China| ® Grand—Vaudeville and mo Peady to participate in any move-|@ tlon pictures, ments in the Yangtse “‘ang region. win. foreign gunk |to make « landing to quell atroch tles against Europeans and Japa | nese as a result of the fighting be tween rebels and inipertalist troops | near Hankow Iie eee eee eee eee AT THE THEATRES Moore—Sam Bernard, in “He Came From Milwaukee.” jetropolitan—"The Girl in the Taxi.” Seatti — “The “In Old Kentucky End of the Poor Rela * should it pecome neceseary for the a eae eH et keene ee Seeeeeeeeeeteeeeeeet The Wonder Millinery Co. 1898 Second Ave. You Can Find It Here « komense millinery stock « just what you want in Felt Moods, Velvet, Velour and Beaver Shapes. Fe 7\ Beantiful Line of Trimmed Mate’) and Trimmings at Moderate Prices. THE -WONDER 1595 Qn Av., Bet. Pike and Pine. I must sell four car- loads of our new pi- anos before this month ends. Our Board of Directors insists that this shall be done. No man in Seattle, the way times are now, could sell four car- loads of new pianos at regular retail in so short a time. That ts simply impossible. But we are piano makers; so long as we get fac- tory cost out of these pianos we shal! be sat- isfied. | Will Sell Pianos at 20c Down and No Interest It isn’t a question of getting all the money now, either. That, too, would be impossible now. Therefore, 1 make the following simply unheard of offer: Bring 20 cents and get one of these new pi- anos. And remember, instead of charging $300 or $350, as would be the case in the regular retail manner, my prices are $238, $216 and so forth. I have also a number of very elaborate and quite expensive styles. Such pianos usually sell for $600 and $625. My prices are almost half. But of course on these few instruments the prices cannot be made less than $15 per month. D. W. Thomas Selling at 20 Cents Down and NO INTEREST at - The Smith, Barnes & Strohber Co.’s Store 1123 Third Avenue, Corner Seneca Street Open Every Evening During October. r te now In that river NEWS OF THE DAY COND PUR a WILL RECOVER IT, ®| Well, Tony,” said & man ® tow frult dealor on Sixth av. ® | yesterday, “I » urkey bas ® Italy's ultimatum. *| ‘Das alla right Tony, with « smile, “No use to ware. Italia will getta ®) heem back.”—New York Tele a} graph, *) . eile Reliealialialetaieelaled | * * * * * * * * * a * ao The Millmen's union holds a dance at Dreamland tonight, 10 per cent of the proceeds t go to ward the ald of striking machin iste, Mayor Dilling has issued a per- mit to carry banners In the bie rade of labor union men next Sun day afternoon, preceding thé pro test meeting agaiumt the ar G the MeNamara brothets, ne trla} at Los Angeles. Owing to the evangelistic meet ings belng held in the Mammoth rink for the next three Sundays, lar Veaper service of the | A. will be withdrawn, | Frank Merthum will deliver a! lecture at a socialist meeting In (he Labor Temple Sunday évening. ¢ tober 22nd, His subject will "The Socialist Voice.” First gensrat me of the new Chamber of Commer » held | Wednesday evening, when a dinner | will be given at the Arctic club by the transportation burean. William R. Striling, Chicago bus ness . and Bishop Keator last night reared the Men's club of Trinity Parish. Because Chicago, Milwaukee & Puget Sound railway moved bi» barn into @ ewamp instead of up a bitl, as they agreed when they bought a rightof-way of him, Peter Cerenl, who owns a farm near Cher y Valley, was awarded $3,600 dai ages by a jury in Judge Ronald's court. Mins Frances A. Kellor, the great friend of the immigrant, was born in Columbus, O., Oct, 20, 1873. She became to terested in the welfare of the incoming Ameri cans while inves tigating the eny- ployment agen cles who catered to the demand for foreign work men, She found that from the moment the tm. migrant set foot in this land he was robbed and {il used, What the employment man didn't get, the employer did Her Civie League for Immigrants ia do- ing much good in the way of help ing newcomers get a safe and com fortable footing in America. Boys’ department of the Y. M. C A. moved to tts new qwarters tn the Y. M. ©. A Annex, formerty the Butler Hotel Annes Invitations have been issued by the Westlake public mar & ket to ftx firet annual jubilee, ® to be given Saturday, There will be attractions of entertain: ® ment snd merchandise bar # Kaine * * | Fiala Relialiaialelialalieleliel Senior clase of the West Seattle high kehoo! elected its new officers jat the annual meeting, New steamer Calista, built for the Island Transportation Co. to take the place of the tllfated steamer |Whidby which was burned to the water's ed on the Whidby | Island-By e run | 24 | The 1912 officers of the King lCcounty Oxteopahic association have been | His chief argument that the im: {migration conditions that now con. | ‘ork will be experienced [here when the Panama canal ts | opened, Francis H. McLean of New| York, secretary of the National Ar sociation of Societies for Organized Charity, urged Seattle to secure the 11913 natioual conferences of chart ,tles and corrections, at the Y. M iC. A, yesterda |. Arrangements were made yester- | |day by the ¥. M. C. A, to have ex: | perts on agriculture give 30 lecture: |on practical farm topics in conn |tion with the establishing of the | new ¥. M. ©. A. agricultural schoo! | |before the class and the public. — | | pes | Accompanied by hie family, J. OD. rrell, president of the Oregon | Washington railroad, left Seattle for Portland, Or, where he will make his home. ALB. AN PAINLESS | DENTISTS | | We Are the Pike Street | | Bargain Dentists Our work if not the cheap clase of rk a A on the care day's Btar #8 to | GOLD rin | We are nic ow prices « | ALBANY around for our ke Dougall’ & Southwick. s walle up. wate eg Mes | YOU’LL FIND IT HERE © FOR BUSY PEOPLE Famous eld battleship ao which will be the first veHneh «te \atoam through the Panama cana), arrived In Biliott bay today, where whe will remain at anchor fer two | days befor porting at Sam Diego lingulet and rvatory of hington hotel: TACOMA.— Mra Alexander 6mith lof ‘Tacoma was elected president Mra. W. Darby of Spokane flrat vice | president, Mra, KR. Booker Reed, second; Mra, William ©. Af recording secretary; Mre. Libby, corresponding Mra, W. H. Turner, treasurer; Mrs. A. Jeft Nelson, regintrar, and Mre W. A. Brooks, custodian of croasen. at the United Daughters of the Con federacy convention here, Get.’ 20, 1861, @ battle was plan ned to be fought at Fredericktown, Mo, and a con sideradie upion force mare on the town take it. But t women ay dren of lektown were too well bred to fight with strac Kers to whom they had not been Introduced and the confed erate soldiers who had been in Fredericktown bad left that morn ing. So Fredericktown may be le famous today, but It was then lees bloody CASTLE ROCK —Forced to come to time in the matter of granting a lghting franchise or suffer bay ing the lights cut off, the city coun ett has given a SOyear franchise to A new concern, with a five-year city contract. The old company’s fran chise explred. The Viewpoint. “Il suppose,” sald the city mi “there are some queer characters around an old vifjage Ihe this You'll find a Bbod many,” admit ted the pattve, “when the hotel fills up."—Loulaville Courier Journal. GOLDENDALE.— Prof. Ghartes Timbiin, while camping near here, found * drinking water in stream and called the wives ofthe party to have a look, The eougar took fright and started to ran, but it was brought down with a shotgun loaded with oe shot -akaqwaw, ‘Alaska—While in hie here, having (taken large pone for Uckets, City Agent Clyde Guptill of the Alaska Steamship company was assaulted and fatally injared. The ailanie are uD. known and were frightened away defore they could get the money. ALBERT HANSEN Established 1983 PRECIOUS STONES, JEWELRY, STERLING Across Lake Washington GET AN ACRE OR MORE NOW, VALUES ARE GOING UP ACROSS TH KE. 1-2-2-4 or 5 acre tra TERMS. ALSO BUILDING LOTS in and about BELLEVUE. PRICES, $1.25 per acre up. $10 CASH AND $10 MONTHLY CLOSEAN CITY PROPERTY LOTS 650x120; city water city light, telephone. HERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO GET A HOME. FIRE INSURANCE? YES, This office has ite own companies and will write your policy DAVID P. EASTMAN 605 Lowman Bidg. Money loaned on improved property. FAST STEAMERS LEAVE COLMAN DOCK As Follows FOR TACOMA rant Single Tri FOR EVERETT AND EDMONDS fe. SIOUX 7:00 A. M., Noon, 5:00 P.M. On Sundays eat 7:80 A.M. 0 Noon, 6:00 P.M. THREE ROUND TRIPS DAIL Single Trip, Everett 90¢, Edmonds 400 Round , Everett Te, Edmonds 80c Special low Po Sundays, Steamers and Schedules Sybject to Chango Without Notice, Ottice, Colman Dock. ‘Tiel Main 2998. Ind. 796 "other end of it WALTER OVEREND WARKBEN,-O., Oct powerful employers’ association of | Paraway, New Zealand, has the prospects of a xtiff fight ite hands, with @ licking looming up as ot Improbable powat bility. Walter Overend, a young Anglo American mélder, will be at the 20 on To New Zealand he will “come back” to settle scores with the bi« business interests which exiled bim from the country two years organizing labor unions and pr log that labor ob greater consideration than capita A parliamentary election comes «medium high crown, The alte 1 i in November. The militant molde is going to New Zealand at once to be in the thick of the campaign for the labor party (Ry United Press Leased Wire) PORTLAND, Or, Oct. 20-—The San F cisco board of marine un derwriters has been given notice of the complete abandonment of the schooner Wm. Nottingham by the Globe Navigation company, its owners | It Ie understood that the po: Portland commission will dem: one-half the value of the ship 0 for towing the vessel into; the Columbia river er her crew had been rescued sixty miles off! shore and brought to Astoria, WILL CONTINUE TO. COLLECT BILLS BY MAIL Light and water bill probably | will be collected the same way in the future as they have been in the past— by mail Joseph A. Haviick a couple of weeks ago sent a communication | to the city council, showing that 922,480 a year could be saved by jacing collectors in the field The department efficiency omy had a reply from Supt, Youngs of the water department, in which he} presents figures, showing that Hay-| Hiek’s method would cost $2,238 inore than the present. AT FRIEDMAN'S The Best Overcoat on Earth FOR $15.00 903 FIRST AVE. Square Dealing With the public; selling good goods at low prices, always guaranteeing every article to be exactly as represented ; these are the things which have made ours what it is today, the greatest Trunk and Grip Washington. Come sec: state of and Our Stoelting Special The atrical Trunk, 34 inches high, lined with Holland satin, covered with canvas, steel riveted throughout with Excelsior flat key lock. The modest price of this strong, service fable trunk is... GE Both trunks can be Pei taken through any door- way. Come to our stores, where you will have the biggest assortment from which to select, and where you will find the prices the most modest, The same tiiiks 36 inches high, for Traveling Bags Shopping Bags Sample Trunks | Steamer Trunks Stoelting Trunk Stores 2 of them—2 706 2nd Av. 1420 2nd Av. furniture Dry Geode Warm Tailored Coats for Little Folk Excellent Values at $4. 00 A BOY'S TAILORED COAT k bone Sizes 2 to ] FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. f Gtore Closes Daily at 5:30 Furniture | Dry Goods black velvet collar and t buttons. f black sateen lining A GIRL’S TAILORED COAT in lor of navy-blue years melton cloth, High neck close-fitting turnover co of blaek vel Price $4.00. New Hats for Children AT $2.50 ft, med Black» Felt i broad-brim= med Hats, trin sett crown bows or re bon AT $3.95—Pret Hat Mushroom Hats | With shirred or blue Cr blue or pink ribbon b | with | trimmed | with tailored bow of Bl velvet scarlet nm mash: ilk facing ribbon vet AT $2.75 in red or black felt ed in shirred rim finish silk binding and | German Silver Mesh Bags Special Women’s Silk- “Lined Gloves extreme! fi ¢ “snappy” erry the silk eight D MOCHA pique sewn, Parise ; $1.50 n mornings Is very little t t LI and ¢ SILK CAPE $1.75 pair SILK - LINED GRAY P. X style, with broidered backs and one large $2.00 pair. LINED ~ Sty black a First Ficor. HE picture shows several wa WOMEN MOCHA spear-point er pearl clasp at wrist WOM EN’S SILK in two-clasp one-clasp style one of attractive patterns ; : GLt IVES in the offering. The Bags are all of Ger VE man silver, with strong mesh and well-r They are full kid nade smoothly-finished frames lined, with pocket Exceptional values at $1.95.- 4 | Ec } , ; ‘ 1 s SIL LINED 4 } j 4 { 4 g ; H ane nnnntntarattnetcitintn Nas SCONTINUED styles in vie oe Misses D a ——— Shoes and Lace models, on comforts Kid Shoes able lasts, with roomy toe, patent leather tips and spring heels. Sizes 11 2. , $1.95 pair Misses’ Special, $1.95 FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc.—BASEMENT SALESROOM= House Dresses, $1. 25 black- Have Specia —Firet Floor. quality of fastening. stitched NE-PIECE white checked percale, made with O* House Dresses in a very good square low neck and % sleeves trimmed $1.23. side-front with narrow bands ; $1.50 — Well-made and trimmed on c LONG FLANNELE good quality kimono flannelette, with fleece inside . ae sailor collar and kimono sleeves with pattern border. me in a blue, ou red, gray and light-blue with smali design. TING FLANNEL NIGHT GOWNS, 50c—In with double yoke, and prettily trimmed with feather stitching. Hubbard st Sho in pink and white or blue and wh stripes. —Rarement Salerroom, New Tailored Silk Waists — S* ART Tailored Waists of black messaline, made with Gibson plait over shoulder tending to waist-line in back and plain collar and bow; finished with*turn-back 4 and patch pocket. Sizes 34 to 40; price $2.95. Basement 8 Women’s and Misses’ Coats $14.75 and $16.75 —materials are novelty coatings and the popular double-faced fabrics, ome of lar, the reverse side in the latter effectively used as trimming. the Coats show the deep sailo- collar, others the plain round c and there is an excellent range of colorings in both styles to choose from. Prices, $14.75 and nhs 75. Women’ s and Misses’ One-Piece Serge Dresses, $8.75 ELL-TAILORED Serge Dresses, in black, navy or brown, made in high-w ed style, with three-quarter sleeves. Some are designed with sailor collar and cuffs of neck finished with lace collar; buttons, These wear, and are atin and others have the low skirts are fastened at side with pear! Dresse unu are appropriate for ial values at $8.75. New Arrivals in Girls’ Coats for Autumn Wear NEWLY navy-blue or tan, fitted back piped with velvet and trin 14 years. Pr 50. Other new Coats for ¢ are diagonal che gray and tan mixtures, cut in straight, with Jaq pointed-back rolling collar and cuffs of harmonizing plaid. $i 6 to 14 years, $6.50, at-home, street or business —Rasement Salerrooin arr in heavy méfton cloth, and is made with loose front and § and cuffs of bright § ived Girls’ Coat is Has large collar with fancy buttons. nes 9 ce $ in loose effect —Masement Frederick & Nelson INCORPORATE,

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