The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 16, 1912, Page 8

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| Our Idea of nothing to do Is to try to show off your furniture in front of the tax assessor. Sulphurro The Great System Tote, | At all Drug Stores. | Tn SO-cent and $1.00 Hotties a mM WART st n co.) Le t1 to Wash ia St. Seatt every department. IMPORTANT! Closed All Day Friday We are going to move to our new location, corner Third av. and University Street. Watch for our removal sale announcement in tomorrow night's Star—Great reductions in Sale starts Saturday at 10 a. m. sharp. Pacific Outfitting Co. 1418 Second Avenue Between Union and Pike I Hpectaline tn C. G. CHILBERG Paperh: Dealer | Wall Paper, and Pai TID BLEWHTT #T, Wstimates Cheerfully Given between Seattle, Tacoma, [ Portland end San Francisco fy She Finest Grain} in the Mest you realize that you are Ketting every road can give to-date accom hing a rail you in up. xdation Loewen Seattle every day ot 11:50 0 me ‘Three Other Fine Trams Daily (Lise of the Shasta Limited) &. &. BLus District Passenger 7M6 Second Aw: Phone Main 932 or deposited with The Dexter Horton National Bank. Second at Cherry Have You Suspected Your There are two ways to whether you have weak Vidneys | There are Two Ways to Find Out Whether the Kidneys are Sick or Weak The first is through the pains in| the back and other outward signs.| The second is by examination of! the kidney secretions | That is why physicians make such a careful examination when you apply for insurance, and if there is any sign of kidney trouble you are likely rejected Kidney disease is so dangerou that it is a bad mistake to overlook or neglect it, and if pain in the back, recurring headaches, or a fretful, mervous, tired condition makes you suspect some kidne trouble, take the trouble to watch the kidney secretions. Look for any of the following signs More or less than three and one haif pints pass y Too dark oF te Passages too fr uch reduced, or # ie a color. nt, profuse, or ing and pain al. Bandy, gritty or cloudy settlings Fat or olly-iooking iayer whic gathers on the surface when allowed nd, or a jelly-itke thickening a ining of the linen or bad o4or Temporary changes may occur for a time from things eaten, but if the changed appearance con tinues, your kidneys are out of| order and you need help. Neglect May prove serious. In life depends largely upon the money you save, of the first thousand dollars is the first step toward your success We pay 4 per cent interest, compounded semi-annually, on money “When Your Back i @PDOAN’S Sold by all Dealers. Price 50 Washington Trust and Savings Bank The capital stock of this bank is owned by the stockholders of New York Bik. “Oh, what a pain!” tog, Tating, Patutiog The accumulation | ached Intensely. | aald: Soups, Stews and Hashes Are delightful dishes when properly seasoned. Use teom insipid without it, An Appeticer Joux Dewean's Sows, Agents, N.Y, The First National Bank of Seattle welcomes and appreciates the banking accounts of firma, cor porations and individuals, ite present high standing is due to considerate, consistent service which is an endorsement of the agreeable and pleasant re lations existing between banker and depositor. Capital and Surplus, $380,000.00 Resources, $4,000,000.00 FIRST NATIONAL BANK Pioneer Square, First and James ESTABLISHED 1882 ARCHITECT BUNGALOWS, S700 AND UF | NICHOLS | _MINCKLEY mime | BUILDER nce in rivate Seventh Unton. Weak ankles, break- ing = arches, weak jimbe, spinal curve- ture and rupture can in moet cases be cured If proper ap- fe worn tn are pe 08 tim claliate and to The Seattle Star a favor by notifyin © of any fall prompt and rem lar delivery of the paper, or any attempt to sv tute he tt ire of the 6 the beet complaints are given courteous and prompt attention, If your paper falle to arrive any night by o'clock, kindly phone this office at once, Main $400, Ask for the Circulation Department, BEAUX ARTS ELECTION The village of Beaux Arte held ita) annual election for officers last Inight. The business affairs of the) village are under the control of a park board, consisting of five mem bers, The members of the board elected last evening are Robert Whaley, Tolman and James 8. lDitty, Frank Calvert and Alfred Renfro continued on the board from last year, A verdict of $0,800 was awarded }Joseph Martin In @ damage sult lbrought against the Columbla & |Puget Sound raliway,- On Decem- ber 20 iast Martin was crippled for life when a switeh engine kicked a car {nto a train from which be was jirying to detach a car HER FEMININE WAY He! really think, wife, that we ought to economize. She—Very well; we won't pay #0 many Dbilis-—Boston Tran- script. A nt U. 8 District Attorney Shela hax returned from San Fran- where he represented the gov ernment in the appealed cases of iNels Paulsen and Laura Paulsen, | charged with violations of the inter- ate comme;rce act. | elec | Senator Henry F. Asburet of Art | zona, one.of the “babies” of the upper house, still clings to the be Wet that “the YOU'LL FIND IT HERE News of the Day Condensed for Busy People |returned home THIS DAY IN HISTORY May 16, 1811, Commodore | Rodgers, cruising off the Virginia | eoast in Instead of recely ing @ polite an ewer he got a rude cannon ball in the main mast But Rodgers had shots to shoot, too, and in the skirmish which followed Preaident took the British sloop-of war Little Belt. The sauey answer and 21 wounded. When “getting somebody's goat,” take care he doesn't butt you, McNeill, Ark.—While 500 men were dragging Dorcheat bayou for her body, Miss Ruby Cook, In the freedom of overalis and short hatr, was planting corn for John MecAlb ester at College Hill Rev. Mr. Aagat of Stamps, who knew of Ruby's disappearance, stopped at the McAlester home for dinner and recognized in the farm hand the missing girl and sent her home. Ruby ts the 16-year-old daughter of L. M. Coak, a wealthy lawyer and farmer, and after her absence from school was noted, her clothing and the false hair she wore were found on the bank of the bayou. It was aseumed that she had elther drowned herself or had attempted to go ewimming and had been ac- cidentally drowned. The search was stil] in progress when she w “lL was tired of school,” Is the only explanation she has offered. Swat not and the filee are with you; swat, and you doze alone. middie is the right place to part your hair,” ee Emperor Wil- liam of Germany has caught the back to the soll fever, having purchased two farms in South Africa. eee Alexander Rose, Boston, was awarded $1 dar- tee our app lances, artificial Hmbs and tr to be the Catalogue and advice free A LUNDRERG Co, 110T Third Ave. | TO GET ANMBAD GrT Back or A FAIR OF PrROrERLY MADE GLASSES, We know how to examine eyes and determine the kind of inesen you need, and then we know how to make the glasses as they should be made HUTESON YOOWOPTICAL CO f330 2 Von rai near UNION DIAMOND rings from $10 up. Watches from $i up. Fine watch re pairing. Houghton & Hunter, Jewelers, 215 Yesler Hotel Frye Building. HOTEL ETHELTON Don't fall to stop with us the next time you are in town and get acquainted with a house of quality at low cost ern convenience at per day single. Opposite post office and federal court. YOUR EYES woud he carefully nad and fitt with Eyexiasses oF cles by an t who makes bis specialty au suffer grom eyestrain, headaches, Rervousness, #6, see 301 Yeury tilde. tua ane oar Themen! Main BT0: Kidneys? Doan’s Kidney Pills are used to regulate the kidney secretions, stimulate and help sick kidneys to better action. There is less back- ache, rheumatic pain, nervousness, dizzin bloating when the kid neys are well Home proof is the best evidence. SEATTLE PROOF J. Prenatt, 311 Third Ave., Seat tle, Wash., say “About two years ago I suffered from attacks of backache, caused by my kidneys being weak and disordered. 1 tired easily and after any exertion or whenever I caught cold, my back Doan’s Kid- ney Pills promptly corrected all these difficuities, and there has been no recurrence.”"—~(Statement \@iven January 2, 1903.) SEVEN YEARS LATER. On January 28, 1910, Mr. Prenatt “I am today enjoying good health, thanks to Doan’s Kidney Pills, This remedy has certainly worked wonders in my case.” is Lame—Remember the Name” KIDNEY PILLS@) cents, Poster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, N. Y., Proprietors peeeeeeesesee #| and Pine st., tonight. I also had trouble} from the kidney secretions, the pas- |#ages being painful. H. F. Ashurst ages for having to sit In & baleony seat from which he couldn't see the stage. SEARED Suit for $1,670 damages has been brought against the city by C. J. Pearman, on behalf of \ his 16-year-old daughter Ruby, ® who, it is alleged, received *| broken lim when « bench ® from which she was endeavor. &/ eee | Ing to reach a patr of rings at & the Lincoln park playfield, # overturned. * RRR AHE REE Ee Badly battered, steamahip Edith, | which encountered the same gale) | that forced the tug Pioneer to aban- |don barge Hayden Brown, put in Ketchikan Tuesday night. The | vessel lost two propeller blades. The seine boat Little Tom, bulld- ing for the Pillar Bay Packing Co., slid down the ways at Johnson Bros. & Blanchard «, Georgetown, early last night. The boat will be; lequipped with a 50 horse-power en- gine. } | | MERELY ON HIS JOB Missionary—Why do you look at me so intently? Canni 1 am the food in- spector—Buffalo Commercial. | An excellent program, which drew a good audience, was given by the Church Choral society, under the di-} |rection of Dr. Frank W. Chace. at} the First Presbyterian church last) j night American Ladies’ cnorus will give its spring concert, under the aus- pices of the American Ladies’ socl- ety, at Odd Fellows’ hall, Tenth av. While in Washington, D. C., on a month's visit, Geo, F, Hannan wae admitted to practice in the United States supreme court. New York.—Harry Hammond, |son of John Hays Hammond, today faces a suit for $40,000 brought in the supreme court by Robt. J. Kerr, who alleges misrepresentations in connection with ofl lands in Mexico. THE FEMININE WAY She—! know, Alfred, | have my faults. 3 He—Oh, certainty! She (frigidly)—Indeed? Per. you'll tell me what they —~Anawers, London, hi a A jury in Judge Ronald’s court has acquitted Jas, L. Shute, proprt etor of the Quality bar, charged with selling liquors to minors Sterling, 1Il—Two hundred young |women students of the Sterling Township high school are hopping mad as a result of the most drastic order ever issued by the high school faculty. The faculty has decided that female students must here after appear in the schoolroom minus corsets, F@6nch heels and hair rats. BET HE'S A BORE George Auger advertises him. “the tallest actor in the Middletown, Ohio.—Mrs. Cath- erine Burgemeyer, 49 years old, is dead as the result of having seven oy BRALEY He wrote of the glorique Wert, Of gunmen and cowboys bold, ‘Of miners who made the quest In search of the yellow gold; Hot never been further west Than Oshkosh and Kalamazoo, But the Easterners said, when his stuff they read, “How Typical—and How True! He wrote of the Southern life Of Colonel and Cavalier, Of politica, drinks and strife (He'd never been south, dear), But up in Boston town They read hie novels through And the Northerners said, as his tales they read, “How Typical—and How True.” my He wrote of the uttermost isle ja the depths of the blue South and guile, And anything else you please. He'd never been there at ail, And little enough he knew, But the stay-at-homes said, his tales they read, “How Typical~and How True!” when Now the moral ta plain as day; Your tales may be askew, But those who don't know will read and say, “How Typical, and How True!” NAVAL BALL The First division of the naval militia of Washington will bold ite second annual bail tomorrow even- ing at Faurot’s hall, Broadway and Pine, It will be attended by officers @f the Puget Sound navy yard, of the Pacific erve fleet, cers here tn this city in connection with submarines being built at a local yard for that government, guardsmen from the various com panies at the Armory, and the Sec val militia, located at Tacoma. The A. H. Robertson, U. 8 Robertson WOMAN SLAPS A Miss Becky Beck, a tailoress for- merly employed by the B. & R. Tailoring Co., 71 Columbia at., was arrested last night on a warrant 60, charging assault in the third de- gree. Mrs, Steen claims she ped in the face yesterday morning by Miss Beck. The latter was re leased on $100 bail, LYNCH ELECTED INDIANAPOLIS, May 16.—Incom plete returns from the general elec tion of the International Typograph- {eal Union, as tabulated here today, show the James M. Lynch of Syracuse, N. Y., by about 6,500 majority, George A. Tracy of San Francisco is elected vice president, and John W. Hays of Minneapolis, secretary was slap. ity as that given Lynch Fred Barker received a big vote at yesterday's referendum vote of the Seattle Typographical Union, No. 202. Barker is insurgent candidate Barker is the insurgent candidate for president of the International Typographical Union, James Lynch, the incumbent ker Bar teeth pulled, Carbolic acid and quinine were used to deaden the pain, She took sick the next day from results mixture. brought on by this Cause for Worry “My poor wife! Buried on a Fri- day, too! bad luck!"—Pele Mele. the! American frigate President, hailed |If a passing vensel | the| i li af of the Little Belt cost her 11 aaa Chilean offi. | ond and Third divisions of the na-| grand march will be led by Capt. | N,, and Mrs. |} #worn to by Mrs. Thea Steen, aged | re-election of President | treasurer, by about the same major-| VOTE FOR BARKER opposed tof received 234 votes and Lynch | ff | hope it won’t bring me |i = sp Bome men ere eo conceited they'll claim to when they're really up a stump. Store Closes Datiy af 6:20, [gators FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. - ORV Goons For the Camp Cottag Laer is of well seasoned fir, with woven fabric spring, with white cotton and covered with good grade striped The bed supports are held in place by small helical steel springs, Jures 30 inches wide and six feet long Price $3.25. Other well-made Camp Cots at $1.75, $2.00, $2.7 Maple Steamer Chair, $1.00 TRONGLY-BUILT Hammock or Steamer Chair, with frame of light maple and seat and back of one piece of striped canvas; adjustable to several angles and to a reclining position. Price $1.00. and $3.65, Other styles in Steamer Chairs at prices ranging from $3.75 to $7.00. Folding Hardwood Camp Stool 75¢ Finished natural and fitted with carpet ally desirable for porch or lawn. Price 75c. | Other styles in Folding Camp Stools at 50c, Furniture Headquarters, A Few Reasons Why The Direct-Action Gas Range Leads in Popular Favor: It has no oven-botton to burn out. No dangerous pilot-lighter to cause explosions. It has oven-burner designed for baking —not for broiling. Broiler fire in plain view while broiling or toasting. Oven fire in plain view when baking or roasting Valves are fitted with spring and wear- absorbing washers—they never leak Jurner caps are not cemented, but loose —hence easily cleaned. —Third Floor, 43 - Piece Cottage Dinner Set Special $2.98 VERY desirable Dinner Set for the Cot- tage or Camp, of pure white semi-por- celain ware in new and pretty shapes. The Set consists of Six 7-inch Dinner Plates. Six 4-inch Bread and Butter Plates. Six 4-inch Sauce Dishes. Six 7-inch Coupe Soup Plates. Six Tea Cups and six Saucers, in different styles. One 10-inch Meat Platter, Handled Sauce Boat, Round Open Vegetable Dish, Oval > A . llers. : Open Vegetable Dish, Sugar Bow! with “be a ss H lie aa Cream Pitcher. " Special, for the 34-, 36- and 38-imett | —Chinavare Section $10.00. i BASEMENT SALESROOM Tailored Suit Ps SPECIALLY good value in a durable fiber-bound Trunk, with hardwood slats and full cloth fim with two trays; capitol brassed steel mings and brass catches; Yale & Towne and two good sole leather straps. The bd tom Is of sheet steel with hardwood slats a | i] i Women’s and Misses’ | materials are serviceable weaves of serge in gray, navy, tan and black, also gray and tan mixta signs feature the newest ideas for summer wear. i] | Some of the coats are in semi-fitting, one-but” ton style and the skirts show the high waistline, _ with panel back and front, and with inverted side 2 plait. The extra-size Suits are designed with full skirt. ag | | | | | | | Sizes 16 and 18 years; 34 to 42 bust measureme extra sizes to 51 bust measurement. Special $9.50, $12.50 and $15.00. WOMEN’S DRESS SKIRTS” Special $3.50 well-made Skirts of mohair, panama and serge, in tam? gray, navy and black and white mixtures. There are high-waisted models with panel back and flounce effect, also styles with inverted back plai med with braid and buttons. Sizes 23 to 28 waist me Special values at $3.50. FREDERICK & NELSON INCORPORATE! | i | —Rasement | | \ | Vem

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