The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 26, 1914, Page 2

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7 DAYS, BEGINNING Sunday, Mar. 29 THE INSIDE OF THE WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC THE SENSATION OF THE AGE Performances at 1:00, 2:30, 4:00, 5:30, 7:00 and 8:30 Each Day. Minors Under 18 Years of Age Not Admitted. No Brutalizing Features _ No Harmful Situations But Real Education and a Good Mora! Lesson Czar Ferdinand and Queen Eleo- nore of Belgium will sail for the United States May 21. The Upstairs Shoe Co. Women's and Girle’ Shoes Buctastvety Next to “tunes made” Ride Up and Save a 6 We save you Sc to 81.00 om every pair you buy heenuse we are upstairs, aod $15 Days our reat We Have Two Prices Only 2 50 New stock of 60 styles " to choose from, leathers—all styles. FOR WOMEN AND GIRL SHORS AND PUMPS Your money refunded If you are not fat Special Attention te Mall Orders. ‘ECZEMA President White of mine workers to government to release Jones. . T 5 PIKE St “ENE TRAGEDY OF AMBITION” 3 (Two Reels) ROMANCE OF THE NORTHWEST” | CUT TOMORROW, FRIDAY, FRYE:C0.’S MARKETS As Follows: { eleom, te I urn again ement af a half uM and devoting 12 to Its treatment you have lite [what all Ee green ...6e AOC . 186 Kuaranteed nvince you, as it he are diegusted and dleec you to give me a chance t By Choice Vi Chops aime. writing me to ‘enjoy ii e real ¢ Choice Steer Shoulder Steak .... Anchor Brand Bacon, Ee Choice Pork Liver, J 8 tbe. for ......... Best Quality New Zea- | . 220 1 Bank Sedalte, M Send this notice to some eczema sufferer. When the Children Cough Use MUSTEROLE 65c Look for U. 8. Purpie Stamp tt signifies purity and quality Shops open until 6:20 p. m. — sure relief (ROBERTS PAIN-SAVING ONE-PRICE PAINSTAKING DENTISTRY | give prompt, It posi tively does not blister the tender- | est skin, As first ald and a certain reme |dy there's nothing tke MUSTER. OLE. Thousands of mothers know Th™vou should keep a jar in the f ia al the Chest (it prevents Pneu-| ' monta) At your druggist’s In 25¢ and 50 jars, and Special large hospital i The A mont ag A is, the on {| size for $2.50 to decide he Accept no substitute In Wiagnowing. 1 «x se the ¢ Wf ye dru cannot sup fe due in « great . TEROLE | Comna lavwand that Tar ‘ s No oh Ohio tnd we: ps : 4 Ph me for ex ne Bilt pr D nd STAINWAY SOUTR RARION OPPOSTE COLMAN BLOG ENTIST errr we HOUGLN The Shoe Repair Man 216 Union St.—2 Shops—110 Madison $3.00, j prison. Deer Lodge pent-| versity of Wisconsin Ski club, Miss jEmery is the club's vice president, | age ¢ be Greatiand the only woman officer in the tures of the|country and say pas siioinesidle THE STA ‘COD GOES SOME ON SKIS; LANDS OFFICE LEARN IDENTITY — OF BELLINGHAM | TRAIN BANDITS | HURSDAY, MARCH 26, 1914 ANOTHER CRISIS COMMISSIONER — THREATENED IN OF HEALTH CUTS | ULSTER MATTER OFF SEVEN JOBS Wounded Man in Victoria LONDO. Match 26.— Another Pursuing an expense reduction i . crisis over the Ulster situation campaign, Health Commissioner J of Crime to Detectives Premier Asquith's repudiation Of oil te approve the elimination of 10 the “Gough treaty,” by which V positions and the creation of three FIED Minister Seeley yielded to the a to take their places PHOTOS IDENTI offloers who refiesed to fight, the |‘Ceke thelr places, ( Uistermen, was believed to have ing of about $650 a month Rogues’ Gallery Pictures of averted the cabinet's downfall only "ty. Herbert Cos has. bees page > ¥ temporarily yamed to succeed Dr. W. H. Hall an Jailbirds Shown to Passef | "Many liberals copatiered the pre-|amed to succeed Dr. W impife tte gers on Train mier's satunas of Seeley's resign® ang Dr, W. C, Lipincott to take the [ * ee lace of Dr. A. Jeff Nelson, third With a bullet wound tn bis atom Call Seeley Incapable Eibictant Yosnseabe ach, near death in a hospital | irhelt “ ’ vr) a he oe It is planned to abolish the pos! Victoria, B.C. 2 man, whose name shown himself hopelessly Incapable tons of chief medical inxpector, four Shausttion. tan fell ” - | or handilag ouch a bituation ac ea-|0°" st og ge ? s withheld by a od th identity of two of the late in Ireland district sanitary inspectors, milk inspector an as th ; an isolation his presence in ho wantonly killed three |the cabinet will be ® continual nurse, district foreman in sners nad vonbed ethets source of of weakness to the ad Tatas divialen, anon ives the holdup of the Great Northern mintetration ran Ane dade’ train at Samish, near Bellingham, The resignation of Field Marshal on Feb, 20 French and General Ewart was an Mas whale, codes. te. Celie ) nounced by the Evening News ombed for the men | today. Fearing be wee about to dle: the : The resignations of Gen, Paget named Harry Math and They among, th officers| SPOKANE, March 26.— Alonzo I tet ni oben 76 ‘ | who stood by their om the! Cole, engir 1, 6. Decker Caranha Onti sie’ } ‘ 7 / \tatied to wustain ther isde Da trainmen wolterian toe W ' » the hos] j injuries today as the result of a vital the wounded xald he hac ; head-on collision between Great He at first protested that he mery i ; and a freight train near Priest : he Gres ro some |river, Idaho, Inte yesterday w nothing of the Great North In honor of Bainbridge Colby of | : tragedy, later talked to] MADISON, Mis, March 26.—An bbridge Colby o' tectives: He said that two men w expert on skis, Mins freshman in the Wisconsin “U," bas landed right at the tgp of the Unt photographs of the in the Westminster) sengers on the train the night of| - the killing have identified them as t R the ones who committed the mur Ge I ders. d of | Piles at Home) Simple Home Remedy, Easily Ap-| plied, Gives Quick Relief and Prevents All Danger From Have Criminal Records Mathews has a long criminal rec ord, the police say, and was ident fied recently as the man who stole $5,000 worth of plumes from a San Francisco millinery store all| University of Washington, who has Ball has been in San Quentin, | Cal for burglar d4 now Operation wanted by Victoria C., Vancou ver and Edmonton officiais for var | Send for Free Trial Package and fous crimes. The two men are de Prove it in Your Case clared to be drug fleuds. A. R, Adkinson, a Vancouver busi ness man; Thomas F. Wadsworth, of Vancouver, and R. Lee, a clerk of the Puget Sound navy yard at Don't even think of an operation for ptlea, Remember what the old family doctor sald Any part of the body cut away in gone forever One ‘or two apgliications of Pyra Bremerton, were killed tn trug-| mid Pile Remedy and all the pain. gie with the bandits. Littl money|fire and torture ceases. In a re- was obtained. markably short time the congested | veins are redyced to normal and} lyou will soon t all right again | Try this remark medy, Sold] jeverywhere at drag stores, Send) lfor a free trial packs: and prove beyond question it i* the right rem edy for your case, even though you may be wearing a pile truss, Just send in the coupon below at once for the free trial treatment. It will show you conclusively what Pyramid Pile Remedy will do. Then you can get the regular pack- VOTING FAVORED BY COMMISSION > Stators A plas te eliminate the primar ‘t suffer another needless min- lea and adopt the preferential sys bg Write now tem of voting {n municipal cleo tions, as a better method of demo FREE PACKAGE COUPON cratic representation, is being con- Pyramid Drag Company, 462 sidered by the charter revision|| Pyramid Bidg., Marshall, Mich. J) commission. Kindly send me a trial! treat. }) Prof. Herman G. Brauer, of the || ment of Pyramid P' Remedy ]} at once, by mall, FRE wrapper, so 1 can splendid results. in plain prove its been sitting with the commission | In an cdvisory capacity, explained | the working of the preferential sys tem. The voter marks his ballot for first, second and third chotces, and more if he #0 desires. | The vote for first choice ts alone | Name Street City ed lelected on handling | date, his second choice vote ta di t number of votes is thereby declared | | TABLES TURNED *” Them | house. It is the remedy for adults, too VE Relleves Sore Throat, Bronchitis Tonsilitix, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asth i >> | ma iralgia, Headache, Consti-! F4 | pation, Pleurisy, Rheumatism, Lun Pi | bago. a Aches of Back o Joints, Sprains, Sore Muscles, Chil 2 blaine, Frosted Feet and Colds of compulsory, the others naming the) voter's preference in case the can-| . Prue |didate mort favored loses | The plan prevents a pledged vote on first choice by amy faction, as| it in possible for a candidate to be lower cholee votes. To get the total vote of a cand! | vided by two, his third by three, | » o and #0 on | The candidate with the Irrgest |Our et About winner that stay up In place wrinkles from young or tenth without of friends and ¢ Martin J plaintiff in 8 | o¢ crsscing loess teeth and maktag then $25,000 maly ainst Dr tent 1 Edward C. Neville n jail today | Without making joo away out of in default of $1,500 bonds, The case | oe gn Mkttce eine that Den iin was suddenly ended yesterda ini w a toe #8 work th do tor Jud: Albertson's court when the you < ¥ court ordered Johnson committed |! “°shasc, £94 "Si! leet and wii | for perjury Ana * { eur you at amaliness of | st know, as through. | states | hear a good ‘TO GIVE $10,000» 2": word for the! FEARFUL HUMOR NORTH YAKIMA, March 26 The business men who, a few days ago. declared they would subscribe ing how soon the symp develop into croup. And|Mothing for the state fair, have then's when you're glad you have|Changed their minds after a con a jar of MUSTEROLE at hand to fetence with the governor, and wil “sia jsxubseribe $10,000 rixcar rates RESINOL CURED , 1 | Pimples and Commutation tickets, 16 for $1, ia|!tehy, Covered With P| | lenC rate fixed by the council city | Most Unsightly, Instantly Relieved. Jutilities committee for the Highland| Paterson, N. J., Dec. 9, 191% Park & Lake Burien railroad, which “About a year ago my face begat will begin operation shortly under'to erack and get sealy in blotches city opership It soon got worse and my face was sll spotted and rough, and it itched ’ me very much at night, and caused WILL FREE °EM@ ite no ena ot aiscomrort. ater a month or 80, pimples and black heads began to show, first in small VANCOUVER, B. C., March 26—|numbers and then gradually cover-| |} The governor general at Ottawa!ing my entire face. It was awful. | will sign the release of 22 mine ‘The pimples were sore and the rash| strikers, convicted of rioting at\was itchy and my face had a most| Nanaimo last summer unsightly appearance. I tried dif-| fe creams and) t kinds of soaps, jet diet, but Resinol Soap | 1 could get no re DAMAGE TRUCK and Resinol Ointment caused. me netant relief ity the time another BELLINGHAM, March 26—The! jar of Resinol Ointment and cake snowstorm ber believed to have of Resinol Soap were gone, | can aused considerable damage to the! truthfully say that it, was a com earl arden track and flowers, The plete cure. My face had assumed temperature was down to 25 de /|its former color .and looks, due: to green last night Reainol Soap and Resinol Ont Pythian Sisters will give card|fur tiny mila tronien” eeeat peety, epg | pLisht. Tyee ball,|Robert Troyano, 269 K, 21st st ig ane ne Rewinol ap and Osntment heal For the BEST In Traveling Goode eczema and other skit eruptions the RIGHT PRICK ’ top itehing Instantly, and are most REPAIRING aluable for pimp dandruff, 7 2 ore born boils, pil ote Por Phone Elliott 1169 trial ize 2 Write to Resinol Miller Trunk & Leather Peo sf iy Th ctad fow ~. . unserupulous dealer eto sell ° Geeods Co. |substitutes for Resinol. Look out | 904 SECOND AVE, for theta Myra Emery, |: w York, the progressive state ral committee has arranged a rally to be held tn the Press club vuditorium April 16. Colby will ome fre the national headquar ers of the party 5A FRANCISCO Maret The ima tion of Mi chael Jervis, a young barber, ts | :" good, but bis alm ts poor He | Pretty ToughonNick |) frei toe sci ee formes employer named Bello and SAN FRANCISCO, March 26. then dashed madly into police » restaurant headquarters, exclaiming, ae shot down here to day by an unidentified man, who had asked to be given breakfast. After he had served a liberal order of ham and eggs to him, the man drew a have murdered « man Bello was uninjured LOSES HIS SPHY revolver and shattered the bone in Khristi's right arm with a LOG ANGELES, March 36.— My bullet sphyxomanometer is miseing from A rush for the dictionary proved Rockefeller institute announces| unavailing discovery serum to cure pneu-| The doctor explained It was was} monia, = v a& surgical instrument _ TELEPHONE ACHIEVEMENTS TELEPHONE SERVICE OF TODAY THE CREATION OF THE BELL CO. In no line of human endeavor has the inventive brain of the scientist contributed more to the world’s progress than by the creation of the art of telephony, of which the Bell System is the embodiment. A When the telephone was born, nothing analogous to telephone service as we now know it existed. There was no tradition to guide, no experience to follow. The system, the apparatus, the methods—an en- tire new art had to be created. The art of electri- cal engineering did not exist. The Bell pioneers, recognizing that success depended upon the high- est engineering and technical skill, at once or- ganized an experimental and research department, which is now directed by a staff of over 550 engi- neers and scientists, including former professors, post-graduate students, scientific investigators— the graduates of over 70 universities. From its foundation the company has continu- ously developed the art. New improvements in telephones, switchboards, lines, cables, have fol- lowed one another with remarkable rapidity While each successive type of apparatus to the superficial observer suggested similarity, each step in the evolution marked a decided improvement. These changes, this evolution, have not only been continuous, but are continuing. Substantially all of the plant now in use, including telephones, switchboards, cables and wires, has been con- structed, renewed or reconstructed in the past 10 years. Particularly in switchboards have the changes been so radical that installations costing in the aggregate millions have frequently been discarded after only a few years of use. Since 1877 there have been introduced 53 types and styles of receivers and 73 types and styles of transmitters. Of the 12,000,000 telephone receivers and transmitters owned by the Bell Company January 1, 1914, none were in use prior to 1902, while the average age is less than five years. Within 10 years we have expended for construc- tion and reconstruction an amount more than equal to the present book value of our entire plant. Long-distance and underground transmission was the most formidable scientific: problem confronting the telephone experts. The retarding effect of the earth on the tele- phone cyrrent often impaired conversation through one mile underground as much as through 100 miles overhead. Overhead conversation had _ its distinct limitations. No possible improvement in the telephone trans- mitter could of itself solve these difficulties. The solution was only found in the cumulative effect of improvements, great and small, in tele- phone, transmitter, line, cable, switchboard, and every other piece of apparatus or plant required , in the transmission of speech? Styles Today Buy Easter Millinery On Credit Hat urely nee trimmed Hat 1 our ne lillinery Departme Phey’re ill everly made ome being direct pie magnificent Hate of Milan hemp, hemp bra and ® small payment any of them. Reasona $7.60 uf Reliable Convenient Credit ing & 211 Union St. — Credit House |AMUSE M ENTS = MOOR SEATS NOW \TIVOLI Mk OF THE ING HAUTY CHORUS SELL! Days Mat. Wed. 6 Com. M0 * and Sat. " ~ SEATTLE THEATRE 1} Phone Main 43 TONIGHT AND ALL WEEK BAILEY & MITCHELL PRESENT A MESSAGE FROM MARS Prices—20c, se, S00 ae $1.00. § $200 | Rargals Night Mondsy PANTAGE DANCING HIPPODROME Filth and University, 10-plece Union Orchestra. Dancing Taught by Competent Teachers. HARRY BULGER SEVEN TREMYS In a Ce Acrobatte While the limit of commercial overhead talking had increased ffom strictly local to over 1,000 miles as early as 1893, it was not until 1905 that conver- sation could be had over long-distance circuits of which as much as 20 miles was in underground cables. By 1906 underground talking distance had increased to 90 miles. By 1912 it was possible to talk underground from New York to Washing- ton. It was then that the construction of underground conduits from Boston to Washington was de- termined upon—not that it was expetted to get a through underground talk between those places, but in case of storm or blizzard, to utilize inter- mediate sections in connection with the overhead. Our persistent study and incessant experimenta- tion have produced results more remarkable still. We have perfected cables, apparatus and meth- ods that have overcome obstacles heretofore re- garded as insuperable both to long-distance over- head and underground conversation. Underground conversation is now possible be- tween Boston and Washington, four times the length of the longest European underground line. This enabled the Bell System in the recent great storm, so destructive on land and sea, to maintain communication for the public between all the principal points on the Atlantic seaboard. Telephone communication is established between New York and Denver, is potentially possible be- tween all points in the United States, and by 1915 will be an accomplished fact between New York and San Francisco. In our use of methods or apparatus, we are com- mitted to no one system. We own, control or have the right to use inventions necessary to operate any system recognized or accepted as the most efficient. The Bell System must always recognize, and in its selection must always be governed by the necessities of a national service, with its complex requirements, which is infinitely more exacting than local or limited service. These achievements represent vast expenditures of money and immense concentration of effort which have been justified by results of immeasur- able benefit to the public. No local company, un- aided, could bear the financial or scientific burden of this work. Such results are possible only through a centralized general staff, avoiding waste- ful duplication of effort, working out problems common to all, for the benefit of all. The pioneers of the Bell System recognized that telephone service as they saw it, was in the broad- est sense a public utility; that upon them rested a public obligation to give the best possible service at the most reasonable rates consistent with risk, investment and the continued improvement and maintenance of the property. Without this expenditure of millions and concen- tration of effort, thé telephone art as it exists could not have been developed. What we have done in working out these great problems in the past should be accepted as a guar- antee of what we will do in the future THEO. N. VAIL, President,

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