Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
JOHN PANTON'S TINWARE Is to Be Sold at One Cent, Five Cents, and Almost Any Price at All TO GET RID OF IT We shall have ready again tomor- row another lot of useful Tin Utensils to sell at a penny apiece. There are Ramekins, Tin Dippers, Skimmers, Quart Measures, Cooky Cut- ters, Pot Covers and all kinds of odds and ends in Tinware that you can buy for a single penny apiece. But don’t ask us to deliver them PLEASE. Have a heart! They cost John Panton from ten to fifteen cents apiece in the golden days of a year ago. But John Panton is going out of the Tinware business. He’s going out of the Housefurnishing business entirely, and he wants to wind it up as quickly as possible. He doesn’t care what we do with this stuff as long as we get rid of it. Bless you—you can get Wash Basins for a nickel. They are worth ten and fifteen cents, and there are enough of them so that every man, woman and child in Seattle can have one. Why go unwashed? There are Vacuum Washers that were i made to sell for two fifty that will be sold at 75c. There are Curtain Stretchers that were sold for two dollars that will sell for $1.00. And Glass Lamps, minus the chim- neys, that you can have for 10c apiece. More important than anything else is the Dinnerware— Haviland and English China—the fin- est kinds—at one-fourth less than it cost before the war, and it is getting dearer every day. Every piece plainly marked with big red figures, so that you can wait on yourself, Up on the Fourth Floor John Panton i is closing out the Floor Coverings, the i Shirtwaist Boxes, the Window Shades, the Rugs and Carpets. If your home has any need of any of these things, now is the time to get them. Terms—cash. No goods charged. De- liveries at our convenience ‘only. Sale resumed tomorrow at 9 o'clock. ~ Written at John Panton's Store, By Geo. Francis Rowe. AMUSEMENTS MOORE TONIGHT (METROPOLITAN Matinee Saturda Evenings KITTY MacKAY Th ye © Sem, te : i 1 THIS WeEK D’Annupzto’s Orchestra and Chorus 1122 MAT. SUN.SEPT.20 Entire New Series 1914 Paul Rainey African Hunt That Versatile Organization Webber's JuvenileOrchestra oan AND 20¢ Seats now selling. Ma and 20 nights 10¢, 200, 29c—all T Daliy—2:30 and 8:30 M lity Vaudevil! S Tur [Marcus | Quality Veudevitte| SEATTLE THEATRE YOPLAYS—6 w All-star Compa " . Empress 1,000 SEATS “Otterings Sunday, Hept. 30 and Holidays Theatre | 4. 10¢ } In the G corm Buccess Mats, 10e and ise; Nights, 1c, ise, “A Woman’s Way” and 200. | | Seat Bale Thureday, 760, 800 and the PL LTT TER MEAT PRICES © C U l Third and Pike TOMORROW (FRIDAY) AT Dental Experts. MARKETS about your teeth. AS FOLLOWS | RHOADS DENTAL CO. what to Ao what Aental cortainiy Choice Steer Sirloin Steak ‘dentists have been in practice many years, and thalr advice will be valuable to you 18c .15¢ Choice Lamb An office fitted entirety in white Chops enamel and sanitary in every way. Choice Loin Pork fee them before going Chops ........ . . 22c Gold Crowns $5.00. Frid) Fillings 600 Ratenctins and eSicening Pree with Rhoads Dental Co. Third and Pike Choice T-Bone Steak Pork Liver, 3 pounds for 20¢ 10c Bacon 1 2 4 c Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp. It signifies purity and quality, Shops open until 6:20 p, m. PANTAGES | ”| didn't come back that night.” STAR—THURSDAY, 8 TRY TOINVOLVE ‘U.S. AND JAPAN TOKIO, Aug. 25 (by mall to San Francisco to escape censor ship).—Sinoe the beginning of the war between Japan and Germany there has been what appears to be a aystematic ef fort to create lil-feeling between Japan and the United States. This has been manifested partie jularly through the cireulation of re ports of demands which ft was w the United States was about make upoi Japan, and of julona of American sympathy with Germany A typloal report wan one to the effect that the United States had sold a number of warships to Ger many. This was published tn many of the Japanese newspapers, and for a few days produced a violent antl-Amertoan sentiment It ts belleved here that Russia tn responsible for most of there re that It is a part of @ well ampaign to embrot! Japan United Btaten, CROWNPRINCE BERLIN SAYS ‘AND HIS ARMY ALLIES ARE ARE RETIRING ONDEFENSIVE FRENCH REPORT GERMAN REPORT | DARIO, “Gent. 47-—lAmather BERLIN (via The Hague), 8 i \7.—-The Germans are still main retirement by the German isining their positions in France t crown prince's force, constitut he war office announced today ing the kalser's center, east of The Franco-British allies, it was |dectlared, have exhausted then mapa hcqpnitenig setae selves by vain attacks on the It Ie believed the Germans | \iiscr's lines have been compelied to raise | The allies were declared to be the siege of Verdun, jeverywhere on the defensive. f © explained that the A * id The war office exp! co ie Teutonte conten wen und |DAttle of the Marine was not a Ger east to Varennes, and at Gen, man def ut that the speed of Gaillent’e headquarters here it | thelr mi into French territory was announced that the Ger- | bad worn out the katser's troops man crown prince's battle line | And It was deemed bent to Kive ther was rapidly encroaching on his ae hes Test ea ic Lattkian oon headquarters at Montfaucon, Pray . reel na = Aaeg © ‘The belief te expressed that u es ol . ona © a tem whine hetero gry tad which had previously been chosen direct line with the Ste. y \for just such a purpose. gap, through which he will have | Siiretreat W beaten. BEN, THE SCAMP, Elsewhere it was sald the al- Nes are holding, although It Is | admitted the Germans have | | was Where is Benjamin B. Sibree? His brother is looking for him Seattle police have been asked tc ald In the search Henjan | been heavily reinforced and are making a determined stand. is a youth of 75, and esing from home and years weeks ago he wrote to his try Sibree, at St. John. an¢ attle, in SAVED BY POLICE (Continued “From Page 1.) went over to her and 9 bis finger | nine * on one of her eyeballs, Still eo) didn’t seem to know that he was in| the room. “Finally he got some ammonta| and put ft under her nose, and that) brought her round, and she sprang | |tor him! They overpowered her,| and after she had been given three | Or care of general delivery has been heard of him /HAWTHORNE TO GET TODD’S JOB? Democratic precinct committes men will meet Saturday at 2 p. m. Scott Always Natty “How Mr. Scott, whom we have Jall known as Miller, could live tn |such a style, I don't understand |He is always so spick and span~ jnatty, you'd call him, and just as Jelean. But he's here yet, and last |night he came and asked me if I | wouldn't come in and have tea with jhim. As {f I could go tn that awful| place!” It ts a fact that Scott, held tn 000 ball for trial on September on the charge of harboring an tn |sane person, still occupies the den from which his insane captive has bean removed. He takes his situa tion calmly, and says that he has }saved the state the cost of keeping Katie Fisher tn an asylum Met Her as a Child ‘I've taken care of her the best I could. They say sho emaciated when they took her but that isn't so. I fed her well.! She didn't care to wear clothes | though in winter time she draped ®/ sure: ts purely vegetable and al- jsheet around herself, In summer) ways adminiatered internally— hy- she wore nothing at all. The first! \ogermio injections are never used.| time T met her was in 1895. when | ho not delay until something ter she was a mere child. I lived in a rible heppe ne, but call today at th | 36th st. then, and she ran up to me Neal Institute, 1736 Six.| Save Your Sons From Drink Habit Drink Habit fe a habit. It ts also a dangerous habit Mothers and fathers of young men who drink Itve dally in suspense and terror of what might happen| to their wayward sons. Dol you} wish to see your son freed from the appetitg for drink, and sober and industrious, as your neighbors’ and friends’ sons are, instead of a common drunkard who has the | reputation that he cannot be de pended upon You can be happy with him if you wil 1 give him the Neal Drink Habit} tment, which will remove the alcoholic poison from his system| and free him of the craving and necessity fot drink tn three days.| The Neal Treatment is safe and| wa in the street. She was so bright * : we Avenue, and investigate, or Me eee et ee he send mo! write or phone East 4381 for full , \nformation. City office 802 North ern Bank building. All drug habits treated. to help her select a 2%-cent hat 1 Stayed Out All Night | “One reason 1 stopped her going out was because once when I was sick I let her out alone, and she “ "9 | The only other person who has DENNY-RENTON HAS RUN AWAY. at the Lyon bufiding for organ | baths, took her, away | 7 “They sald she had been without |!#ation. | County Chatrman Tren y clothes for years, and when 1|°°!me ts not a candidste for re any lelection. Joseph A. Sloane, John first saw her her skin was almost/ 1) Wooeer HD, Folsom and CD recap ey Bernd ona must have| Pullen are mentioned for the | Bee e noe, chairmanship, Col. 4. M. Haw jall matted, ind I don't think {t bad/thorne ie mentioned for state been combed for years jchairman to succeed Hugh C. Todd disgraceful | EPT. 17, PAGE 2. 1914 Exempt fro sta Coupon Registered fe New York City 6 Per Cent. Revenue Bonds and $57,000,000 6 Per Cent Corporate Stock Notes Due Sept. 1, 1915. $18,000,000 6 Per Cent Revenue Bonds Due Sept. 1, 1916. $25,000,000 6 Per Cent Revenue Bonds Due Sept. 1, 1917. These three issues are direct obligations of the city of New York. Interest at six per cent per Principal and interest payable in gold coin of the United States of America of the present $100,000,000 Corporate Stock Notes Maturing as follows: Price 110 and Accrued Interest. Exempt from the Federal income tax. m all taxation in New York state except for state purposes. annum, payable semi-annually on March Ist and September Ist. ndard of weight and fineness at the office of the Comp- troller of the city of New York. form in denominations of $500, $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000. orm in denominatiéns of $500 and multiples thereof as desired. WILL BE SOLD, "PRATER SAYS At last!! The receivership of the Se- atte, Renton & Southern is not | going to last forever. The junk- pile railway will be offered | at a receivers’ sale to the high- | est bidder, | So declares Judge Frater. |commenced Wednesday considera- | tion of creditors’ claims. These because he drinks?|may be presented in the next two! | Weeks, and then the judge will close | up tho receivership. | “It is not the policy of the courts to operate a ratiroad or other pub Ho utility under recetvership | definitely,” | Renton recetvership has | about two years. “This proceeding,” the court said, is preliminary to selling the road to some one. directly with the lasted the line to the city of Seattle.” In all there are claims of $1,461 000 against the of the claims, however, disputed by the rv are being in: | Judge Frater said, “The ot prayer for peace in Buropa, ; HOW TO TEST ENEMY CARRIED OFF WOMEN 7 WASHINGTON, Sept. the Germans in response to their YOUR Ch kable atroci. charge that the English were using argos of unopeakable atrocl- | cumdum bullets, contrary to the| 4 SIMFLM THer Foe NORMAL ties, sald to have been prac- | tleed by German troops in the invasion of with detail names of victim EVESIGNT An eye teat that costs but 5 conte ond te worth the price aside from the value the test is a movi you can sit through an average Sithout your eyes aching or feeling Sail and tired, and without feeling an tion to open and close them frequently, end {f an hour later, or the next mere Ing, your eyes feel perfectly smooth anf | rules of modern warfare. Outstanding among the charges against Germans preferred by the Belgians are those of the murder of non-combatants, the looting and burning of homes and farm build- | ings and thetr contents, in one tn- stance the carrying off of a half. 5 et fo the FurPose. refully |Raked woman after her husband | worded reply, said the matter is of | bad been shot, the mutilation of an | far too great import for one neutral bred eS Neerhespen, who was |country to attempt to decide, and ite. the aliens eT roune wien ce that it would have to be left to the | *!¥e, the abuse of young girls, the day of accounting which will follow | @2Ulation and outraging of chil. the cessation of hostilities dren, the hanging and shooting of A similar message was sent to|2™soners, firing upon doctors, OREGON TO BE FULLY MANNED | glans close, only to be mowed down under violation of the flag of truce, the massacre of hundreds at Aer- | schott, the pillaging and burning of BREMERTON, Sept. 17.—The battleship Oregon, which has been “in ordinary” for the past two years, with only a skeleton crew | by commis is sent to this | program your viston ts dim, your eyes Gry or irritated, or burn or Itch, or or feel overworked, try this prescriptiont Optena 5 fag (1 tablet) iS This application re feeling, seems to or strain, and makes your eye th and fine It fs « boon after at the moving plotures, oF d day's work where you have eyes incessantly. Irritation, in jammation and many minor eye trouble are greatly benefited and sometimel churches and other public buildings, and the sacking and destruction of entire villages. Almost coincident with the filing] ‘ wholly cured by the use of this prescrip: tion. If you wear ginases, try it. Yeu to your own surprise, find that you jot_need them. Glasses bought st aboard, will be placed in the first|of these charges. with President] “"e?, *tores without selentifie adj! It has nothing to do| reserve class, fully manned, as the| Wilson a long 1 communication tment, are oftentimes met proposed sale of| first step in y aration for the ves-| Was received m an American 1 ly unnecessary. but Deatttve el to a t dd § ry ba av er corresponde 1 use of this prescript | sel le United States bat per cc pondent who fol favorable opportunity 10 tleship armada throguh the Panama the German army through whether or not you need siassem Renton line, Some| canal to the San Francisco fair {n| Belgium, one day in the rear, which ‘a simple home 1915. used by hundreds of thousands, among {ts users muny regard it as a® Indispensable part of their dally tollet=m Advertisement forcibly denies that any atrocities! were committed by the Germans in entered the dingy harem tn which All Clay Products GRIFFITHS DEAD . SSS =i] a “= e2vee 440 9anenne 44 > Coupon and registered forms interchangeable. We are advised that these bonds and notes are available for the following purposes: 1, As part collateral for circulation, under the Aldrich-Vreeland act of May 30, 1908. 2, As security under the workmen’s compensation law of New York state. 3, As an investment for savings banks and trustees in New York state and elsewhere. A syndicate of banks and trust companies of New York City has purchased these bonds i from the city at par and accrued interest. A large part of the bonds having been with- drawn from sale by the subscribing banks and trust companies, we offer the remainder, on * their behalf, for public subscription at the cost price. Subscription books will be closed at 12 o’clock noon, Tuesday, Sept. 22nd, 1914, or earlier, in our discretion, withbut notice. © The right is reserved to reject any and all appli- cations and also, in any case, to award a smaller amount than applied for. Applications for bonds should be accompanied by a remittance in New York funds of $50 for each $1,000 bond applied for. The balance will be payable at the offices of the undersigned, Monday, Sept. 28th. If only a portion of the amount applied for be allotted, the balance of the deposit will be applied toward the amount remaining to be paid. J.P. MORGAN & CO. KUHN, LOEB & CO. New York, Sept. 17th, 1914. RENTON LINE BELGIANS TELL PRESIDENT |?84%.°STORES OLYMPIA, Sept. 17.—Gor. has issued a proclamation i |the insane woman was {mmured {| |Mrs. Anna Prescott, formerly aj |Janitress in the building | “I used to go in and comb out her|™ lovely, black hair for her,"| Prescott told me. “But day she struck me, all of a sudd and after that I was \back. She 1007 Hoge Bldg. jlong, | Mrs. n, afraid to go used to ait all day on old couch cross-legged, just a the police found her, and without | a stitch of clothes on.” | superiority of | uarantes the At tho hospital it is sald the wom. | {2 on Oe wire teens prove It an has been insane for years. Her mother, Mrs, Phoebe Fisher,|,. A LUNDBERG co of 49 Columbia av., Winfield, L. 1.,| T**%™ Deformity Appiianc le Artificial Limbs. visits her every day, but Kate Mish 1107 THIRD AVENUB, er hasn't recognized her! in private practice m, chief engineer of ttle, has tendered his resignation, to take effect Octo ber 1, Commissioner Remsberg 1s out of the city, and until he returne no action will be taken by the board on the resignation. Whitham plans & partnership with an old friend, George Watkins Evans, a welil| known mining engineer, with offices in the New York block. HIBERNIANS TO To engage Paul P. Whit the Port of S¢ terribly affileted and even bedridden with Rheumatian, and tt effected « ¥ case, ry sufferer from any form | » try this mar | Don't send. a mply tall your name and ad MEET, SPOKANE) Wall eend.4s, Y Spokane will be the next conven # pelea tion city two years hence of the Ladies’ Auxillary of Ancient Order of Hiberntans » state convention ended a three-day ses sion yesterday afternoon at i | bernian hall, Broadway and Mad-| ison, Mrs, Agnes N. Montague of Seattle was elected president, the T Write tod Mark H. J on, No. 314 Gurney Bid Syracuse, N SPECIAL DISCOUNT For 90 days the Albany Dentists will give a special discount of 10 per cent on prices quoted below. We do honest dentistry at honest .|prices, and with our painless meth ods, which are entirely harmless, we guarantee the painless extrac tion, filling and crowning of teeth No students employed, only skill ed graduates of years of experience NO HIGH PRICES FOR EFFECT, NO IMPOSSIBLE LOW PRICES TO DRAW A CROWD, Good Red Rubber Plate... Best Maroon Rubber Plate Gold Dust Rubber Plate, Whalebone Rubber Plate. the world) . n“ Gold Crowns extra heavy). 5.00 bebe a Work (extra heavy), per so 85.00 Gold. Fillings ‘$1. 00 UP Amalgam Fillings . -50¢ Our work is guaranteed for 15 years. ALBANY DENTISTS PEOPLE'S BANK BUILDING | Second Av, and Pike St. Open Sundays 8:20 to 12:20. Evenings till 8 Phone Wiliott 4083. Chief of Police Griffiths, pro- gressive candidate for congress. will probably not be back in Seattle before the latter part of next week His father died yesterday at Ben dict, Neb. Griffiths was at th bedside when death came, He leave for Seattle after the funeral. ASK FRANCHISE An application by the Postal Tele. graph Co. for a franchise to string The the electric company's application to abandon service on Stewart st on from Sixth to Eighth, from Stewart to Lenor enth from Olive to Ste service is Irregular at present TALK OF FUSION Talk of fusion between progres sives and democrats in most of the legislative districts and county offices continues, tisanship te 1s indorsed both by the progressive and democratic contentions, fusion is not at all im probable, TURNER BEST BET If W. W. Black ever had a chance before, It's dollars to dough nuts now that he'll be “gyped” out of the nomination now. The count has been altogether too secret in that dark political corner of the state—Chohalis county, It's a |{the bet, now—George Turner is the democratic nominee, will | wires for long-distance telephone service will come up before the council committee on franchises | Friday morning. committee will also consider | Bighth | As the nonpar. | Capital Assets | $400,000 $1,000,000 Your Savings Are Safe When you open an account at this Savings Bank. We specialize in Savings Accounts only and by economical management offer you the highest rate of INTEREST 4)/2 % Seml-Annually Your account is protected by a fully paid capital of $400,000 and assets totaling over $1,000,000. Nearly 7,000 people, including 1,000 children, have deposits at this bank and we Invite your account, whether it is large or small { Our Joint Family Accounts Are Convenient } D, KELLEABR veer The Bank resident sav L0¥ Savings ater Third Avenue at Pike | R. -AUZIAS 0. H. P. LA FAR W. HW. GROWTH Asst WESTERN-GOODYEAR:QUICK SHOE REPAIR } COMPANY We Guarantee You the Best Work in 1 Used, Bring Us Your Old Shoes—W | 219 James St. n—The Best of Materials ‘ll Make Them Like New, John Cicchetti, Prop.