The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 29, 1914, Page 3

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Insured Title IS THE Standard Title AND PASSES CUR bl RENT WITH ALL.” m ; American missionaries In the Mr. Max Ragley, the Selbes ec Udi castes ee | By W. H. Durborough | prominent real estate thelr own personal gains, and vas Prent De i b live In beautiful and luxurious pbroker, reports on his re homes where they are attended | pose of the turn from the National by many servants, says Anne | torn Mex . c Clay Tartar, who has returned | Oars m Association of Real Es- from a year’s tour of the Ori. | Diaz the sand mines tate Men that Title In ent, and is at the Madison |of the republic fell into the hands x hotel jof an autocracy and the common surance was strongly in- Sho declares Amertcan misston:|man, the peon, became little better dorsed by the National aries mingle with the best set/than a slave among the Chinese and Japanese.| Madero tried to help him and ee Association They teach classes of children,” irdered T was more than ever she said today, “charging a good| To's successor, Huerta; ; price for their tultion. Physicians for the Diaz principles and| impressed with the ad tn the mission field conduct a thriv-|was driven out : ory ing practice among the rich Carranza Dallyin vantages of Title Insur classes, Many missionaries have| Now Carranza, wha tele’ Mie : ance on noting its use tn |/stores tn America to which they|fight for the common — people, Is 2 . ship silks and other dress goods,|dallying and not fulfilling his the great and progressive | joucnt at auction sale promises, THAT 18 THE CAUSE city of Pittsburg, where _ Not Lives of Sacrifice OF THE PRESEN™® TROUBLE, 90 t of Nl 1 | “We have been to believe,” 1 don't think Carranza in as * we cent Of al rea Miss Tartar says at the lives|crooked as he is w He is an estate transactions are of American missionaries are lives|old man easily need and, f * sa of long sacrifice. The truth ts/above all, int us ‘ mow closed under Title |/that most them tn the Orient] His pet aversion Is Villa beosuse : Insurance. [I am glad | today are ten times better off than|perhaps, Villa ts the great hero of & " ; when living in Amertea. the country, and without doubt ; that Seattle real estate In Yokohama one this weakness is being taken ad misstonary nese pupils whom he per month. He ts mak-| xtra a month fn addition a These poor Japa. boys, One was the] soy of the maid in my hotel. T {maid paid the tuition out of a sal ary of 14 yen ($7) a month, all the family had to live on, I supposed |misstonaries were out there to teach free. Has Every Luxury has 100 J. charges $1 ing $100 to his « deals are no longer neces- sarily delayed by the use of the old archaic abstract method investments in are rendered more desir- fable than ever by the se- curity afforded by Title nd I believe that this etty Insurance. The Insured || “This missionary lived in a bean- ; tiful home and was surrounded ‘Title is the Standard |‘) every luxury. I know many “Title, and passes current |! other missionaries doing the same owith all.” thing. CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE ight, 1914, by the Ni lerprise Association. DEAR AUNT MARY Dick tells me the doctor says that | |poor, dear, old Daddy may linger ifor months. I really feel as though | it were wicked to make him suffer| . He has always been a good man and he now has to lle in bed} with only the contemplation of the/ linevitable between paroxysms of great physical pain. I am unable jto think he deserves this from the hands of fate Mother Waverly has at last giv- om up and decided that a trained nurse is the best possible thing for Dac. She seems to have suit denly grown old, as she bas for the first time begun to realize that Dad {fs not going to get well. | Yesterday she cams up to me so pitifully and safd: “Don't rou} jthink Richard is better, Margie?"| | I stmply could not tell her the} ltruth and so I answered: “He| ldoes seem easier this morning.” Mother Waverly means to do ll right, but she has always been | one of those self-centered women| in whose narrow orb't there fs no} |place for any plans or ideas that do not emanate from herself. I am awfully sorry for her, because she will have nothing to take, tn} (Cop: Uader State Supervision No Abstract Required the slightest degree, the place} that Dad will make vacant She | does not read—that wonderful sol- ace of the solitary will here. She loves her children, cause they are hers, but she has| nothing 1n common with any one of them. | Poor, poor woman! I am go ing to try and be as good to as I can. I wish her jsickness of Dad brings her own] grief back to her miore vividly! than usual. I have persuaded her to visit some friends at her old home. | “IT am afraid tnat Sally think I am 4 tronble,” she said. “We can be with Mother Way erly now, dear aunt, and you can come back well and strong enough to comfort her—after.” Dear Aunt Mary! I sometimes feel that she is my very own rela tion—she is #0 lovely, #0 patient, so sympathetic. I am afraid that when I am as old as she I will) [not be as delightful a companion as shu. Iam so glad she decided | to live with us. She and Dad a old people I have ¢ Jnexcelled Service urteous ficient Employes via the about the only | er known who | takes and £0 excuse those ones who are still making them younger ’ Arrives Portland 2 p. m. Shasta Limited 2 Sometimes I see her eyes fill| ie voctiacd. 2 m with tears when Dick comes : around the table to kiss me good-| bye The other nforning I said to him: “Dick, perhaps it would| be better if we did in private our kissing | (Portland and Grays Har- bor) Aunt Mary.” Leaves Seattle 11 After a few mornings Arrives Portland 6 Mary came to me and gald: “Ma Arrives Hoquiam 7:15 a, m is anything the matter be-| Bleeping Cars Ready at 9:20 en you and Dick?" p. m.) Why, no, Aunt Mary further details, tickets and bye any more Feservations, call on Then 1 told her and she came and put her arms about me and Dist. Pass. Agt. would break my heart if you and Dick gave up one of your little caresses because of me. I love| to see him kiss you, dear, My| greatest happiness 1s in your love. | “If my eyes filled with tears tt} was because you reminded me of | the sweetest times of my life. It {s sorrow not unfnixea with joy,| dear. “Married life is always like that, dear, Every day brings its joys and caresses, and as as men are men and women women it will be the same. i] I answered (Continued Tomorrow.) are mostly|come at all, are a WomanSays Villa Wants Missionary Angeles for Has Soft Job President they do long way off. better than f ension 0 of by the unscrupulous in terests in Mextco City As a result reforms, if Villa knows this any one. My chief the man is bis unca Honestly puts his ranza ahead of heart and soul = fc people, before they bud and put an yreeful mai able dent's wi belley Mexico, Nn nip ir That man ts Gen Villa's chief of artillery T got In touch rreon last July in I talked with 1b about him and I learned, first, that next to Villa he ts the most lar man tn He ts self-eft Mextce ad human nature ability to ing that Car own Villa, or the Carranz mn in Fellpe him p today and ambitions who ts common a's plots honest.) Canadian Pacific railway pre- he prest|pares to employ 6,000 men to jtake places of those who have Angeles. with this general talked ing and has the cause of the peon at heart. He ts one of the staunchest sup. porters of the peace of Gaudaloupe. which 4 ple—-62 schools shall be built, eo a cres to be enlightened Comes From Good Family is of good family He Angeles is able the world on common ¢ to w t His bravery anc ing on” while in command of Vil-/ largely la’s artillery were sible for more th ‘This, then, ts Villa's solution of | Mexican problem the res that the he dipk 4d bulldo confiscated | lands must be restored to the peo | press man that Mexico that jlomats o! d. me “hold: respon. one victory To take Carranza out and put Angeles in YIELD TO VILLA WASHINGTON, Sept. 29.— Of ficlals of the constitutionalist junta here were convinoved today that the split betw will be healed within the next 48 hours. nm Carranza and Villa It was understood they had re. ceived information which Indicated | Carranza would retire of the constitutional | would not run for president. Said the junta: ceived reports that the peace con- ference scheduled to s r 1 will be postponed until Villa and |Carranza can adjust all differenc Bot D® | through peace representatives.” ~ ta “We THE EMPRESS first chief rmy, and have re rt Octobe: she would let! me love her all the tims as Aunt | Mary does. | Aunt Mary {s not well—the| . t ° ° “The Come-On” is a good story but it visits has no moral, Th will | Westerner erting her in her! with three crooks, trims the bogus London, he breezy falla in English lord of his roll, and gets the girl ism to } Somehow It tickles our patriot n that an American crook is smoother than William erner, is fat and br The act tops the | 8 Empre and the audier La H St. J es th my an Eng * Na neatre t os yesterday liked as the glish one West it Marcus his week The Three Stewart Sisters and their escorts bring the finished dancing act in which they were seen The phone Burke and Harris, singers good. wu 1 | have kept thelr hearts young and 5 Of the Shasta Limited” || V0 are always ready to help one| comedians Steel Fiyer over the hard places—who are| | Leaves Seattle 7:30 a m. able to remember their own mis. Music Jat the Orpheum last year. Four al Avo! ers. Good. Anderson and Gotnes, ta Odd and good. Good. los, xylo- n-colored Fairly juggling Nelson opened the bili Good. Five first-run reels are eo “ “The shown 2 THE PANTAGES si nking of the T mechanical production, is derful a It seems to hurt dear) nt Pantages ct s this w eek. It Itante,” a produced {8 a won In the last scene there unt |i, the crash as the ship strikes the ice, the clicking of the wireless, the rocket flare of lifebo: Teddy com Sande! nutty ac The Willia Walte sa Med “Weil, he doesn’t kiss you g00d-| of giris put on a cles rs t m , comic amar Good and Vor Funny. Lochar the A and , fas n Kant Rosedale Singers ‘dt and acrobatic act. lowering of the final plunge. his bev t musica 2 have a Good. 1 Laddie Good A Keystone comedy film finishes it off, Love Comes High A wife's affections ar 0 says James C, Ca 000 brought Geo Baldy 6 are |action ag n, All that I have already known,” |her away from him and finally in ult this Baldwin t , asking long |cause his wife commenced divore inst him Bays w mornin, ‘orth $50, wley, who & against an Alaska min Cawley, nount b weaned duced her to elope with him to Call fornia. STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 29, 1914, SHORT NEWS ~ ° HERE ¢ Six deaths reported. | Five Jap pleture brides come to take husbands. Soft wheat flour dropa 20 cents. New York grapes due Thursday Six bring divorce action. Three tiners arrive from four sall U. of W, Glee club picked. } Removal of U, 8, 8. Philadelphia from Hremerton to Mare Island ex: | |plained as economy measure. | N. P. cake, which figured In Seat |tle guessing conte features | Montana state fa Chamber of Commerce protests against canal tolls law which fixes extra charges for deckloads of lum ber A | Carey | North stant Genera resigna. Over $600 ralsed here for relief of English soldiers and sailors. | Peace day on university campus Thursday. John E, Waggoner, 2946 av,, killed tn 20-foot fall, loners appropri 20th av, N, F Attorney Alki ate $20,400 for | bridge. Cops get Fred Cole, 19, and B Maning, 16, in pipe a + = ¢ | ELSEWHERE State Representative W. O Hays, cashier of defunct Olympia} Bank & Trust Co., placed under ar charged with receiving de posits illegally | | Oakland Mexican, said to be leper, works “easy graft” by bein ald to move away from various places Chief Forester Henry Graves urges number of roads through |Olympte mountains, Cardinal Farley returns to New York from Rome. | Hugo Relsinger, noted New York art collector, dead in Germany | Mrs, Annette A, Adams, San/ Francisco, appointed assistant U 8. district attorney at Washington | First woman to hold position. gone to war fitness of Fil {pinos for independence. Passage of bill providing for pur- jcha of ships by U. 8, will prob. ably be postponed, R. W. Se founder of mall or der house of Sears, Roebuck & Co, dead in Chicago. Lexington district school, near | Centralia, closed on account of |diphtherta scare Northern and Great Northern ex- companies pay taxes under protest. Will carry cases to su-| |preme court. | Cruleer South Dakota sails to- day from Bremerton to Mare island | to be overhauled | | First fair of Cedar Grange and) | Maple Valley big success | Crulser Concord is mantled at Bremerton. | Suspected wireless plant In Mon- terey county, Calffornia, declared | |not to have violated neutrality Two are killed by boller ex- plosion at Storrs, Utah. Robber locks two bankers In wake City and es being die} Invites lyoung officers to serve tn aviation corps To relieve cotton market crisis, jouthern cott may ask & governm tax coll vil war Universities of France and Ger. jmany will exchange professors |with Harvard this year as usual, |despite war. Jap steamer Panama Maru will carry 30,100,000 cigarets to Orient when she sails from coma. | Government experts advise grow-| ers to store apples until market steadies | Capt. R. O. Crisp and Lieut. T.) H. Yeager, officers of wrecked cut-| jter Tahoma among those of crew] escued by steamer Cordova. on growers nt to return $6 4 from them f CURES Without Drugs Wonderful Invention Re- stores Health While You Sleep. that i . BEAL PULLY ILLUSTRATED BOOK PREF Call If powath r beautiful 90 bout our fe illustrated leveloped men how Bilectra 4 explains know. We'll send nook paid, ree, 1f you will eall or write for it Free teat of Wieetra-Vita If y Office hh aturday e sly sealed and p: Connultation free a, m. to 6 p.m. Th Electra-Vita Co. DEPT. 4 ‘Theatre Building Cor. Spel Wash, Room 206 Kimpr Second Ave. Beattle, PAGE 3. Magazines Think of the Elbert Cycle Car Vrom the Commercial Car Journal: leht delivery car Wderful opportu t is wher Is @ pr whether uoks or lema 1 wag Krom the Automob would be graphs arge, even we make from the photograph From the Gas Reviews “We have your favor of the 6th Inst, and have read the specifica Uona of the Hibert Motor Car with much Interest. It indicates that you have a remarkably weil built car with ample power, and so far as we can sea, no faulty features of con atruction The price at which you are sel! ing i is #0 low that you ought to have an enormous demand for it Krom the € “The Car Amer vitally concerned tn Car industry have for o past felt that some live organisation would be formed to produce care on the Pa cific Coast and we extend to you our heartiest congratulations for hay ing entered the field tn such a large way at & time when the porsibili tles of this rapidly expanding in lustry are the greatest At a glance one can see that In designing the chassis of the Elbert Cycle Car, consideration has been kiven to the very iatest develop ents of the business and specifi ations complied to sult the demand of the cyole-car buying publi With a car of such specifications. the Hat price of 5.00 without equipment seems much lower than should be necessary, but the setting of the price so low te a clear indi cation that you are prepared to go er business on @ very large and have set the price low so as to make the Elbert the untversal low priced car.” © most From the Motor Field: We have read the spectfioations of your car, also your plans regard ing its manufacture. We realize that It ts necessary to manufacture & car at that price tn large quanti- tien tn order to make profite and sell same as @ retail price of $295.00 ee “We have had more inquiries from wub thers regarding care selling & price between $200 and $600 t any other kind of @ car. We have no advertisers at the present ing {fering @ car to our r for leas than $395.00." Automobile Trade Journal: “It Is roughly figured that there ‘enty to twenty-five mil- les represented. The writ of the full many times as entire automodt It te the belief o: ® of the small term broadly, Including every- %, will amount to a cents as the cars combined. within a State 90,000,000, of exented by the gregate in the prehension of the writer.” MOTOR FINANCE. A journal of Interest to all of vast value tmportance, part larly to those who own or we to own motor cars fc profit. Publ mailed free. A certain banker privately loaned a young college graduate, just start- ing in business, enough money to buy an automobile. The same day he refused to, extend to an appar ently successful gre tt enough to discount the price of an autme bile truck. There was a financial reason for each action. Would you like to know what {t was? READ MOTOR FINANCE, You are he machines tn yo ating between two r selection of a Nght delivery car. One machine Is an as set, the other will b ne a Hab! ity. How shall you decide which is which? READ MOTOR FINANCE. A new company has started to manufacture cycle cars here on the Pacific t. The public Is invited Into partnership, The suce enterprise Is secured by a operative manufacturing distribut- ing plan, #0 to arouse amaze never been tried pany makes no guarantee beyond its ability to turn out amall, powerful cars of standard quality and sell them certain margin of safe profit, but the elements of a big dividend-pay- ing proposition are covered by their plan of action, Would you like to fnow the details of share tts benefits? the plan and READ MOTOR FINANCE. Henry Ford's income ts ‘ a month, He shares with his em- ployes of profits, Recently he has evolved a scheme to sell 200,- 000 cars ore August 1, 1915, by @ promine ating. Some finan clers claim that this scheme ts un- sound and unbdusinessiike, What are their reasons for this statement? READ MOTOR FINANCR. MOTOR FINAN! the accounting 2 1s published by department of the Hilbert Motor ¢ mpany. Its pur- p is to give the public and the individual a glimpse of the huge in- dustrial and eco’ side of the automobile game. iscusses In a light, breezy ¥ problema of inter- ext to every who Is affected in the slightest by the word motor car or Pill out the coupon ¢ sample copy ELBERT M R CAR CO, 355 Empire Bldg, § Wa Please send me, without and with obligation on m: onthly magazine, for % montas, YOU CAN SHARE IN THE HUGE PROFITS MADE BY MOTOR CAR MAKERS BECOME AN ELBERT PARTNER SHARE IN THE SUCCESS OF SEATTLE’S LATEST MANUFACTURING INDUSTRY We want a few additional partner to join us just now in building up thi business few Only a more in tor will be permitted to join with us on the present exception ally favorable term You probably knc of some of the tre mendous fortune made in the autom bile business The greatest profits have been made by man ufacturers of low priced cars Wheelbase—102 inches, The Ford Motor | Frenemiesion dends this last year. | Ignition tine tenet Only a few year Horsepower—Full 18, ago their stock went begging. The Over land Company paid 30 per cent on $20,000,000 worth of common stock last year 5 Many other motor car companies are earning tremendous profits and paying large dividends to their stockholders. Motor Car Company was organized h Avenue 0,000,000 proposition The Elbert The present fact We are obtainin ry is located on able of turning out and selling 1,000 or more cars monthly. By joining us now with your idle money you can secure an interest on the nity ground floor basis. Write today for comp! 4 inches, clearance 10 inches, Sliding gear, two speeda forward, one reverss, bprings—Sem!-elliptio over in front, full elliptic over in rear, leather taced. ition—-Low tension magneto or Atwater-Kent Top and windshield extra. @ specifications and full particulars. Motor—Cast on blo, é-cylinder, water cooled, 2% bore, 4-Inch stroke. Wire apokes, regular motor oar type, 28-inch diameter by 8-tn, « It has grown to be a Seattle on September 5th. : Vest, where work is now in progress. additional funds with which to establish a factory and a plant cap- This is your opportu- We are certain of our ability to manufacture and sell 1,000 or more cars monthly. dividends to the stockholders of the company. Mr. F. W of Mechanical Engineers. matic Tool Company. quickly doing this we will be able to earn tremendous profits and pay enormous »pken, our chief engineer, is a member of the American Association For 11 years he was connected with the Chicago Pneu- Mr. Topken is one of the original designers of the MacKay motor cars, used by most railroads and first built by the Union Pacific Railway Com- ny at Omaha The Elbert Model No. 1, indorsement of every mechanical man pi who has examined it designed by Mr. Topken, is receiving the unanimous We are being besieged with eager buyers who would gladly lay down their money today in exchange for Elbert cars splendid profit form of advertising basis. We need additional capital to turn these cars out in quantity We are obtaining this capital quickly and economically through this Just now you can get an interest on an absolutely ground floor and at a Our first block of stock is being sold at the low price of 10 cents per share (par value $1.00) will be placed on sale at a higher price To all those who buy at 10 cents per This block of stock is almost share exhausted and an additional block an option is given on an additional block of stock at the same price until November 30th., This option will undoubtedly prove of value, for the reason that the price of the stock will ad- vance rapidly and by November 30th it will be selling at a much higher price. The Pibert Cycle Wagon fille a Jong felt want. eattle product ar will be on display within the next $00 pounds, The Elbert Cycle Car is a No. 1 ts how progre: few days. ng and A conservative automobile journal recently stated that the present Mght car and cycle car movement “The third and greatest mobile industry.” Another automobile journalist recently made the prediction “That within five years there will be several cycle car mana- facturere whose product will exceed Im quantity that of the pree- Ford Motor Company.” ep since the beginning of the aute- Carrying capacity. ‘ork on model Our proposition is a legitimate, sane, safe manufacturing enterprise and we court and solicit the most rigid investi- gation. Our officers and directors are all devoting their en- tire time and en- ergy to this busi- ness and can be seen any day at our downtown offices or at the factory. In- vestigate this enter- prise. It is an op- portunity for you to share in an Institu- tion that is destined to become one of Seattle’s greatest prides. Call at our office any day be- tween 8:30 a. m. and 5:30 p. m Don’t delay, how- ever, or you will be compelled to pay a higher price for your stock. Out-of-town parties should fill out the application blank in the corner of this announcement and mail it with their remittance promptly before the price advances. Bear in mind that the stock is fully paidand forever non-assessable preferred stock and no bonded indebtedness the laws of Washington. There is no The company is ificorporated under The stdtkholders will be kept fully informed of the progress of the company The factor through frequent reports. see it with You are invited to join with us, even though you y ishere in Seattle, where you can go and and where you can watch the development of the company. his is an enterprise of merit and one that you will be glad to be associated It is one that offers tremendous profits and you can share in those profits. subscribe for only 100 shares. Full information will be furnished you if you will call at the office or we will gladly send it by mail. Bear in mind, however, that the block of stock to be sold at this price is almost exhausted and orders are coming into our office every day both from Seattle and from outside points. any delay whatever. Therefore, it is to your own interest to act without ELBERT MOTOR CAR COMPANY 355-357 EMPIRE BUILDING, SEATTLE, WASHINGTON A HANDY REFERENCE Cash or Installment Payment 100 shares cost $9.50 cash. 200 shares cost $19.00 cash 250 shares cost $23.75 cash, or $2: equal monthly payments of $5.00 each 200 shares cost $28.50 cash, or 6 equal monthly payments of $6.00 each, 500 shares cost $47.50 cash, or 6 monthly payments of $10.00 each, 00 in & equal 1,000 shares cost $95.00 cash, or 5 equal monthly payments of 00 each, 00 shares cost $287.50 cash, or 5 equal monthly payments of .00 each, 5,000 shares cost $475.00 cash, or 5 monthly payments of $100.00 each, 10,000 shares cost $950.00 cash, or 6 equal monthly payments of $200.00 each. Other amounts in proportion, No installment subscription will be constd- ered unless payment of at least $5.00 per month is made. Payments may be made, one-fifth down, bal- ance four equal monthly payments, Remit {n any way convenient Kindly register mail containing currency, equal SUBSCRIPTION FOR ORGANIZERS’ STOCK ELBERT MOTOR CAR COMPANY INCLUDING OPTION AGREEMENT ELBERT MOTOR CAR CO, 366 Empire Building Seat tle, Wash. I hereby subscribe for . of Bibert Motor Car Compan: per share, and enclose remittance of § in jt payment for same, with the un- derstanding that I am hereby granted an option upon an equal number of shares of said.company, at 10 cents per share, said option to be without obligation or ability upon my part, and to hold good until November 80, 1914 When subserip- tion is fully paid, mail certificate to Name scsseeeees atte ees BROt@.ccmeerererers No subscription considered for less than 100 shares. a ir . * . . + . i ‘

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