The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 15, 1915, Page 1

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Fe { d | “ECOND AVE. teemed with women today, attracted Across the atreet hundreds of sets of feminine eyes are Heretofore stores arranged their apring openings Inde The Colonial idea is also carried « a considerable S downtown by the widely advertised annual apring style Qiued on the sights offered by the McDougall Southwick Co pendently of their competitors, This kept Mra, Out-of-Town extent in gowns. In all dresses the waist line is higher ow, which had its opening this morning. Every Here the windows are uniquely arranged in periods, t stepping pretty lively to get a line on the styles for the Dame Fashion was evidently influenced by the war in latest wrinkle Dame Fashion has produced In Women's wea ginning with the days of Adam and Eve, in the Adam wir year, as spring openings at the stores occurred at widely much of her new work. This is observed in gowns made was displayed in the store windows. dow Nile green predominates in gowns and headgear, the divergent intervals from sand-colored goods, trimmed in strape and braid. The inlay Wsnaives thoty the teubh oh gbitue same hue being Used for draping purposes One of the atriking features of the 1915 opening is the war, too, has affected color, for only somber shades are cDougall's also has a Louis XV. window. The gown dearth of the daring French gowns, Mademoiselle is griev ised. The predominating colors now are dawn pink, putty Every window along the Second ave. and Union st. sides shown |e Parisian to the moat minute detail ing over the war, She has no time for fine clothes Oregon green, Tuxedo brown, battleship gray, Newport The Rhodes store and Fraser-Paterson windows ave Everything Is distinctively Amer fre and Belgian biue, Trouville (sand) and Dela equally elaborate and attract much notice back to the Colonial period, whict shown especially in ware peach Hundreds of outoftown women swell the downtown the poke bonnet, with its loosely hanging ribbons, and the Dresses are far more practical than they ever have s largely in consideration of the country coustn shepherdess hat. The milliner has also gone back to the been. Few carry much that ls unnecessary w closes Wednesday afternoon an. Patterns date sand, Jo of the Bon Marche |s beautifully arranged, wondertul cel schemes supplementing each exhibition of finery One of the Bon's principal window attractions Is its throng. It pe display that the style show idea Is being carried out broad-brimmed sailor The style black and white st The Seattle Star The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News The Price of The Star Is Now, as It Always Was, ONE CENT DRESDEN DESTROYED! bi SS ea “ LONDON, March 15. —The German cruiser Dres- A MILE OUT OF SKY TO DEATH The Dresden has been ceeaalide for the ella Shipping; of a dozen or more British craft since the start of the; Daredevil Aviator Who So Often Defied Grim mene, is Killed at San Francisco; Mother May Also Die as war. i Result of Shock; Thousands See Tragedy. EDITION Forecast—Fair Weather Cooler TIDES AT BKAVILE High low VOLUME 18 NO. 15. SEATTLE, WASH., MONDAY, MARCH 15, 1915 ONE CENT 28 thee one (eee eS Sa eee No details as to the destruction of the Dresden or. eir where it occurred have been made public. ort € --"U,$, SHIP FIRED ON? AMERICA TO MAKE WASHINGTON, ~ March ‘15. —A rumor, coming VIGOROUS evhinv irom a source which has not been traced, was circulated his afternoon that the Mexican gunboat sent to Pro-- W ASHINGTON “Mareh pone Yucatan, to blockade that port, had fired on the coed to a SAN FRANCISCO, March 15. | depth of 40 feet near the ar —Fears that death might claim — transport (rook a second victim as the reeuitef | A gasp rose from tho thronk, | the accident which sent Aviator } Thow isands dashed toward the spot; Lincoin Beachey to his death | where the aero fine had fallen, and s of scores of vent the expo: of an mmodittes through, Holland < navian countries ‘were expressed today by doc it required the serv America will vigorously protest tors attending Mrs. Amy Beach. | guards to presery Geder wnlle.éor England r U. S. cruiser Des Moines. No such report has reached v re red the machine jovernmen lecia “ ey, 65, the airman’s mother. rs recovered the machtr Rader vee 9 _jeclared|the navy department. The aged woman collapsed | Beachey's body this afternoon that — order when told her son had been | Doctors who examined the corpse would be a flagrant violation of tr Officials of that department did not believe the report drowned in the bay of San Fran- | said Beachey had drowned i the rights of The rumors came after it had been decided to exert the strength cisco when the wings of his Miss Merced Walton, Beachey's Se this P of the naval arm of the United States to prevent Gen. Carranza from Taube monoplane buckled in fiancee, was overcome when noti. He ation of yecificall pro blockading Progreso. flight, Sunday afternoon. fled of the airman’s death, but hur-, veo’ gi That this pressure has had its effect is indicated by advices to the ; | Hed to the bedside of his mother to| , es of navy department tending to show the blockade has either collapsed or Fifty nd persons within the right of the United! has been abandoned. console the 0 er woman | Beachey's body was taken today to a private morgue. both France and Eng The administration had instructed the cruiser Des Moines to keep grounds of the exposition, and at Carranza's gunboat at a distance from the Mexican port unless the least as many more outside, saw the fatal fall of the aviator who had suc- phy Elks’ lodge will be in charge blockade was voluntarily lifted. cessfully de ot » funeral Wedne: This action was taken to prevent interference with American com- The trag: merce. Two hundred thousand pounds of binder twine are needed an- ey's secon nually to harvest the crops in the United States, and Secretary of Agrt- culture Houston told President Wilson unless the blockade was raised, practically all the harvesting machines in this country would be out of CAMPAIGN FOR REFERENDUM commission for lack of sisal, grown In Yucatan. | ‘wons-o & ARE VICTIMS SENERAL STRIKE I off compet OF LONGSHOREMEN half an he oplane, the seco tried anything bt which he had used for » first flight was only 4 cess. The gracefu ed several thous: then whirled arot the “loop the loo Starts “Dip of Death” Descending, Beachey fixed his mo tor and took tc air again, When he had reached a height of ¢ JOHN D. KEEPS BODY OF WIFE TARRYTOWN, N. Y., March 15 of John D. Rockefel of Mrs. Rock long an possibl Active organization of the jthe “certificate referendum battle will be un- [Its der way within 24 hours At 4 o'clock Tuesday, the committee appointed at the mass meeting Friday, will meet in the office of Corpora tion Counsel Bradford 1 Renic eh th ng burial. This was the i » show feet, Beachey pe on given by a member of Before the week is over, ref | and Senate RB ic TERRE HAUTE. March 15. sentcigs Oe thie Aa apparently for Nelay, he sells CHGsa erendum petitions will be ob- | financia { the, —The entire family of Mrs. liner’ Ohioan and ti t ding f dow a . r citles n ove s of} pe ox started the sliding flight downw oken because he was not tained and prepared for circu- {cit turn over of} Lizzie Balding was found here |Nippon Yusen Kaisha steamer preparatory to turning over, i er whet lation, it is belleved. The best dollars unnecessar . iterest! today by neighbors with their | Sado Maru then apparently changed his Puneral eid ts: the legal talent in the state will to bankers skulls crushed. Two of the The boycott had been declared Ata ot 4,000 ‘eet he s : Rocke Pocantico res ct ag vail aiyg aie Labor Gets children were dead and Mrs. Sat vy the Pacifie Coast ex- down the motor and began the “4!p! p14 sun aon. wee nterests no chan © ki ernor does r Balding and three other chil ec f the council and of 4 whic ade him {8-| hare of f piven Beachey Looping the pg te Over San Francisco referendum petitions by tech- | re e eight-ho aw. On|® ‘dren were. piehably fatally ine 14h mite ee mous the world ov ; ——| nicalities, ; roe bp ; whist come Sawyers Say) jured 5 as 1e port The machine he he 4 HALTED e committee aipotite. the the « law n The dead idbat sabe: . Gadiial BC ° ae gown, renee sar =. | ADVANCE hat meant and Ce 3 ce were te For more than %,00¢ AY Ro« | ° f it Cane ae a minute ade no attempt t | are to| will a 8 hundred feet above the bay is tears | liiet e Re: Ange bank” t ore| an certin, whe. 3 hich wit | PETROGRAD Mar The ered | if the ; plane and straighten out until he floral offert + tenat the | Ernes : gle could make a landing on the green the nt the : ext | State ie (oy ae spot near his hangar n in th iving nt of 90 days mittee wa i Th andous pressure on the PD. Archbold Sleep Jitney Referendum Certain | with other labor ive years Germany, at, however. Just! eter ing fina AustroGerman forcera| Another law that is bow elizations on t ssia have spent $28 seemed successful rted bot th and west| placed to a referenditm vote is the} The committee co 00,000 and 000,000 c ANNOUNCE SPEAKERS W Elsewhere In Poland | Jitney b eaaure {Vice President ed for aeronautics « Arrangements for the t Pat Jull in the fighting The wu ness the Charles Per And Beachey himself eiata Gay Wdaduat at the uti arent face it ma ©|Counetlman f " a ae a He struggled to e straps hotel have t omplete Jo DOLLAR HAS BIG CARGO law a only to Seattle, Tacoma | man and Char which held him to hb 1s f W elected t t & } San Cal., 3 and Jegs, arms and bod ut it was too toastmaster. A « the on 1Ca est ca 1 | requiring prohit ate ft eve are Ma Hl, M ‘ eles | ak: wt weight into t and sank to a wort Lincoln Beachey J Orient enate Bi GUESS IF THEY'RE MARRIED ARAARARARA AAR ADR ADAP PLL LLL LLL PLP LLLP Mayor Gill says in his annual message to the council today that Division A of the city railway must be extended either to Rainier val- ley or to Ballard YOU'RE RIGHT, MR. MAYOR, HAD YOU MADE YOUR VIEWS PLAIN BEFORE, THE PEOPLE, AT THE LAST CITY ELECTION, en : we ; 7 ~ a — WOULD HAVE ENTHUSIASTICALLY ADOPTED PROPOSITION B, 4 OH TOM, | SAW THE CUTEST LITTLE | IT WAS IN THE WINDOW AND IT | ) | WAS AWFULLY nl $88 | | DID BLN IT } THE BALLARD EXTENSION. AS IT IS, PROPOSITION B RESULT- |. HAT DowN Town Top - IT | ae ene bt of eben ney | Rl sles asad ¢ : "y You THINK) ae Pearse KO amnnlaniet thang and hired press, thé -extensial | WAS THE stad Us SNR | L NOV UKE Too T aL LATEST besicn | WELL-A— ‘ _Preré | palggg eshe aibta Mite lintescas sme people as are now being ac | [ov on tr? ) commodated by the city car line ; The city railway was meant to go there in the original plans, It should have been there long before this. Division A was not complete in itself, and was never meant to be. It is a good, safe, business-like enterprise to extend Division A to Bal- lard, and the mayor ts showing nothing more than common sense in ad vocating it His conclusion, however, that until the extension is made, Division A should cease operation is NOT businesslike. To stop operation of Division A would defeat the extension, and the elty would have neither extension nor main line. The present in- vestment of $400,000 would be totally lost Once you quit running the city cars, it will be a herculean task to tart them up again, Me, Mayor, You won't get the Ballard extension ‘that way. Instead, you will kill it THE WAY TO GET THE BALLARD EXTENSION 1S TO BOOST FOR IT, INSTEAD OF KNOCKING MUNICIPAL OWNERSHIP OF RAILWAYS BY INNUENDO — ates

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