The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 22, 1915, Page 2

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Doctor Lathrop Is licens State Board of Medical tO practice in the sts Ington, and he has been practic dn Seattle for several years Moctor doos not claim that h ment is a cure-all, end he w take your case he thinks he MOt benefit you. If medical Surgical treatment is what ts need ed in your case, he will tell you so and advise you to go to your ; Plan and surgeon for treatment Lathrop does charge Bultation and you are welc: Wialt his office at 214.15 Peopt Rank Bidg, any day except Sun | days, between 9 a. m. and 6 p. Some of the diseases that Doctor Lathrop successfully treats are > Asthma, Heart Trouble, Dyspepsia, La Grippe, Femate Trouble, Const! tion, Lumbago, Neuralgia, Liver mble, Rheumatism, Appendicitis Headaches, Paraly Kidney Troubl Trouble ners of Wash K The treat Be i aL Dr con to is and Stomach ‘Are appropriate at all times. We have made a tareful selection of flaw- less stones, perfectly cut. These gems can be mounted in settings man- Jufactured by us to your order. Diamonds have perma- ment value and are be- coming much more valo- able every year. We have them in all sizes, but the smaller stones are _ as precious propor- ately as the larger ce} Notice! Every dental op- erator in this of- fice is a graduate dentist and regis- tered in the state of Washington | license hangs right before you) ‘You sit in bis chair. This means) when you come to this office) are absolutely certain to have) not Insomala, | STAR—SATURDAY, MAY 22, 1915. PAGE 2. 'Big Oil Companies Will Cut Prices in Seattle} GASOLINE WAR WILL POP HERE A gasoline war—a fight to a finish between big oll compa nies—looms today In Seattle. It has come to a showdown between the Standard and the Shel! For months these two gigan tic concerns have been planting their retail substations side by side from one end of the city to the other Within the next few weeka, it Is predicted in oll circles, the Standard and the Shel! will have reduced the price of gaso- line to a mere fraction of the present cost, If they are not ao tually giving It away to all com ere the fight more realis the Union ON Co, will hru local retail ga it is pr jtake a hand Gaso formed EB. Griges president. and Alfred Lentz. »porary secrets We forese attle roy tween the Standard and the said Dr. Griggs Saturday, “and are getting ready for It Most of us have been patronizing the Shell company, and will contin clut D acting te he was chosen Press toes Tr he lows will t happens to Union. Tt has Standard and the Sheil must ‘ome to a point where the| fight or agree to divide the field.” | A meeting of the association will] ye held Thursday at the Rathakel ler, to farther perfect plans May Start Jitney Line Dr. Griggs announced that the as sociation Ix thinking seriously of in-| yading the jitney id, with a new line of upholstered cars of a dis tinetly jitmey model, affording room and more ease for passenge than in cars now operating The jitney men,” he said, “have| aused a lot of gasoline price cut ting, and we are suffering. We are thinking of going into that business ourselves. We have the cars, so/ there will be practically no fnitial outlay. It fe probable that we will incor eae | porate shortly for the purpose of op |couires a jitney system covering the entire city THE WAR TODAY FRANCE ENTHUSES AT WARLIKE ITALY! By Wm. “Philip Sims PARIS, May 22.~All France | ts Guy Bates Post and Loulse Gra John Hunt Tells Why He Married Anna Sterling, Who Had Lived “On the Line” san man acquainted with Anna Ste tin Oakland ferry boat when it hee io of the silp Nee againet him the al charms of the gt fo aroused by thet fact t about men, during sucereding weeks b shed wo light om how she I BY JOHN HUNT CHAPTER II! With full realisation that I loved Anna Sterting concern as er identity became a deep urce point of as where she asso loy At times | was on the certaining stealth worked and who her everyda clates were. Then my sense of alty would restrain the wild fm pulse, Indeed, it bh me whether to walt for unmask the mystery {tn had wrapped herself, or to uncover it myself thru clandestine means Love has its wieas moments when proprieti and codes are shaken aside brazenly if they stand in the way, And Jealousy was whip- ping me cruelly now Vhat omy inference Was there in that outery of hers when 1 had kissed ber for the first time. It can't be! It can't be!” It spoke of some tremendous crisis in the girl's Hfe. And it delayed, too, m confession of love. She had avolded any ex and for two Weeks afterw a battle with Anna to ame lanation would not pern me call for her, # signing reasons so vague that I knew the to be spurious. Then suddenly she surrendered which she} ir work done by a man who has awaiting Italy's opening gun In the; all necessary examinations|world war. Great crowds thronged | { ove that he has the knowledge/about bulletin boards today. At ability to do your work as it/taches of the Itallan embassy were| my importunities with pathetic And under the spell of presence the whole incident be done, and {s licensed by| state of Washington to do so. A} imtee from this office means ing. | Regal Dental Offices OR. L. R. CLARK, MGR. 1405 Third Avenue W. Corner Third and Union | | | such a possibility? DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK BLCOND AND CHERRY STAR WANT ADS | BRING RESULTS | Salandra” jriver, cheered upon their every appear-| ance {n public, while Premier Salan-| jdra is the idol of the hour, Long live Italy” and “Long live are the popular cries of the crowds. \MACKENZEN'S LEFT | torments, alternatively seemed to me insignificant Thus we groped toward each oth er's inner selves, thru sentimental rearing and leveling barriers of distrust. soon to look back at this period of my life as surprisingly boyish, as a bewilderment. My blindness to things that should have been ap Parent to a man of mature expert ence now seems scarcely beliey able Anna, too, seemed profoundly | perplexed. PETROGRAD, May By de. termined counter attacks, the Rus sian forces in Galicia have forced Gen. Von Mackenzen's left wing to) lretire on the east bank of the San 320 miles north of Przemysl The AustroGerman troops have |gained the south bank of the Lubac- zova river, but there they were | checked. Dispatches received here today | |declared the Austrians and Germans suffered extremely heavy losses Fighting about Przemys! has con- tinued with great intensity during the past 24 hours, It was also officially announced |that a battle of great proportions jis now in progress south of Stry). | [RUSSIAN MARINES LANDED AT EREGLI #RAD, May Russian marines have landed at li under the protection of warships and re pulsed a small body of Turks, it was| officially announced today. The} coal docks were destroy the| landing party | PETROC b: | Asia Minor,! miles from} are exten-| leinit KAISER ABANDONS ALL HOPE OF PEACE BERLIN, May From Von Mackenzen’s quarters in Gall cla, the kaiser has declared that he |has abandoned hope of continued| |Italian neutrality It 18 reported that both the kaiser and crown| prince are preparing to return alt| of their Italian decorations and hon ovary uniforms Eregli is a on the Blac Constantinople sive town of sea, 128 There coal mines in the FIREMAN SHOOTS HIMSELF PORTLAND, May trouble was sald today Domes to ha tc been the cause of Fred P. Klose, al city fireman, shooting and wound ing himself #0 badly that he dieal shortly afterward, | ribly I think her discovery that she was losing her heart was an amaz ing realization. It was evident that she tried to battle against it; that she succumbed only against her will, slowly, fearfully, asa de corous maid might surrender to a half-concealed temptation after much tantalizing Once surrendered, however, her emotions grew tempestuously. It was when, once again, we sat on the cliff in Sutro’s garden, that the last passionate scruples against her love came tn a burst of weeping Her hand rested placidly in mine, We watched the steamer Yale move gracefully southward under a slanting sun. An uncouth lumber schooner for San Pedro fol lowed. Out on the horizon an Ori liner hung its smoke dragon And close at our feet, in garrulous contrast, a dozen sparrowa wran sled. Never had we in accord more at peace. Then without warning down off the bench, placed her head upon my knees and wept ter Nor could | console her un the paroxysm had passed and had resumed her seat beside she slid til she me What Is it, Anna me?” I prompted Maybe. But now and can't you tell some 1 jus time want she to rest sald and | that we the only two pe in the world?” I suggested and that nothing else matters? “That's exactly it, John," she responded quickly, with a timid amile. “Ae if we two were alone in all the world, and it was a young, green, sunny world, with singing birds and flowers and—'* “Without any ugly pitfalls,” that’s it.” “But,” | argued, “then we'd be like the original lovers who were innocent fools and were run out of the Garden with a flaming sword, Simple human strength and tolerance kindness = and comes from climbing out of the pitfalls; scraping off the muck salving each other's wounds groping on without bitterne: working and sweating and grin. ning when we're hurt—that’s better than Eden in the long i T was) seemed more} will reappear at patre for four nights and v enday matinee, commenc ing Sunday evening, in Richard Wal ton Tully's magnificent spectacle Omar, the Tentmaker.” 1 initial visit here, @ year « section arouned great in Omar, the Tentmaker,” is based ipon the life, times and Rubalyat of Omar Khayyam, the beloved Per nt 1ith century, espe being placed upon his love-life At the same is compact with brisk the swift succes apades being cal p pulse of ¢ © goer adornment Omar. cker,” hae run.” ably r n surpassed in b That was straight preaching—| y he stage beginning to things I had thought out while llend there is an ‘asing proces was a mucker in the off fields, and| sion of brillant, colorful settings a mule skinner alone in the soll/ all suffused with the almost intan tudes, and later on in the victsst 1 mysterious spirit of the tudes of more respe 1 have never liked to sermonize, but of the play opens in a I felt that Anna needed it, and} ro bird-filled garden at deringly I tried to respond to) sy Persia, thence it pro: necessity the narrow, crowded streets . Do you belleve all tha Nalshapur, with their L with tense eagerness nh bazaars and = revelous do you--have you known 1 next to majestic halle tn out ugly things and pitfalls ely palaces, and so on, till final | “I have seen some ugly things,”|iy we return in the end to the 1 responded I've n ‘em in| fowerdecked garden whence we Alaska mining camps, in Manila,! started | Caleut Mexico City and In San| The action covers a period of | Francisco; fn dens and drawing] nearly years. | rooms, and the latter were the| eee wit ha ualieat by as beauty and wholesomences,” “And what “Well,” beyond the big wooden gates. cause they she asked, with je eyes and white face, “do you think of ugly women, you know what | me those who e failen into the mire?” | reptied truthfully, | sald masqueraded) PANTAGES The Little Shepherd of Bargain | Row,” featuring Miss Sarsh Pad den, the well { known legitimate star, will be the beadline tion of “1 have never been able to feet bill at so much better or superior to opening with the them that | could see only their natinee Monda | ugliness.” Mise Padden will | She began to laugh hystertcally e expported bya | And just then the caretaker, with aoabie < gies rr & rake in his hand, came and drove on wanes us from the garden on the cliff =o oon | with « gentle ad alt s ro € losing i bene TE ecco | time—everybody ou ne «ABT pee He watched us until we had gone the appearance of Friend and Down | “He didn't need a sword, ing, the comedi Anna, calm again; “he only carried) Other num a rake | rs on the prd And he looked at you as {f you gram will be Dor might have been another guilty thy Vaughn, the Eve,” I added, facetiously cheerful girl, with She looked at th her | | (To Dine Continued.) PASTOR TO TALK The Elements of a Perfect Char. me with a quick ain in her eyes, gasped and would) swooned had I not supported T gave a boy a quarter to call| expert a taxicab, cheerful the Four Ishi kawa Brothers, acrobatsSarah Pad at and equilfbrists; Pantages | West and Van Sicklen, in musical oddity, and the Rainbow Trio, a | comedy novelt songs: Suropean see |GRAND OPERA NEXT WEEK Dollar grand opera—that's the |ideal toward which American man. jagers have been looking for years acter” will be discussed Sunday aft-| Meanwhile the great organizations ernoon at Ym¢ A. by Rey, | #Ucheas the Chicago, Boston, New |George Robert Cairns of the Tem: | | ple Baptist church | Three discussion groups, under ithe leadership of H. A. Woodcock, Arn §. Allen and Judge W. D. Wood, wil 1 with biblical life and social problems. The Fellow: ship lunch will meet at 5:15, com bining the Friendship supper and the Fireside hour. revelation of} ‘ORGON OFFICERS SA Com lant | build Ha jor 0. and " ta | obliged Hedg p ment aon cers of the ared seve its na GUESTS AT BALL N FRANCISCO, May nander J, M. Reeves and offi battleship Oregon were 22. ball held at the ing. ve you # n lost-strayed-or-stolen look? e him Lieut, He several os will be dollars’ worth en’ t ral days ago and rtillon put on the at the me 8 were 1 missing-per report station The Conatitutiona \waR-R REMEDY ndigestior anything | cust 1 tarted tak montt © be MARK | nk DAVIS at drugeiat the guests of honor last evening of | the Oregon commissioners at a bril-| Oregon state HEDGES LOSES DOG liver and white colored pointer dog, wearing a sort] at tiaras and aigrettes in the boxes, It to police headquarters] notonous regularity. greatly! o-yearold pointer disap:| grand op urday| asure: at times |g e © Kar-Ru Chemical Co, Tacoma, ae Luigi Cecchetti, orchestra director, with Italian Grand Opera company. Orleans and others, philanthropist millionaires posing as “angels,” and charging from $2 to $10 for the privilege of looking supported by have been going to smash with mo- It has remained for a group of jItalian singers to realize the dollar a ideal. what is being done Italian Grand Opera company miliary for years to Seattle Lembardt company They will sing here next week at This is by the fa as the the Moore. Mario Lambardl died sud after ling reads like 8, When denly in Portland last month a lifetime whose romance, his sing family of artists, we a big, happy well-nigh in m | Consolable But they plucked up re. y|newed courage, reorganized un \the gifted conductor, Luigi Cecehet and decided to continue the work to which the big-hearted impresario had given his life Seattle next week and the fter will hear the and opera at price afford week masterpieces of everyone can Th schedule is as follows Thursday evening, “Aida.” Friday evening and Saturday matinee, “Rigoletto.” Saturday evening, “Il Trovatore.” Sunday evening, “Carmen.”, Monday evening, “La Gioconda.” the | The Rose Arbor,” | | Tue | Rusticana’ Wednesday matinee, | tor Box morni A We with tional top th | Empress the com | ing tells t band amore woma Sia clever veigle love home, riva stand compa the erring were his worth Cha offer skit befor and ATI eagem f ff ay The tinue Turkie 1 he Ti | Are Burn at | ginning hagen that h It pro comet ing? Wednesday evening, | EMPRESS a wife eyes origina sday evening, availeria and “I'Pagliaccl. Trova Faust.” offices sales open Monday ng at the theatre eee sketch by Name Was comedy Her an ex cast, will e bill at the: Roland Dennis, week he si of whose hus-! became en dd of nm unworthy him. wife his new into her where the 1 couldn't * the test of rison, and of the husband opened to® wife's real The in dd Three Alex at Empress Wilkens comedy ries and Addie an eccentric Wilkens claims to al motion picture comedian, Max Linder became famous ore Chaplin was ever heard will concing be the CONTINUE ASSAULT | ON DARDANELLES MAYO PROVED HI IENS, ents M are @ the Daré pte and the their n reported ples land forces con ABSAUTLN Against th positions ‘British squadron bombarded to. n region irkish concentration camp at the entrance to the |Guif of Smyrna, for hours, be Thursday morning Observers at University of Copen says it Isn't Delavan's comet as been r ently discovered ved to be Tempel'’s periodic Ob, my! isn’t it disappoint of. © Barth will offer some fun ny stories The Three Alex will offer an acrobatic act. The three Dixon sisters wil]|@rticles from many other Seattle sing, dance and play the banjo and| stores,” declared Danziger's attor “one and yet other musical instruments ney, summing up the testimony be on 3 - fore the jury |despite this fact 25c is the Mrs, Thomas has tong since loft / admission, including a seat Violent en-| | crowd of 1,400 people at the Robin Hood of Sherwood, schoo! auditorium, Shattuck OF Very Little Many agoO-—-or more? e She's the woman of mystery in| 10—-CRNTS—10 |the case which attracted wide at-| ‘The Ola Policy tention in Judge Gilliam’s court wecdacemine | She's the riddle the jury of five) ‘ Renan and) sass jwomen and seven men have been! anys trying to solve for two days } Two years ago, Mrs. Thomas | |showed Mrs, M. T. Sturgeon of Se a fine marten muff, worth | She would sell it, she said $75 Mrs. | tr ond John claimed stolen months Broad play the Mayo the Har hit of the NOTED WOMAN HERE Mrs cago, Council attle on was entertained by the Seattle coun cll at the Her at the night, 7N cor GrandOpera Company Pp SARAH PADDEN “The Little Shepherd of Bargain Row” Friend and Downing TELL OF WOMAN FUR THEFT CASE Mrs. Thomas— Nice little woman— All busin Silk kimonos— Willow plumes— Opera cloaks— Ever meet her? manufac’ SEATTLE hanutetterer to consumer, she} sald Tues. 3 Wed. Mrs, Sturgeon had a friend, Miss | | He pay June June Mary » of 914 E. Denny way | Reserved nem ld at The Owl Drag. | Miss Kelly just loves furs. So does her sister, Miss Ruby | . a nurse, So the muff was| |bought from Mrs. Thomas And Miss Ruby Kelly—two years | \afterward st the Danziger Fur Co. from suing Miss Kelly the muff. Probably and equilibriatic | black satchel contained many other Hannah G mother” of the National of Jewish Women, is in Se her way East. Friday she|®! err, ae iday shi Ae ned agers POP. MOORE A DAYS | wes. SUNDAY coM. NIGHT “The Bird of ¥ Prices: Evenings, Wed, Mat., Bie Be ights— Italian May27 “Rigoletto” “Rigoletto” “Il Trovatore” on “Cosmen” “La Gioconda” “Cavalleria and 1 Pagliacci” “f) Trovatere” We “Faust” ANTAGE Unequaied Vaudeville—Our Policy Never Changes BEGINNING « MATINE MONDAY Phe Well-kn zitimate Star And Her Players in the Great One-act Play —and— e Tess impress SULLIVAN, * + CONSIDINE “THE Sines Mor TexiTs" MYSTERY IN chatty— tho— black satchel— argaine— About two DAILY MATINERS Except Sundays and Holidays years Tents at PVfth and Lenora Thomas could do this b-| THREE BIG DAYS was selling direct from | the muff) store on | was wearing ave ( Danziger saw it and the muff as being one his place of business | before. Danziger now is for the return of | | Mrs Thomas’ little | SEATS FOR 10,900 PEOPLE T Reserved Seats, If You Want Them, al annual in Friday night. attle winner of sMolarship, was the) evening way seniors entertained vard Solomon of Chi EAL WILD WEs'r ERFORMANCES 2:15 and 8:15 Doors Open One Hour Earlier ld hotel de She spoke Hirseh, Friday

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