Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MARKET | EAST WITH A Elliott 2315 CARNATION Mk ue Be Limit 3 cans to a grown person Gale starts 10 8 . “Tokio Grocery fg the, Pure Cane 50c 25c Young = Suffragist That Enfranchised Women Help Sisters Get Vote. DEMANDING United States Only Nations mm, and Not Con- sidering It, She Says. Soap Rete Fisher Pastry” 3B oq Ret Kes 10c x ; PP, washington 25c . 10c .50c jhe Tomatoes Pip Lipton's (Neil Meat Co. ~ Roast. 124c pet F* 10c, 124c tm Roast Round Steak 124c 18c 25c Fresh Dressed Hons and Spring Chicker eta STA Tie Cherries. tb sees Be Fancy Tomatoes. |b sa Me JOE IDA ———_ en STALL A—PNTRANCE Freak Fruits and Vegetables every day Miss Doris Stevens women stand by women, and j mand, not plead!” the West by Miss notable suffrage worker by Mrs. O. H. P. Belmont of New | York to prepare for the congress in September. Tho suffrage states STALLS 21-10 Wax ane. eeewe-crown Wax Be: [tional amendment women, contends Miss Stevens. “We ask so little of the women jot the free states, |xtates,” she asserted; Best Butter, Ib. Be, “simply Extra fancy Peaches, crate Sse Extra fancy Apricot 5 Hea, fancy 1b... among whom Miss Stevens |prominent place—“have called this Kreat exposition convention of wom en voters together, not to educa’ orate -. 81.00 «We fancy, ready better educated than lation by begging from the men, but the voting women. the obvious thing b; where the power ts. orgainizer jnot yet “free.” Ws healthful, delicious, re fresbing. And {t's always ready. |)" 48ked for easy tasks. She Saw Seamy Side in Nebraska, iT The kiddies love it and it's oda Detter for them than pastry. |tlement work at a congested vaca Our “Cream of Quality Creams” | !nspector, and had other experten | is sold everywhere. Your neigh- Derhood druggist or confectioner aa supply you. | politicians in high places. “The Congressional Union,” says, J] Just ask for “Seattle Ic0 ” It has grown to be the seller. jm ition in the world has done: Con- ‘sider the political enfranchisement of women in thelr legislative bodies. “Why, there wasn't a nation Ia: |sidered this question, United States and ‘Tarkey!" Made by SEATTLE ICE JURY RULES OGDEN, Utah, July 16.—Aft- er deliberating for more than 20 hours, the jury which heard Albert Geddes’ suit for a share in tl of the late David Eccies at noon today returned a verdict for Gedd The jury stood seven to one, Only six jurors out of eight are requir. ed for a verdict in civil suits in Utah. By the decision, Geddes will re- |ceive about $200,000 from the es- MUHL 618 PIKE ST. Prices That Talk tor the Best Wall Paper. lfrom $6,000,000 to $20,000,000. The |trial consumed four weeks. Attor- |neys for the bstate declare the case will be carried to the state supreme court and possibly to the United States supreme court. WORKERS WIN; BRIDGEPORT, Conn., July 16 J Pvenyrn NING AND DYEING Plant om WH AVE. AND EU fecting machinists everywhere, lowing a threatened walkout workers in the Remington Arma Co. lwere considerably lessened when three arms companies, in addition to the NION Rem SHOES ) (for the whole tamtty TALL 1-198—PIKE ST. | concessions soon Organized labor hand, | ders for | warring nations. tration were sidestepped has arma for the use of the The World Millinery 1816 Second Ave. Unusual Reductions In department for tomorrow, \turers would be compelled to mee' | their terms. American Federation of Labor, who,| not yet arrived, CRY TO WOMEN Demands ACTION Turkey SAN FRANCISCO, July 16.—“Let de- Such ts the message brought tel Doris Stevens, sent here! big suffrage themselves have the power to pass a constitu-| enfranchising| the suffrage tO}is meeting with favor Best Exes, We dor stand by women regardless of polit-| Robert fri 3 sber of the }ieal entanglements. port commission, he votces | Devise Plan of Action the sentiment of hia fellow mem | “Leaders of the Congressional *s jo announcing the port is Unton for Woman frage"— ot the has a women voters, because they are al- the men, a8 a rule; not to secure legis-| to devise a plan of action among “We are doing the political and coming West,| Miss Stevens leaped into the Iime- ight practically over night as an | Her rallying cry has been to en- franchised women in bebalf of those Still in her early 20s, she has nev- she taught schools in wildest Montana; did set-| ltlon camp; trained as a tenement | Which determined her belief that the world needs women instead of she! “fs simply asking the United States to do what every civilized year whose congress had not con- except the FOR GEDDES |tate, which is variously valued at} BIG STRIKE OFF Possibilities of a general strike, af- fol- by today, manufacturing SIEGEL’S $@ a] /inston company, conceded the de- Bample 1 mands of the workers for an eight and job lot hour day. It is predicted that the lother compasies will make similar the whip because of the immense or All efforts at arbi- by the workers, who believed the manufac- Samuel Gompers, president of the! it 1s reported, is en route here, has of the railroad is shown of 2,500 In two months. CHICAGO, July 16.—Officials 1 | of the Chicago & Gr Weat- | } ern raflroad today confirr | | the report that Samuel Felton, } ve ent of the road, had re | fused an offer from Russia of @ salary of a quarter of a | | Hon dollars yearly to superin. | } tend the buying and placing of | 1 contracts for $80,000,000 worth | | of locomotives, freight and pas senger cars and shr for the next two years | The Russian government, fn } addition to asking Felton to ac. | cept the position osed that | he se Bet PORT BODY WILL HELP TO BRING _ CONGRESSMEN | rection »y October, | The proposal to raise sufficient money to bring the national con gressional rivers and harbors com mittee to Seattle from California, as explained yesterday in The Star to appropriate part is needed 1 think that to bring them here, with thelr influence in congress lon matters of vital importance to the Northwest, Id be tn line with the best poll he sald Secretary Otto Case, who Thurs day received a telegram from |Chairman 8. M. Sparkman, of the committee, signifying the t teo's willingness to come, sald Frt day that after a day's cruise thru the council chambers at the city hall, he had found a majority of the councilmen heartily in favor of | the scheme The county commissioners were} yet to be interviewed Case Thursday interviewed a jnumber of big business men and jfound them enthusiastic. They said it would be a mistake not to bring the committee here. An auto ride over the boulevards and a banquet at the Commercial |Club was given 11 Rotarians from St. Paul, Minneapolis, Duluth, Su | perior and other cities in their vi jeinity, who passed thru here Thurs day en route to thelr international | conference at San Francisco. They spent the day as guests of the Seattle Rotary club. They were! met at the depot by the St. Paul | Shriners’ band and a delegation of local Rotarians. BO SWEENEY WILL TALK TO DEMOCRATS Oliver G. Richardson, professor of history at the University of Wash ington, and Bo Sweeney, assistant | secretary of the interior, are to be jthe speakers at the Saturday lunch jeon of the King County Democratic Jelub, at the Good Eats cafeteria, at| {12:15 p, m | ON ROTARIANS | ‘RIDAY, JULY 16, k, Alaska, now officially known as Anchorage, the most for the government's new $31,000,000 raliroad from Se ward to the coal fields. Beyond are some of the hundreds of tents occupied by the newcomers which empties into the bay to the right. Lots in this new townsite were auctioned July 1 American Turns Down a Salary | of $250,000 a Year From Russia _ to Superintend Buying for War, 1915 PAGE interesting town in the North wherein materials would be manufactured It was planned that after the war the plant would be turned Police of Seattle and Tacoma over to the Baldwin Locomo are endeavoring Friday to un tive Works, which ts In charge ravel the mystery in the disa of the Russlan order, It in on pearance Monday of E. C. timated the company's profits Miller, 41, and Helen Young, $4,000,¢ 13, who vanished from the city POSLAM QUICK TO SOOTHE ALL ITCHING SKIN Don't » hal mm OR. L. R. CLARK At thin office, as well as a sincere desire on our part to please and satisfy you very And y prices, When service, other kin {TEETH PULLED FREE! Kach morning from 8:30 to 10 to demonstrate our painiess methods. | Regel Dental Offices Dr. L, R. Clark, Mgr. rill Bartlett. traordinary t Alaska Totem Talk by P: rof. w. ou an it we why a? get ‘The Dental War Is On! you get the the ne 1405 THIRD AVE, Cor. H. Th ire and illustrated entertainment vans, Union. Manufacturers’ Roof Garden Come Tonight The Best Yet | A large number of handsome prizes donated by the manufacturers will be given away free. Dancing as Usual On Our Big Floor Dancing specialties by Miss Jane Ott and Mer- and Dancing Tomorrow Afternoon And More Prizes. SHRINE-TILIKUM Invitational Dance Tomorrow Night. ENTRANCE THROUGH STUART BUILDING Admission 10c lowest | is an invariable rule on our part that we will not be un derbid on price by any offer you this kind of take chances on any following trouble between Mil ler and his wife. because Resurrection bay Is to the right In the foreground are the log buildings Uncle Sam is putting up for bunkhouses and commissary for his workmen. The offfcial townsite has been located on a hillside across Ship Creek, Anchorage has sprung from nothing into a town ‘POLICE OF 2 REVEAL HUGE CITIES SEEK BAD MONEY -MANANDGIRL CONSPIRACY it Is the preliminary base Also a section CHICAGO, July 16.—Two raids, entirely accidental, by the police nere today uncovered what is believed to have been a widespread conspiracy to | pass $50,000 In counterfeit | bank notes, $200,000 in fraudu lent Minnesota state bonds | A Mine Watkins, who says she and a vast amount of spurious | has been taking care of Hel store coupons. | sung since Miller and his wife The most complete counter- | arted, reported to the police feiting plant discovered in M Gans te har bana Ot years was found in the house at | Tent ave. W., on Monday, and| 1502 West 30th st. and this | took the girl away with him, saying| @™ount Includes counterfeit | he would returs. | bills, bonds and coupons, which | Miss Watkins says a boy brought] Were taken over by the police. | her a note a few hours later, saying| Fe youths, opersHas, the that the girl was dissatisfied with ee Bleep Bangle ye ma her home, and that Miller was try"! craver of Duluth: Ben Saltsman,| n,| {ng to find another place for her. [5° “baward Bake 3 and Joe *| Mra. Miller says she has seen |.) , \onerd, vaker, 23, an "ilittle of her husbar for three . | or The discovery of the counterfelt ed| Weeks, and that she put the girl ling den was the result of a quarrel under the charge of Miss Watkins. jand fight betw 1 the four arrested Since Monday all trace of Miller! ih4 «reir landia a aent | and the girl has been lost 1 ck sles call wan turned in | t Miller is an oll field promoter. After quelling the trouble, the| «'Helen Young ts described a Hi tarted to make a search of "“ | rather fine looking girl, large fof |the house and found at full of| her a with large, gray-blue eyes. | money, dies and plates. One of th teased. Mrs. Miller) men confessed and a second raid ht her husband might! was ma This search resulted in| > girl to Tacoma the discovery of even more coun-| terfeiting ‘material and counterfeit GREAT RAIN AND WIND STORM RAGES LINCOLN, Neb, July 16.— Three towns are flooded and crops damaged by a heavy wine and rainstorm which swep' Eastern Nebraska last stent Many light structures were blown over. David City, Bel! wood and Wahoo were the towns flooded. A heavy dust storm preceded the rain, which was accompanied by a terrific electrical display. WABASH VALLEY FLOODED previous flood WELL, HE ISN’T THE FIRST ONE NORTH YAKIMA, July 16.—A footpad who wae unable to with- stand the stony stares and frigid glances of six haughty women he attempted to rob as they were returning from lodge meet: ing, fled into the night when they haughtily ignored his com- mands to hold up thelr hand: They were Mrs, Frank Lanter. man, Mrs. F. M. Whited, Mr M. E€. Kreidier, Mrs. William || Creighton, Mrs. Sophia Adams and Mre. J. C, Herdick. BATTLESHIPS ENTER CANAL COLON, Panama, July 16.— The Missouri, Wisconsin and Ohio, the first large battleships to pass thru the Panama canal, entered the east entrance at noon today. The cadets from the United States military acad- emy, at Annapolis, are on board, | en route to the San Francsico exposition. The fleet Is expect- | ed to pass out at 7 p. m. GERMANS HAMMER FRENCH IN VOSGES PARIS, July 16.—Heavy forces are delivering attacks against the French in the Vosges, From Cham pagoux to Vezouse, the Germans directed concerted charges yester- |day, the report announced today | All were repulsed with heavy losses, displayed in the attacks, due to re |ports that the enemy plans a gen leral offensive in this region. BOYS, HERE’S CHANCE OAKLAND, July 16.—Twice married, twice divorced, and a party in two elopements, is the record of Miss Alice Lilllan Westphal of Oakland. The sec- ond divorce haa Just been grant- ed, it was stated, but great interest 1s] fees of graduate, registere eat tists only we employ no other HUNTINGTON, Ind. July 16. | kind. [Reports received today from the} You get a written guarantee| Wabash valley countries are that! ned both by the operator who | floods have seriously damaged the q your work and by L. R. Clark,|crops. Washouts have impeded) D. D. manager and owner Of | rajiroad travel. | this ¢, who ts thoroughly re sponsible in every way. That's a} KANSAS CITY MENACED great deal better, isn't it, than a] KANSAS CITY, July 16.—Kansas| }muarantee which tan't signed at|City is menaced by floods for the! all? }fourth time in three months. The You get the dest of materials|heavy rains raised the Missourt jand absolutely painiess methods, |river to the 27-foot mark, which is the high stage reached during the} S.E.CO, APPEALS jand Ballard Beach Iines beyond the noten FIVE THOUSAND GENUINE! DOLLAR BILLS, WHICH HAD BEEN RAISED TO $5's, WERE | FOUND” SY THE POLICE. NOBLES SPEND THEIR LAST DAY _ SEEING SIGHTS | An early soaking rain did not | prevent more than 100 imperial | Shrine council representativ | from embarking on a special Milwaukee train Friday for Mount Rainier. Several hun- dred more took advantage of a trip of 200 miles around Puget sound on the steamer Chippe- wa. Both excursions left the city at 8 o'clock, with a flourish of bands and the same exuberant spirit that has characterized ev- ery other event of Shrine con- vention week, Twenty-six hours in Rainier National park, the wonderland of the Northwest, were to be permitted the visitors, who will return here Saturday evening. Another party Is to leave for the mountain Saturday morn- ing. Those who went aboard the Chip- pewa visited Everett, from which city they went on to Deception pass,| lbetween Fidalgo and Whidby is!-| ands, thru Rosario straits to Ana-| |cortes and the salmon canneries,| |then to Bellingham and return. FROM DECISION Alki, To extend its Fauntleroy termini specified in its charter would result in a large annual loss,| the Seattle Electric Co, declares, tn appealing to the federal court from a decision of Federal Judge Frank H. Rudkin, who ruled against the company's application for an injunc- tion from the order of the public service commission to extend the lines. The Hollywood Lunch and Soda Fountain, 212 Pike St.—Adv, Two for By EDWIN J. BROWN DD, One My large volume of dontal business enables me to give two dollars’ worth of dental work for every dollar paid ST IN THE WORLD i Inlay Filia, fre $5,815 Rich monde, 87.60 810 Porcelain Crowns, 85; my- beat spectal prervative Alloy ‘iis, $1. A not of th, guaranteed to fit 1 ‘give satisfaction, Extracting guaranteed painless My lb-year guaran- tee In backed largest priva practice In t established ownersh under my and manage- ment 14 Years. Nov WIN J.” BROWN 7 nion Block opr RTMENT TOS Virst Ave, Washin me ide. Open evenings until § and Sundays untll 4 for people who work, Phone Main 2640. BEWARE of tmpostors who tmt- tate my name, just one door south of my offices. “My not offices. do face Cherry xt; Lam near Columbia st. in the Unton block. ESTA » 1876 Second Ave. and Vike St — (A Special Purchase of Snappy New Wash Skirts $2. 50, $2. sn of White are offering to fortunat Wash Sk aterials are a narrow wale pique, cotte gaberdine and 1 iz from 24 to 36, i gil One style i plain wi inverted pleat de fro and one patch po ket Another styte is belted has twe And note part ; model with the Kitty Ge don pockets and a belt ru ing through the pock loops A feature is the detachable bone Excellent values at $2. $3.95. FOR e pur t differer ac J ougall Zfouthwick $3.50, $3. 95 u th or n- buttons of pearl and $2.95, $3.50 and | FALL 50, We are receiving daily advanced styles of Suits and Coats to be worn for early Fall. nd Floor Women’s Silk-Plated Stockings 35c LATED STOCKING and are as attractive silk B5¢ pair Regular and out-sizes, S give entire satisfaction in appearance as the pure in black, white or tan, Fancy Silk Stockings $1.00 Combinations of stripe match. Colors to match A new assortment from boot and plain boot to the costume and shoes. which to choose—$1.00. Kiddies’ Socks A splendid assortment o: in all plain and with fanc f Socks for the young folk, y tops—15¢, 25¢, 35¢. July Clearance of Children’ s Coats 1QU E: 2 to 6 years. Some are plain and others There are also a few kc white materials and Serge Coats for chil iren, ages from They are white and cream color. are embroidered ng Infants’ Coats of soft, rmer prices ranged from $4.50 to $17.00. ONE-HALF PRICE Children’s Lingerie Dresses $1.50, $1.95, $2.50 AINTY Swiss and lawn, and ribbon run. are trimmed with dainty ribbons. tucks litthe Summer Dresses of voile, dotted belted styles with lace insertion Some have wide ribbon girdles and touches of —Third Floor, and lace, and Clearance of Boys’ $7.50 Wool Suits $5.85 b a tion Suits. Sizes $7.50 Su Many of $7.85. will find a splendid selec- of Boys’ Wool Norfolk Many of them in weights suitable for Fall and Winter wear. 7 to 18 years, Regular its, reduced to $5. Boys’ $10.00 Suits $7.85 High-grade Suits that have style, including fine cheviots and tweeds. these are the well-known ‘Sampeck” make. Sizes 8 to 17 years. Reduced to —Third Floor. SOLDIER FIRES BULLET IN HEAD Chauncey Willing, post exchange clerk at Ft. Lawton, private in Com pany H, 14th Infantry, is dying in the city hospital, with a bullet wound in his head, self-inflicted, at the Bon Ton saloon, 1504 First ave. 7:45 a. m. Willing has been missing from the fort for two days. He told William E. Woods of the hospital corps, who was searching for him, that he feared to go back to the fort because he was $15 short in his exchange account, Woods advised him to go back and square the account, and Willing was on the point of re turning, but said he was going to get a drink. A moment later a shot was heard at the rear of the saloon. Willing was pital, dying. ‘STATE TO ‘APPEAL FREEING OF THAW ALBA N. Y., July 16.—Attor-. ney General Woodbury today in- structed counsel for the state to file an immediate appeal with Justice rushed to the hos-| Hendricks in the case of Harry K Thaw, TOTEM. EXPERT GIVES LECTURE As a special feature of the enter tainment given Friday evening on |the Manufacturers’ roof garden at the windup of Consumers’ day, Prof, |H. L. Evans of Chicago will give jan illustrated lecture on Alaskan totems. Prof. Evans will be clad in a costume to resemble the totem of the Hydah Indians. Home Consumers’ day closes with a grand prize giving to the visitors at the Manufacturers’ roof | Barden, | DENTAL CLINIC WANTED—Teeth to fill with sil. ver, at cost. No students or experiments. Apply 812 Green Ridg, Friday and + Saturday mornings. (((“"KODAKERS— “In at one, at five they’re done” JACOBS "PHOTO SHOPS Second Floor P.-L. Bldg.