The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 14, 1915, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

OR. L. R. CLARK TIPPLERS |Mail Order House to Do Business With Thirsty Ones in Northwest. We Pull Teeth Free Each | HAVE 318,000 NAMES . Morning From 8:30 to} Great Warehouse Being Con- th de an ba of ot you guarantee, oO of at t+ } M jan whe 10 to Demonstrate Our) Painless Methods. Our busir at we ha ntiat to ts krowing #0 t nM nination nging rig his denta her oper When ye © assur n PRO ke no chances here, Bestde are protected by our t signed both ark DS, owner and this office, and the oper 4 your work ‘TAL WORK DONE HERE Regal Dental Offices Dr. L, R. Clark, Mgr. 1405 THIRD AVE. N. W. Cor. Third and Union. SOME PEOPLE SEEM TO THINK That the way to save money is to hoard it—hide * ome did that, half the industries of the country would be stopped. Dol-| lars are the tools of business. De-) posit them where they will do you .#ome good, and help the communi. ty It away. where you live. Interest MB Per Cent ‘UNION SAVINGS & TRUST Co. Vib: OF SEATTLE Capital and Surplus $815,000 . JAMES D. HOGE, President N. 8. SOLNER, Vice President and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING tn the Heart of the Financial District THIS PLACE ONLY. tors sold by I. H. You Must Have Money There are very few worth while things in this life that don’t cost money. To enjoy them one must pay the price. earn money if you would have it; you must save it if you would get any lasting good from it. There is no better place for you to save than in a sav- ings account at thi great bank. Do it Now! DEXTER HORTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK ORCOND ANY CHERRY ANT GET UNSATISFACTOR if every 1% years’ guarantes on alt Arnold ‘Tel. Matin sane structed Just Over Oregon Line in California. \y| REDDING, Cal, Aug. 14.— The names of 380,000 tipple: in Oregon and Washington are catalogued and arranged in an alphabetical index by a order liquor house that is pre mail paring to open for business in Hornbrook, the California town nearest to the Oregon-Califor- nia line. Oregon and Wash- ington states will go dry Jan- vary 1 The law in both # tows, after the opening of the new year, any person in those two si to purchase three dozen bottles of beer and two quart bottles of whisky every four weeks. The enterprising dealer in Horn | brook who proposes to shoot alco- |hol across the state line into Ore- Y gon and Washington, has bullt a} Warehouse 100 feet long and S80) feet wide, in which he will store j his alcoholic beverages. A fireproof, burglar-proof safe has been built, In which are kept) the names and addresses of the 380,000 tipplers of Oregon and Washington, who, likely purchasers. The value of town lots in Horn brook has advanced 50 per cent | the last three months, or since the property owners realized the geo Sraphical advantage they have in dealing with “booze” shipments to the northern states, A second mail order house has bought a large lot and proposes to enter into the business which promises such handsome returns from the dry states north of Call- fornia. When Roguish Eye Meets Hefty Fist CHICAGO, Aug |i4—Hermann |} Hoffman has roguish eye; Lou- ise Johnson has) a hefty fist. Hoft- man's Just too romantic for any- | thing; cutup with the girls, Mies Jobn- son's quite dit ferent; doesn’t cut up much, cept with her fists. When Her- man's roguish eye got gay, Miss Johnson's fist got busy. Biff on the nose! Bang on the cranium with um- brella! Zip on the chest! Down Koes Hoffman, yelling for police! Whack «£ Miss Johnson's umbrella, while she yells for the police. “Fine you ‘20, says judge in lee court next morning “Every girl should know how to use her fists,” quoth Miss John- fon, “It would keep the police busy but ft would free the streets of "_mashors.” | Brigadier and Mrs. Dubbin, in }command of the Salvation Army | work in Iowa and Nebraska, will conduct the services at the Salv: |tion Army citadel, Fifth and Wash- \ington st., Sunday at 8 and & p. m. The brigadier and his wife are| well known in this part of the coun- |try, having been in charge of the | Northern Pacific province for sev- j eral years. | They are visiting the Pacific coast in connection with the cele. bration of their silver wedding an. |piversary. DODGING BULLETS W. H. Walker, a county stockade prisoner, broke from the road gang jas it was leaving the stockade Sat jurday morning and, dodging two | bullets fired from the revolver of ard John Mack, made his escape into the woods. . Walker had been’ sent | stoc kade Friday to serve months for the crime of larceny, | His {8 the second escape summer, to the raat disorders of the vital or ea yriclan and sin Seattle, Liver, Stomach, Varicose Vein DE. DONAWAY, 102 Union and T Aberty Building rd, Opposite Postottice CHEER UP, |SAYS DOCTOR SEATTLE | MADEHER SIT it seems, will be) regular| TO LEAD SERVICES: three| this! UPON HIS LAP Dr. Homer J. Davidson, of 1427 East Pike at, wae named defendant .in a suit for $5,000 damages filed in superior court Saturday by Minnie Timmer. man, a patient, who alleges the doctor tried to force her to ait on his lap when she called at his offices for advice on a pro- fessional matter last May, Dr, Davidson maintains a sult in the American Bank with his brother, C, Fleming David He physician and son in a building sur) STAR—SATURDAY, AUG. 14, 1915. PAGE 2, | | xeon and, according to Miss Tim-| merman's complaint, has bee her) family's doctor for a number of years } Mrs, Mable G. Davidson ts made} & party to the euit as the holder of half th erty of Dr, Davidson wife and minunity prop. Miss Timmerman alleges she was ma slight pain on May 8 into his she had entered, | | suffertng fr 4, and went to the Jremedy, He showed private consultation says, and, after |locked the door. | This done, he took | forcibly down into his lap, while }to exert all her strength doctor for her chamt r, she she to prevent him from accomplishing his | pose. | She alleges the humiliation and Idisgrace she has suffered since that time is worth $5,000 to her. FORGETS HIS “OWN AGE; WHEN SON WAS BORN A father who couldn't remember when his children were born, who age, and who could not tell in what year temporarily forgot his own he was married, and yet |peared to be “sane, | telligent,” who ap sober and in- Police Judge MacMahon, Saturday. |He was David Bain, 1126 Sist ave | His son, Arthur Bain, jarrested by Officer J. P. charged with holding a license when under 21 declared Arthur waa 21, but could [not rémember when he was born School certificates were {ntroduced, |with his mothér’s statement that the was only 18. “I think he was born tn 1894," |said Bain, Sr. on the Fraser river, It was the year I was elected to the Westminster council.” Judge MacMahon fined the boy $25, accused the father of aiding ever came in again “he would con- sider it money out of his pocket that be bad ever been born. PT. ANGELES, Aug. 14.—An- chored a mile off Ediz hook light today, the Peruvian bark Alliance, laden with a cargo of sugar for Vic-) torla, B. C., has but one able bodied member of the crew loft. He is Capt. Paragon, the master.) sick list, from Callao of the plague known as beri-bert The vessel, Callao. EMMA GOLDMAN TO SPEAK SUNDAY Emma Goldman, anarchist, arriv- in Seattle Saturday morning from Portland, and will begin her extending over a week, at I. W. W. hall, 208 od series of 10 lectures, Second ave. 8., Sunday afternoon, Right of Property.” In the evening she will spe |The ‘Power’ of Billy Sunday The case against manager, Dr. ) Were ar ature regarding birh control, |@ismissed yesterday by the circult court judge at Portland. Ben Reitman, who cipal court and nd appealed. ‘TAFT WILL TALK TO William | president, |the Chamber of Commerce at |Iuncheon ef the New Washington,| | Friday, Howard Taft, hold of her and attempted to pull her had} pur-| sat in the witness chair jand received a tongue lashing from had been Worden, | driver's The father “That was the year of the highest water I ever saw) and abetting him, and said if he The other survivors are on the and five died en route South sea) meeting all sorts of|* hard luck, has been 94 days out of speaking on “War and the Sacred| on| great hit with Rock and Fulton in her and her ated for distributing lter- was) They) were fined $100 each in the muni-|latter the “star Venus” of the Win- | CHAMBER MEMBERS: former|ing Ted Doner, a brother of Kitty; will address members of Harry a) Secking»er 9, according to|look pretty. i iy Above, Ai Jolson at the Moore. Below, at the Empress, Burt Meliburn at the Lois, Josephine Poor: the Pantages. Clyde Hager at Al Jolson will be here again for a week beginning Sunday night. Al ts an old-time Seattle favorite. This time he appears at the head |of a Winter Garden show entitled “Dancing Around.” Old-time residents of Seattle—that is, those who lived here a dozen years ago or so—used to see Al quite frequently when he played the 10 and 26-cent houses in the Northwest. Then, after a while, Al left Seattle and went to Broadway, New York In the big town he made as quick a hit with his fine, strong voice jand blackafce comedy as he did in Seattle. He knocked ‘em out of the seats right regularly, and then the big managers got him to head musical comedies. How they put Al's name on the big electric signs whenever he hits a town. Dancing Around” will be the first show at one of the “legit” houses In Seattle for some time. Good vaudeville bills are also offered this coming week The act has never been on a tour of the West before. A special fea- ture will be Rev. Frank W. Gor- man, the singing parson, a tenor of rare ability, who, after a row with | the deacons in his church at Port- land, accepted an _ offer sing in vaudeville. The added at- traction of the week will be the |Scovell Dancers, in what is de- scribed as a festival of classical and modern dancing. Other num. bers on the program will include Jow and Dow, Hebrew comedians; MOORE A lot of clever people will appear in “Dancing Around” with Al Jol son, the Winter Garden's “uproar- fous upheaval of lingerie and} laughter,” when presented at the Moore theatre one week, beginning Sunday, August 15, with matinees Wednesday and Saturday, Among the feminine contingent) |will be Kitty Doner, who made a} “The Candy Shop.” Eileen Molyneux, Then there is from the Alham- »|bra Music hall, London. Rae Row-' Winche and Poore, in their act, “No din plays the part of “Tittle,” the ag 4 Harry Von Fossen, telephone operator, and is, ax they the blackface comedian, and the |fay, a “scream.” Then there are per egy Rw By re ‘A Nov- elty rprise.” rst-run motion Mary Kobson and Mae Dealy, the pictures will be shown in. the ter Garden, Among the men are|Pantagercope, Frank Carter, a singer and dancer; Lois Harry Clarke, the son of Creston Clarke, who has made a great suc- cons a singer and dancer; Fred Leslie, the English comedian, who has some droll carryingons with Al Jolson, and a lot of others, Includ- Topping the new bill at the Lois theatre, opening with the show to- morrow afternoon, will be Webber's Twelve Juvenile Minstrels, in which vocal and instrumental music are combined. The shows today will be continuous from 2 p. Wilcox and Harry Warnell, For Of course, there is a beauty cho-|™- rus who sing and dance and just| Will be the Triangle Trio, comedy And you know Al—A}|*!ngers and entertainers, who are |n message” [°° mr, accepting the Jolson, blackface comedian and|*#!d to be relia®le funmakers. The invitation. “iie' fs coming to Se-| singer. He was here last in “The, TWO Fishers, man and maid, in a |attle to address the Amertcan|Honeymoon Express.” contortion offering, will be a third |Bankers’ association during its ‘** card of the week. A number of! convention here next month EMPRES other veudeville acts will be| TO MAKE FIGHT FOR NEW BILLBOARD LAW by the Municipal league, the fact that the council |eafety committee against it, Friday of the buildings and | grounds committee of the league. ‘UNIVERSITY GIRL DIES IN HOSPITAL Rounds, 22, junior, died recommended Miss Ethelyn Byrne ® popular university lat the Prividence hospital Friday afternoon of Peritonitis She | Was the daughter of B. J, Rounds, contractor, She was member of Delta Delta sorority, and also of the Girls’ Rowing club. She was active In women's athletics, A fight for Councilman Hanna's billboard ordinance will be waged|« despite public according to a decision | |shown, as will a number of first- run motion pictures, Yuma,” whatever he, she or it) may be, will be the headline at- traction at the Empress theatre for the week beginning Sunday mat- |{nee. “Yuma” promises to be a real novelty in vaudeville, Advance in- formation regarding “Yuma” is clothed with more or less mystery. |“Yuma” will emerge from a “Merry Widow Hat box” two feet square, it 1s announced, and will appear {a8 a seven-foot figure. That will be one of the stunte—there will be others “Too Many Burglars” {s the title of a fast farcical sketch to be pre- TRAPPED BY TIDE; SEASIDE, Ore. Aug. 14.—Sur- rounded by water from the incom ing tide while fishing from Escola rock, off Cannon beach, Theodore! Peterson, 20, an O. A. C. student, of Portland, was drowned fn at-| tempting to swim ashore. William sented by a company of five. Oth- pate Sf PORPRD IE AUER SAA er numbers on the bill are; | 1" Safety. Worden and Gearin, singers; Tom CHARGES AGAINST EVERETT LAWYERS. Kerr and Irene Burton, with their talking fiddles; Hager and Good- win, comedians, who sing their own songs and make their own patter, FF 9 PANTAGES EVERETT, Aug 14.—Disbar-| “The Haberdashery,” a dashing) ment charges are on file today) English comedietta, with Harring-| against Attorneys Robert MeMur-| ton Reynolds and ten people, mostly girls, will be the headifMme feature of the bill at the New Pantages, opening with the matinee Mond: chie and Earl Husted, the latter! democratic candidate for congress last fall. They are accused of mis- appropriating money of clients. to}f the added feature there! STUDENT DROWNED SINGLE TAXER IS OPTIMISTIC the contempt Prizes 80 great w WEEK COM. SUN., AUG. 15 Matinees Wed. and Sa, 1 Nightw 5 0 #2, Mat, 26 to tig that Danie Klefer, chairman of the Fels Fund In America t for apreading the single tax * system of revenue, held for the c, theory in 1896 that when en ry Geena, father of the idea, TORRID TEMeee an came to his Cincinnati place of TERPSICHO ful business to meet one of Kief t employes, Kjefer, recogniz i a econo: 12 5 by at him, gar retired to his private office and WITH Al ct left his distinguished visitor ie standing in the aisie. * int In 1900 Kiet had become yet one of the most ardent support tig ere of the movement, and seven Ms years later so active that he 4 was appointed guardian of the 1 Fels Fund in this country wh “When will single tax generally be adopted in this couftry? nase wile epeated the question at the THE MANGLER OF MELANCHOLY § “In Europe soon after this war; | IN A TWELVE-HOUR SHOW SQUEBZED INTO THREE ope in America ne cen tell he re pied, “But I tain it ty com: | An Uproarious Upheaval of Lingerie and Laughter ne ing. In recent # in OreKo0.| with Frank Carter, Kittle Doner, Harry Clarke, Mary Robson, Pre % Missourt, California, and Washing-| Leslie, Eileen Molyneux, R Bowdin, Harry Wardell, Mop ‘ ioe Sonrty 600.000 voters Reve So) Dealy, Harry Wilcox, Ted Doner and 100 Dainty, on pened tor single tas, Is Western | Dimpled Divinities on the Elevated Runway, i . Canada a partial system has al-/ P. ready been adopted; {s that not] A Shimmering Sheen of Srcnte Splendors j " proof that the,idea ts finding in \ sis bert: Parti cm va creasing favor? } — ov Many Nations Adopt it 7 Kiefer explained single tax by 6 products innumerable leaflets on the subject m4 the simple state th ment that {t was a system of tax-| om ing land and removing all taxes| é or from industry, buildings, and per-! “Unequaled Vaudeville Means pha ate Vaudeville’ an sonal mroperss : dial i Re mmark, weden, estern an Li “ = ; ik ane the Antipodes, Kiefer says. BEGINNING MONDAY MATINE 5 are rapidly taking to the idea, with - < es vite Comedietts hebulous sgitations in ‘Italy,| The Dashing English Comedietta a France, England and the United| ” Btates. Kiefer says that while Fels mere agreed to match every dollar ised by the single taxers in the United Staten, already over a quar ter of a million has been expended in furthering the movement Mra. Fels Sp Kiefer ix a member of Mrs, Fels party, which is bound for the sin-| gle taxers’ convention at San Fran cisco to be held within a few) weeks | Mrs. Fels spoke at a dinner given at the Good Eats cafeteria Friday evening and Saturday noon to the Democratic club at the same place. She will speak Sunday evening at the Unitarian church on Boy) ston ave. Dr. Slaughter of London will supplement her remarks CITY BANDS TO FORM BUSINESS GIVE CONCERTS MEN'S WAR CAMP | 14.—The ly With Harrington Reyne 10—PEO SPECIAL Rev. Frank Note—Rev. Gorman is after a row with the deacon pulpit for the stage The Seattle Police band will play at Laechi rk Sunday afternoon Combining the pleasure of as | Wee, Gapertanont: Cee anenee* sisting the Seattle Fire | j euver camp, Depart-|>usiness men’s maneu' Pp. ment band to make their Seattle|similar to that established at booster jaunt to the San Francisco|Ppiattsburg, N. Y., at American! | WASHINGTON, Aug. exposition next month, with the/raye Wash, from August 24 to/ serious business of advertising | gone” 19 Ballard, the merchants and bust ness men of that suburb will Satur-| geores of business men of Seat- day night entertain the public, and)tie were Saturday signifying their the Firemen's band will furnish the|gesire to join the business men's music for the occasion. camp. This was before it was At § o'clock the band will start/;nown that the war department a concert at 20th and Rallard/pad authorized the camp. It is ex- aves, that will continue for an hour! pected interest will be stimulated | and a half, Later the band will €0) by the announcement. to 22nd ave. and Market st. where The plan is for business men to/ they will play for a dance. abandon their offices for a few/ Sunday evening at § o'clock the/ days and receive military instruc-| band will play at Salmon Bay vark./tion along with physical training “ and recreation. ALL BUT 2 IN CLASS ‘LAST CHANCE TO LEARN HOW TO SWIM, NAME S. E. WEEKLY! Forty-eight of the 50 students who took swimming lessons at the University of Washington during Today, Saturday, is Pay Sem the summer mastered the over. | chance, a 8 ey phlet. arm, side over-arm and side under-| Electric Co. t oo Dan arm strokes, as well as learning! Then the big couteet, $06 | hi ae floating, rhythmic breathing and | tion SU ais ae ‘e_-will be plain diving. Clair Sexsmith was |PTizes—$1 a over, and on August 26 the awards will be announced. the instructor. The Iast pamphlet announces LIVES 200 YEARS! that about 1,000 suggestions have been received by the company, hy Ang among which are the followin) 200 years Haarlem ional remedy of nd, has been r nized ax an|which will not get the prizes: = {ntallte) relleg Afro ie 1 ms 3 “The Last Gasp,” “The Eaoer dney and bladder ¢ * Itsl.. “ “Th Sardine Box, ‘The Apolo-/ very age is proof that It must nave ete “The Last’ Stand,” “The unusual me! If oubled with pains or| Tomahawk,” “The Juggernaut.” the back, feel tired in the headache, Indigestion, in morning, somnia, painful or too frequent pass- | age of urine, irritation or stone In 4 BLAME GERMANS FOR $20,000 FIRE, Aug. 14. al the bladder, you will almost certainly find Mi quick relief in GOLD MEDAL rlem Otl Capsules. This is the} d old remedy that has stood the | r hundreds of years, prepared | he proper quantity ‘and con. venient form to take. It ts imported KINCARDINE, Ont., direct from Holland Iaboratorte: |fire believed to have been started cap sot it at any drug « |by German sympathizers, destroyed romptiy refunded if it Coes not re. |the Hunter bridge and a boiler eve you. But he sure to get the genuine GOLD MEDAL brand. For saloand guaranteed by the Owl Drug plant, which was about to begin the manufacture of shrapnel here to- day The loss was $20,000. ‘WILL SING FROM SMITH BUILDIN If you're near the Smith build- ing at 12:30 Monday, and hear sweet music floating hither and yon in tho alr, don’t think you've [had one too many, | You can ascribe it to— | Hert Vincent, a vandeville singer, with Accompanist Moore. Vincent will sing and Moore will play from the top of the Smith tower. They |launched their music into the at- mosphere from the top of the Tower at the San Francisco ex position recently, and made a large hit Vincent will sing, “My Honolulu written and composed by Weeks, manager of the mu sic department of the Rhodes Co., this city. TEACHERS MEET ND, Cal, Aug. 14.—More ‘than 5,000 school teachers arrived here and in San Francisco today to attend the 58rd annual conven tion of the National Education as sociation Monday, which continues for two weeks. It is estimated that 15,000 instructors, including repre- sentatives from 27 foreign coun: tries, The first ses- Breakfast Lunch and Dinner ‘The quality of your food should be given juat as much consideration as the prie w nh you eat at the Nor tonia Cafeteria you have the satisfaction of knowing that getting absolutely the t the market ex are no hig 11d pay elsew OPEN 6:30 A. M. Continuous Service to 7:30 P. M. Excelient service. Large mez zanine dining room and triple service counters | reading and the conventence trons, rent of room our a OAKIL 1421 23 4th Ave. Adjoining Joshua Green Bldg. will attend. sion will be called Monday, “The ” Haberdashery” The Singing Parson Other Big Acts—10c and 20c OPEN yids and a Company of PLE—10 FEATURE W. Gorman the Portland minister who, s of his church, forsook the gesesy? L M—JUVENILE MINSTRELS=) Other Big Acta We Mat. Pm Nights 7 to it oe eo ae TONIGHT KOLLER’S RINK FIRST AND SENECA SKATING EVERY AFTERNOON AND EVENING K. OF C. IN FRISCO SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 14 day was Knights of Columbus é7 at the fair. The delegation of itors, which included tives from all parts of the U States, was led by Supreme Ki James Flaherty of Members were formally ed by exposition officials noo ifornia buflding. The Hollywood Lunch and Bolt Fountain, 212 Pike St—Ady. Secntede c MUTUAL WEEKLY 5c—CLASS A‘ careful selection of less stones, perfectly cut ems can be mounted ¢ settings mat ufactured by us to ye order. Diamonds have perms nent value and are coming much more val able every year. Wel” have them in all sizes, but the smaller stones are just as precious propory tionately as the ones. mond Merchants 821 Second Ave

Other pages from this issue: