The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 30, 1915, Page 5

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of Bed in ivory or finish; an tonally special, ame! furniture Is very popula this time. Regu’ 13.00, Special Mon- Solid oak Rocker tu the golden waxed or fumed finish; has ER TORPEDOED ONDON, Aug. 36.—The British ip William Stephenson, tons, bas been sunk by a Ger- submarine, it was learned to- Let me @o your work eervice—good resul! 2. H. MENDENHALL Pen and Camere Specialist In Swift'e—Second at Dike | Jeweler and Silversmith 1 Second Ave., Near Madison’ EVERYTHING IN CLEANING AND DYEING Plast and Office W0TH AVE. AND EB. UNION IEXCURSIONS| ||-DAILY-| 1IP.S.Navy Yard ) Hour’s Ride on Puget Sound me | a i | | } | - igh = t a ovo? TE | ! 8. H, 8B. Kennedy and Tourtet fe Colman Dock 30, 8:00, 730, 2:00 30 p. m. Visitors Welcome Dally FARE, 500 ROUND TRIP Children, 5 to 12, 28¢, Main 2101, or Information, Mais 8903. ATTEND TO YOUR TEETH NOW ‘While We Are CUTTING THE CUT RATE PRICES Wag result for « period of 16 years All Piatinse Pilling £2: to $1.50 Geld Alioy Full a rf to 3:8! ? ne BL 3 Kaaminations sod Ketimates Free. UNION DENTISTS—Cor. Third and Pike. Entrance 106% Fike Mt. UNION DENTISTS 00614 Pike 6t., Corner of Third Ave ‘We use nothing but the best materials and guarantes « pleasing and last~ STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 30, 1915. PAGE 5. “The best Range brains and experience have ever produced.” “QUICK MEAL" STEEL RANGES HY not buy your Comforts and Bian kets now be the cold nights get here and our s in all lines of ding are complete, | and remember, you may | buy them on’ eredit if you wish. Woolnap Blankets tn wrays, tans, white and plaids; full sized, Priced from 75c .. $4.50 Per Pair All- Woot erays plaids, 85.05. to Blankets in tans, white and $12.50 bordered Cotton $3.50 on Comforts large — sixes ders, $5.00 78x90, Wool filled lamb fleece Comftorta. 5.50 Fancy Comfe 78x84, aw THEY ARE BETTER BECAUSE: amtwnas The strenzthened parts are thoseM \'T"}. 2) acuta ex where the mst wear is, tra fine 75 The walls aro Asbestos lined. large stse $9. They are mado of steel, consequently they are strong and cannot crack. The only Range made where the Back Flue, Back Wall ant Aan jues are Porcelain Enamel Eee Absolutely _Rust-Proof, $1.00 DOWN, $1.00 PER WEEK Your Old Stove Taken as Part Pay- ment. Two days grade W Rugs, w piece by ¢ ext rug fac try sale on bi! close them out Food Special Monday and Tuesday at All Nickel Alarm Clocks, guaranteed to wake you up. 65c Remember, SAYS WORKMEN [LOT OF THUNDER OF ENGLAND DO NOTWANT WAR 1 DROP OF RAIN Applause greeted the declaration Weather Director Salisbury esti) Sunday night of James Larkin. nates that it rained 589% drops! strike, that the laborers of Ireland|¢tween Sunday night and Monday are not in sympathy with England morning. in the present war. | It was so small an amount that Larkin spoke to a large audience |the thingumbob he measures it with| in Dreamland pavilion under the wouldn't measure. * But he says it auspices of the Sexttle Union Rec-\cleared the atmosphere up consid- ord. He urged the general organiz-| erably ation of all labor unions into one) Also he promises to turn on a great industrial body, with a uni-!shower or two Monday afternoon versal scale of wages. land night, after which he says the He declared that neither the sun will again glimmer for ‘nother working people of England or of) month Germany wanted war, and told of) Germany sin hostilities. “In America you are permitting this deadly war by allowing your money lenders to control you. The laboring class could stop this war,” he said. “{ predict that England, France and Russia will refuse recognition of war debts when it is over, It will cause the greatest panic ever known in the United States, but it will come tc pass.” RNS The Hollywood Lunch and Soda Fountain, 212 Pike St.—Adv. HORLICK’S The nal Origt MALTED MILK you may goth Substitvce FREE DOCTOR 169 e., the beginning of more smoke, {inasmuch as the big wash the smoke to earth. thunder? —the kind we Eastern folks we never tell the m., at one-minute tntervale—sound ed just like a German siege gun, 15 miles away. It was caused by a low barometer, and hot weather in in Walla Walla Sunday DALE WANTS TO CHANGE HIS VOTE Didja ever see a feller with as many troubles as Councilman Dale? He's always reversing his own vote. Now he's going to introduce an ordinance to repeal one passed last May 19 for the construction of a municipal car line into Rainier valley He says the main idea of his new ordinance is to allow himself to way he voted then. he doesn’t want a municipal line out Rainier way. LABOR LEADERS TO OCCUPY PULPITS Labor leaders will occupy pulpits in about 30 Seattle churches on Labor Sunday, next week, and Councilmen Hesket and Bolton and Street Superintendent Case will preach Labor Sunday will be observed under a “social creed of the Call at the Right Drug Co. Washington st, near Second and bh tian diagnose your ease and pr for you, absolutely without charg ‘We want your patronagé and of. fer you the doctor's services as a inducement. Look fur the Yellow Frome Federal Council of Churches of Christ in Amertoa,, advocating among other reforms the abolition jof child labor, regulation of wom- en's “toll, reduction of hours of |tAbor and increase of wages | Churches desiring labor speakers on Labor Sunday should phone retary James Duncan, Elliott 24 work gui | Funeral services for Mrs. Mary | Helena Wilson, wife of 3. P, Wilson, head of Wilson's Modern Business college, were held from the Bonney- Watson chapel Monday. Friday. Heavy Bold Bridge Work ..... Bote of Teeth ... 65,00 and Lady Attendants. AND LIGHTNING; = leader in the Irish dock workers’ | But he doesn’t think we will get|34 years old and a daughter of 152 strikes that have occurred in|choked and burned with much|Senator Warren of Wyoming, fires have now mostly died down./Gen, John J, Pershing arrived to- and the little rain we do get will] day with the bodies of his wife and And say, Phyllis, didja hear the/ tire at the Presidio, San Francisco, r Regular honest-to-g004-len route to Cheyenne, where the ness Western Washington thunder] funerals will be held. vote exactly the opposite from the) It appears now! church,” recently put forth by the! She died|tion may be had regarding this ad- IN NO DANGER OF A STRIKE Officials of the Seattle local of the! |Lowgshoremen’s union denied Mon |day that the union's vote Sunday against ratification of the ar ment submitted by the Pacific ship owners meant that a general strike would be ordered | The action of the union stated by the secretary, forms al basis for further negotiations, The workers, ho d . no hos tile feeling toward the employers, and believe the matter can be set tled amicably © vote against fhe agreement provides that all llocals must ratify it by September 1. Locals of the other American Pacific ports have ratified ft. The Canadian ports are still to be heard from, Hy the terms of the agreement, wagos are advanced on an average) ot 12% per cent. No men can be hired between 7 p. m. and 6 a. m.| This is so they will know at night where they are to work next morn-| ing Pay it was! was 101 for and 271 when the men red to work, If they are | to report for work at a certain time, and there Is no work or if t ship ts delayed tn loading,! they get two hours’ time, Union |men are to be employed in prefer-| ence to others. sd must begin GENERAL TAKES BODIES HOME FOR FUNERALS Brigadier-Generai John J. Pershing) Mrs. John J. Pershing. She was) OGDEN, Utah, Aug. 20.—Brig. three daughters, who perished in a Aitho worn and haggard as the result of his grief, the general did/| It lasted from 1:60 a. m. to 2 a./everything in his power to sustain! |the father of Mrs ‘Sen. Francis E. oming In the general's party were his| Pershing, U. 8./ Warren of Wy-) his family; Sen. and Mr. and Mrs. ren PORTLAND NURSE PRAISES MINERAL |Miss Anna White Says Ako! | Relieved Her Catarrh. | and Mrs. Warren,) Frederick War- One of Port ands bes ba | cnown nurses is Miss Anna White, of 506! North western) building, — Porte| land, Miss White gives the following in-| dorsement of| 3 Akoz, the won-| - li derful California Miss Anna White medicinal min- eral, which she declares gave her| igreat relief from eatarrh | “I suffered for 10 years from na- sal catarrh,” said Miss White in} telling of her case, “During that] time I tried many remedies and| specialists throughout the coun-| try, but got no permanent relief. I have taken Akoz for three months| jaltogethery and am much _ better. |My head is clear and breath ts not! joffensive, and I do not have the former inconveniences I expe- rienced. I expect to be cured en tirely through using Akoz.” | Akoz 1s not a ent medicine.| It is a natural mineral, having |proven effective in thousands of cases of rheumatism, stomach, kid ney and bladder trouble, eczema jand other ailments, For sale at all) druggists, where further informa- vertisement. ° WATERFRONT |HEBBOFFERS © POWER SITE FOR MILLION A comumnication comes the over before elty eounct! Monday afternoon the signature of P, H. Hebb, president of the Mountain Develop of Tacoma, in which an offer to sell the White river power site, to be developed as a source of power for the city light plant, ts re newed The communteation tn detatl is as follows ment Co. river power site under exactly the same terms ae e of our former offer, at me price, name ly, $1,000,000 Reports on File the general Inform the counell who development operty can be « current at high former at « point on your Cedar river y wha continuous ROSS ADVISES TO BUY POWER SITE || The MacDougall-Southwick Co. Second Avenue and Pike Street In a communication to the coun-| ef] Monday, Lighting Superintend- ent Ross urges the purchase of a| new power site, and cites the enor mous increase in the business of| the department as proof of the heed of more power. Commenting on offers of outside firms to furnish the city with/ power, he says that any offer above $7.59 per kilowatt per annum would be too high, and that private plants | would be unable to sell it any! cheaper. An to the Schwager &/ Nettleton offer of 1 cent per kflo-| watt hour, with a minimum charge) of $40,000 a year, he says the city| plant can produce power for half this amount j Referring to the offer of the} Stimson Mill Co, he says “It would be poor economy to close Cedar river partially or wholly at} any time so as to take a stipulated) amount from the Stimson mill, un-} less their total charge for this amount would be less than our fixed costs on a similar capacity of a new water power,” i GIVE UP SEARCH FOR KELLY BABE AT FAUNTLEROY, With police, parents, neighbors and sympathetic outsiders holding many theories as to the cause of| the disappearance of 18-monthold| Florence Kelly from the beach at Fauntleroy Park last Thursday, search for her has been practically tern Washington. It was 104)son, Warren, the only survivor of | abandoned. Whether she was caught in a wave and carried to deep waters, whether she wandered into the woods and was lost, or was carried off by an eagle or kidnaped, are all matters of conjecture. J. H. Carse, 726 26th ave, 8.,, stump blower, who says he has had considerable experience with eagles on Puget sound, doesn't agree with Prof. Trevor Kincaid of the univer sity, that the birds are timid in the presence of human beings. He says he shot a duck on Oreas island several years ago, and an emle swooped down on it, while he was standing in full sight. He has seen eagles carry off lambs on Turtleback mountain, Or cas island, and he tells of one eagle that tried to pick up a 12-year-old boy. ERMAN MOTHER OF FRENCH SOLDIERS TAKES GAS AND DIES two sons army, tho she he native of Germany, a Au- gusta Holz, 64, is dead today, Mrs. having ended her life by In. haling gas. She left no note to explain the motive of her death, With hi sone she lived in France at one time. When she came to America, they re- mained in Paris, BOY CYCLIST HURT Ollie Blake, 14, who lives at 15th ave. W. and West 96th st. was thrown from his bicycle and lay in a ditch an hour before he was picked up. He was taken to the Providence hospital. His injuries aren't serious, ESTABLISHED 1876 ac Dougall + fouthwick Second Ave. and Pike St. Greatest Curtai Seattle Has URTAINS for every room, all kinds and all styles. i-Annual Cur Store Open 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. n Event Ever Had Imported and Do- mesti¢ Curtains from the best manufacturers, at prices 25 to 50 per cent less than usual. } Scrim and Marquisette Curtains with hemstitched edge, edge and inser- tion or edge only, 98¢ pair. : $10.95, $12.95. Scrim Curtains with hemstitched body and net curtains with lace edging, $1.55 pair. Scrim Curtains a hemstitched body, ! $1.95 pair. Marquisette Cur Cluny lace edge $2.55 pair. Marquisette and nd Marquisette Curtains, ace or insertion trimmed, tains, hemstitched body, or edge and insertion, Bonaz Curtains on French cable netting, $2.95 pair. Cluny Lace or Point Venise Curtains on French cable or Br Point Geneva, Curtains, $4.55 pai ussels net, $3.95 pair. Cluny or Point Venise ri Point Geneva or Point Venise Curtains on Brussels or cable netting, $4.95 pair. An exclusive pattern of imported Curtain, including Point Geneva, Point Venise, Cluny, Lacet and Arabian, $5.55, $5.95, $6.95, $7.95, $8.95, $9.95, And single pairs at extraordinary prices. —Fourth Floor. VON TIRPITZ BUCKS AGAINST PEACE TALK BERLIN, via The Hague, Aug. 30. —Grand Admiral Von Tirpitz be- lieves, (RUSSIAN: ARMY with Chancellor Von Beth-| mann-Hallweg and Foreign Minis-| ter Von Jagow, that all differences | between the United States and Ger- many should be adjusted at once | | It was understood today that Von | Tirpitz does not look with favor on making a formal disavowal of the sinking of the liner Arabic, how- ever, and is not yet convinced that maintaining friendly relations be- tween the two countries can be at- tained only in that manner. AMUSEMENTS EMPRESS joe and Matinee 2 p. m. LOI Nights, 7 to 11 LAND OF TOMORROW Big Musical Comedy Act mings, 100 and the; 0c and 186. NEW PANTAGES “LITTLE MISS U, 8S, A.” OBER AND DUMONT South American Dancers LADY BETTY The Celebrated Monk OF 300,000 CUT OFF BY GERMANS BERLIN (Via London), Aug. 30.—Three hundred thousand Russians are in grave danger of being off from the armies of the north by the new Austro-German offensive on the southeastern front. The right wing of the main army of Grand Duke Nicholas ls being heavily attacked by flying cavairy detachments and Austrian infantry, while com. bined Austrian and German forces are smashing at Siav line between Kovel Lusk, threatening to turn the Russian flank. these operations are in the R ns in Galicia assailed They are being driven back upon a line running southward from This will drive the Slavs to the easternmost boundary of Galicia, and should the Teuton attacks be- tween Kovel and Lusk be success- ful, the Galician army will be cut off from the main bodies to the north, East of Braezany the pursuit of) Brody, thru Tarnople. | |the Russians is being pressed to/ jthe utmost and the Austrians are! now approaching the Strypa river, Vienna reports declare. Around Brest Litovek and before Vilna on the north, the retreat of the Ru 8 continues. Unknown speeder knocked T. J. Birchinall, 55, of 825 27th ave., from wagon at Rainier ave. and Norman st. Saturday. Casualties, badly crushed leg. Breakfast Lunch and Dinner j | |] Quality food and excellent |] service prevail at the Nor. |] tonia Cafeteria. | Breakfast—6:30 a. m. | Strictly fresh ranch eggs |] with Swift's Premium hams | and bacons. | |] Try Our Hot Cakes and | Waffles | Lunch—Continuous Service Dinner—Until 7:30 “Our Coffee ts a little better” Fine reading and rest room for the convenience of our patrons. a 1421 23 4th Ave. Adjoining Joshua Gaen Bid. Our Doors Closed to Mark Down Stock Watch and Wait for Seattle’s Greatest Clothing Sale OPENS WEDNESDAY ~ SEPTEMBER ist Veith-Cammack Co. RETIRE FROM BUSINES Second Ave. at James St Sesttle Hotel Bldg bes I )

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