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STAR—TUESDAY, AUGUST 31, EUROPE HAVING CHEMICAL WAR, SPEAKER SAYS PAGE’S. Hundreds of Men ESTABLISHED 1876 1915, Have Been Waiting for Sust Such a Chance as This —COMING— Week of Sunday, Sept. 5th A New A Place on a ne iy “Silver” ac Where the he present war has been aptly called a “chemica @) war,’ because efficient work of every department of the fight Collar — the re) WI Well-Dressed ing armies, from the Red Cross service to the manufacture of “Holliston”’ Men Meet byte sand explosives, involves incessantly chemical phe Second Ave. and Pike Si Store Open 9 A. M. 6 P. M. eage This declaration was made in a paper by Dr. Leo. H Backeland, president of the American Baekelite Co. of ee ° GODDE antare Wi, feud atthe, pbttitia aeblion el the Sint es Seattle and Vicinity Have Never Had Anything nual convention of the American Chemic at society, Tuesda = re = Fs morning, in Meany Hall, on > university campus Quite Like This The subject of the paper was Chemteal Industry.’ F- 4 IN DRYDOCK;. Do not imagine that this ts the \first chemical war,” the paper con Vitagraph’s Colossal Masterpiece in 30 |tinued, "The “art of kliiag and reels to be shown in 6-reel chapters—with lrobbing each other became ‘chem the greatest aggregation of big stars ever || WILL TAKE OUT [rented day gunpowder was in- Ja. e i) in led—featuring | poleon knew very well how | iss “use adroitly exact knowledge al ah — — een jand chemistry for furthering bis = ee | insatiable ambition to dominate | the the world. So he surrounded him | HONOLULY, Aug. 31.—Pretimin.|*¢lf With the most able chemical ary examination of the hull of the [#44 And scientists, and for « xd to reveal the location of | least, he placed himself ae & cite en oF nie © ed advantage over his crew of 22 who went to the bottcm |™@0Y enemies, Incidentally, be with the vessel when she took her |" helped to lay the foundation Guak aioe om’ Wairen 98 nome very importa: ranches ‘ lag pvteee Bos of chemteal industry N. B.—More stars were used in pro- || The Pt is in drvdock here today. (TR aiuon, professor of tn —— so - 4 The Goddess than have been Bousch, Naval Constructor J. A, (dustrial chemistry at the Univers Asses - ity of Washington, spoke on the used by all the other companies in all the | [/Purer and others entered the hull |i, gustrial Resources, and Oppor- through « large hole in the bow The na officers entered all) { “Harney county alone contains jcompartments of the F-4, but 90 | na much Ullable land as Maryland completely is the submarine filled lwith wreckege, sand, mud and The area of Alaska {» greater than RESH out of their boxes, direct from the country’s greatest mills —enough Suits for most every man in town. Underwear sizes up to 50. other continued photoplays combined. tunities of the Northwest.” f N feeeeeerem |debria that the bodies of the men |foeig, accteng ce yeiand, |who went to their death are com ltaken together,” he said 7 [pletely buried, sateo that the|y, it .OfeRon, Washington and Union Suits and Separate Garments of Silk and Wool, All-Wool, A | D Ideho there are still uncut more . aan . bodies of Lieut. Edes and his men |than 60,000,000 ‘actos of merchant Wool and Cotton, Cotton. Light, Medium and Heavy Weights. may be located and removed will |able timber, from whick it is est! probably require two or three days! yma 860,000,000,000 feet board . | |measure may be cut. This is more The names of most of the makers are withheld by request, but a than one-third the standing timber ‘ of the United States.” The chemists will be in session until Friday $247,000 LIBEL FILED AGAINST STR. PARAISO A libel of $247,000 against the am frelkhter Paraiso was filed in the United States district court the Alaska owners, and; look at the garments will tell. ees HANNA SAYS HE WOMAN vicTIM | WILL TAKE BILL OF AUTO SMASH | UP WITH VOTERS DIES AT SULTAN Mrs. Frances Seach, of 418 Bow- doin place, dled im the Fairview hospital at Sultan at 2:30 o'clock Tuesday morning, the second vic- 75c Shirts and Drawers 48c Garment Sizes to 46 Well finished heavy cotton garments. The draw- | ers have double elastic seat. These garments will not | shrink. Sale price, 48. Dr. Wright’s Health Underwear 75c Sizes Up to 46 $1.00 and $1.25 are the prices asked for this well- known make of Underwear at all times. Fleece-lined TONIGHT —Last Times F, Marion Crawford's WHITE $3.00 Wool and Cotton Union Suits $1.95 Sizes 34 to 48 288 Suits of medium weight, 85 per cent wool, 15 per cent cotton. These suits are in the natural | gray and have flat lock seams. Sale price $1.95. hae 00 Wool and Cotton Union Suits $1.95 Sizes 34 to 48 This garment is a very popular weight, 75 per cent wool and 25 per cent cotton. Seams and but- Following the counctl's voting | against the Hanna billboard ordi nance, taxing and regu tating bill | | Councilman Has ar nounced he will begin working jonce on plans to submit his mea ure to the people as a referendum measure at the March elections. “I believe that such an ordinance | Monday afternoon by will overwhelmingly carry,” he| Pacific Steamship Co., tim of an automobile accident near that place in which Capt. Robert Turner, federal inspector of steam: ship boilers, was instantly killed, SISTER says. “Seattle needs more revenue | and she is entitled to more from / -|the billboard monopoly tn this city. | Seattle's billboards are not perfect the Pacific Alaska Navigation Co.,/ charterers of the steamship Ad miral Watson, which sank Sunda after being rammed by the Parats« and scientifically made. Sale price, 75¢. tonholes are silk finish; guaranteed not to shrink. Sale price, $1.95. $1.50 Cotton Union Suits 95c $4.50 Wool Union Suits $2.95 the celebrated star, Viola Allen Sunday. and will stand considerable regula-| while the Watson was lying at the ° REELS ae Batti Adame. who bee tos without hurting any i} 2 Bell st. dock. Sizes 34 to 48 Sizes 34 to 48 six io vi a e me ie n Mag the anna e The Paraiso w not .) P : . * * ‘ * Turners, 2329 North 69th st., te ly-|councll adopted the Hesketh |navigated. and tl eheaghy You will recognize this garment, both the make | 288 Medium weight, elastic rib Union Suits. Filled with the hurrying ing close to death at the Fairview amendment to the present ord! |piame for the accident, alleged the ff and the finish, for we have sold it in our regular ints of a great life dra CONTINUOUS 11 a. m. to 11 p. m. Liberty Seams and buttonholes are carefully finished. Sale price, $2.95. $5.00 Wool Union Suits $3.95 Sizes 34 to 46 This particular garment has been sold in this |hospital. Little hope is held out! |for her recovery. FRENCH GUNS BLOW UP GERMAN TRENCH nance, providing for a sliding scale | |complaint, jot taxing billboards—from $300 on a business amounting anotally to) | $10,000 or less to $1,000 on a bust-| }ness with a minimum, annually, of $75,000. Self-disputer Dale introduced his resolution calling for abandonment of municipal railway plans fn Rat- stock for a long time at $1.50. Sale price, 95. | $1.50 Wool and Cotton Garments $1.15 Sizes to 48 Shirts and Drawers of medium-weight cotton and RUSSIANS LEAVE GRODNO FORTRESS | | | | BERLIN, Aug. 31- 31.—Actual evac 31.—Whole PARIS, Aug. sec-|nier valley. A year ago be voted /aation of ‘the fortress of Grodno {| WOOl, elastic ribbed; made with the double stitched | store for a good many years at $5.00. Made with a tions of German trenches were |in favor of the plans. by th vers 4 ati - . c o c H * Hows sp by Freath artillery sna . Ic, itevt's offer ot « powor| 02 (2 Russians may now be under i] seams. Drawers are satin faced and have double | closed crotch, heavy weight, soft wool. Sale price, mines during heavy attacks direct-|site to the city for a million dol-| jjijtary supplies are being with elastic seam seat. Sale price, $1.15. $3.95. OF ne estst severe attacks nande | aneiner atten to take, over Seat-| Crews bY the Slavs and every to. $5 00 Silk and Wool Union Suits $3.95 @ mos cks made| Another offer to o > te ol " ; a . | by the French guns were between |tle's milk supply and to sell the | Mendory are nrovering te eter $2.50 Wool and Cotton Union Suits $1.65 | Pd. IK an ool Union oul $$ ° Court Chausses, Meurisson and/product to consumers at a max- toward the lines of the railway With the occupation of Grodno, Sizes 34 to 46 Sixty suits of white silk and wool, 20 per cent silk and 80 per cent wool, “steam shrunken,” and we guarantee them not to shrink. Sale price $3.95. —Men's Shop, Where Values are Better, First Floor. 'GAS CONSUMERS ARE MULCTED IN. te, the war office announced ;imum profit of 3% cents a quart jwas made by C. L. Parker, attor-| the Germans will be in possession artillery was tearing up/ney for parties unnamed. He said, lof the last great Russian fortress sections of trenches, mines were | however, that he doubted the city’ 8| guarding the Warsaw- Petrograd exploded under others and heavy authority to grant « monopoly of| ratiway, losses inflicted on the Germans by |the milk business. He wants a 20-| grenadine attacks. year franchise. His offer and the! one made several days ago by John \SETTLE MINE STRIKE |B. Shorett, who asked for his cli- lents a 40-year franchise, were re ferred to the franchise committee. Sizes 34 to 46 | These are light weight wool, 75 per cent wool and 25 per cent cotton. A splendid garment for all around wear. Sale price, $1.65. BODY OF LOST PANTAGES HAS CHILDIS FOUND =APACHE DANCE | | company informed Assistant Corpo- |ration Counsel Pierce, who sought in Pye ~ ghee agreement for e had “evidently aval po cigenherotaaitoet Pierce was handed a flat refusal. |The gas company “welched.” Today the consumers of gas in Seattle are being muleted, as of LONDON, Aug. 31.—The danger| point of the threatened general strike of Welsh coal miners was be Meved to have passed today. Of-| ficials of the Miners’ federation pre dicted matters will be adjusted be-| fore night } ‘BERLIN LIKES BRYAN 31.—The Berlin THE HOUSE OFA T J ebehioabed CANDLES A day's motoring, an afternoon on the tennis ground or golf link LONDON, Aug press has heard that Willlam J poe / “thine | [Bryan 1s coming to Berlin, and plexing freckles. then is mercolized wax, which re or freckles qui peels off the af-| @ little at a tim: the skin comes off in almost invi thle flaky particles, no trace of the tment Is shown. Get an ounce at your drug- at « nightly as you would cold cream, washing It off mornings. In m week or #0 you entirely new skin, parent a ' pt to form at this} seanon, ensily and quickly | femoved by bathing the face in «| solution of powdered #axolite, 1 o7.,| dissolved in witch % pint.} This is not only va. le astrin-| went. a beneficial tonte| ertinement A Man Should at No Time Spend more than le necessary for a decent living. Extreme luxury and lavish expenditure are signs, not of cultivation, but of barbarism. Such an example makes young men want to dress beyond their me; beyond the jouses beyond th your common sense. thing. with AleeB.Francis & Dorothy Green A Powerful and Start- ” Be gg Based on BOUCI- CAULT'S Great Play. Col. Heeza Liar CARTOON COMEDY PATHE NEWS ADDED ATTRACTION 8. 8 ADMIRAL WATSON RAMMED AND SUNK By the 8. S. PARAISO, In Seattle Harbor Interest ca Per Cent UNION SAVINGS @ TRUST CO. OF CEATTLE Coming Tomorrow Robert Warwick in the Stolen Voice CLEMMER Capital and Surplus $815,000 | JAMES D, HOGE, President N. B, SOLNER, Vice President and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING ‘n the Heart of the Financial District |sultant promise of a mystery early “promises a reception worthy of the cause he so eloq tly advocates,” according to @ patch from the Amsterdam correspondent of the Exchange Telegraph today. BRYAN DENIES IT WINONA LAKE, Ind., Aug, 31.— “T have no intention of going to} Europe,” sald former Secretary of | State Bryan today. } ‘THIEVES DECLINE TO BE ARRESTED thieves who Monday | night told W. C. Charlton, 807 Fifth | ave. N., he was a liar when he showed them his special police man’s badge, and questioned them when he found them piling fixtures of a Ford auto into another ma | chine, still at large. They de-| fled Chariton and drove off. Haughty CLEARS UP MYSTERY The finding of a purse contain- ing a mysterious note and the re Monday was dispelled Jater in the | day when the owner appeared and | explained matters, The note, signed “Laura,” said; “Mother, th ‘se the key to the vault. The cc tents and all I have {1s yours. “Laura” explained the note merely ort of informal will, guard against emergencies. MAYTORENA TO ourr NOGALES, Ariz, Aug. 31—~It 1s authoritatively stated today Gov Maytorena will resign the govern. orship of Svnora on Sept. 15, and take the Villa vice consulship at Tucson. Licenctado Alberto Morales, present counsellor to the Maytorena government, will be ap- pointed governor. Gen Angeles is expected to assume command of the Villa military forces in So- nora and Sinola, | was | wy Last Times Tonight To See the Big Family Show ——— sbasgeiands FISCHER | | | “THE ore” FROM HI§ TOWN” Four Acts MUTUAL WEEKLY LATEST EVENTS CUPID IN THE OLDEN TIME FRENCH GUIANA Hand-Colored Scenic “JIMMIE ON THE JOB” Beauty Comed) TOMORROW Another Knockout Family Program Crawford, Organist two men who were gathering wood. lit was two miles from where the 18- | Mn West, 45 Alki ave. and B. Bebim,| “aay petty, the educated 345 ave _.|monkey, plays a conspicuous part The father and mother, who have |on the bill. Her comedy {s good. | |steadfastly refused to believe the) 4 crack musical comedy act, “Lit: | babe dead, were taken to the place |tie Miss U. S. A.” concludes the where the body was found, in a pi, AT ALKI POINT AS HEADLINER, partially cov-|| The real Parisian Apache dance lis the high spot at Pantages the-| atre this week. Ober and Dumont very capably execute {ts intricacies and introduce some new South American dances. Will and Kemp open the bill with some difficult acrobatics. Comedy and songs are pleasingly given by Tom Kennedy and Ethel Burt, and Lying in the sand, ered by driftwood, the body of little |Florence Kelly was found near the Alki lighthouse Monday night by month-old baby disappeared near , while play- her home last Thursday vp Sg Be ods dl greed se gk Pre ing on the beach. | , ‘hap- Fon ne dwery was made by John|the latter Imitating Charlie Chay police auto, The father identified the babe, and then gently told his wife. She collapsed. AVALUABLE CARGO | Copper ore valued at $360,000 is at the dock here in the holds of the Alaska Steamship Co. steamer Ala-! meda, This is one of the largest} [shipments of copper ever brought out of Alaska ‘SEEN GEORGE'S AUTO | A Ford automobile, owned by| George Engler, an employe of The! Star, was stolen Monday night be-| tween 9 and 12 o'clock from the} curb in front of his home, 410 West) Howe st. The license number of} the machine {s 18,814, | Tonight Your Last Chance CHARLES CHAPLIN In THE BANK Colonial 10c _10¢ Adults, 8¢ Children 5c Children RECEPTION 18 POSTPONED | The Best One Yet Adults, 10c Children, 5c Melbourne Second at University Owing to the death of Robert A. Turner, husband of the department president of the Ladies of the G A. R,, McKinley circle, No, 11, the reception to department officers has been indefinitely postponed. It had been planned for Wednesday and Invitations had been issued. Strike Imminent in clothing trade. May involve 200,000 workers in Eastern cities. Marvin Lareen, 18, Portland, sald | he wasn't afraid to touch a 60,000- | volt electric wire with his hat. He’ 8] dead, | withdrew from old, under the old 50-cent minimum charge. The corporation counsel's office, however, is expecting any day the final order from the public service commission, reduce the minimum. MUST BE GREAT ACT OAKLAND. — Miss Gertrude Kreutzberg, 18 a telephone operator, laughed so heartily at the antics of a performer in a tre that she dislocated SAME OLD WAY The public service commission, some time ago, refrained from en- tering an order against the Seattle Lighting company, compelling a reduction of the minimum charge per month for gas. The commission reported that the company officials had ex- pressed a willingness to enter into a stipulation with the whereby an agreed minimum of 25 cents per month would be set But, as soon as the commission the fray, the gas “GAS FUEL RADIATORS” Gas Is Now Used Very Successfully for House Heating YWHERE do conditions more generally de- mand a house-heating system that can be put into or out of service instantly than here, yet many have paid well for a heating plant that is practically unusable except in extreme weather, and then go on paying well for fuel that is burned in one part of the building to accomplish a warming result in another, With “GAS FUEL RADIATORS” now on dis- play at the Gas Office, fuel is consumed only in the rooms where warmth is wanted and is always under automatic control which prevents any pos- sibility of waste SEATTLE LIGHTING COMPANY Stuart Bldg. Phone Main 6767 te eatrsace —~