The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1915, Page 8

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; Fr 3 19 NATIONALISTS TO FIGHT IF UNCLE SAM WENT TO WAR Tf the United States should fight, Slave appear in the above table Croohs, Poles, Ruthe tionalities—the number composing Serbs, Slovaks, Slovens, Morlaks¢ and Bulgarian Friaula are of the Latin race, and occupy some valleys in the Tyrol) and Austria-Hungary, the dual monarchy Germans Magyars * Wallachians Creche Pol Ruthenians Croats Serbs Slovaks Slovens Mortaks Bulgarians Rumans Itallans Ladins Friaule Mebrews Gypsies Armenians The different merical proponderanc ts ost. JOHN CLANCY IS FOUND had started to pull the heavy xen from the Johnny Clancy, proprietor of they nm from th The|tor Lundin’s office told of buying | whiskey at the roadhouse, They Pacific Social club, at Meadows, for the first time in his tory, has been found guilty of sell | suc ing liquor at his roadhouse and was|rubber bulb arrangement and had meditating Saturday on whether or) the contents tested in a laboratory not to appeal to the supreme court. The Meadows {s situated in “dry” unit, and Clancy had number of persons to testify he did not sell liquor, merely for the service. @iscriminate between cents for a bottle of beer charging ing ft ON AUTO HIRE! wow! Sheriff Hodge's expense ac- count for August, presented to the county commissioners, shows the somewhat startling item of $519.45 for auto hire. His state- ment covers the period, course, when he had no machine of his own, his car having been ditched and burned accidentally near Ronald station. It was several days before the com mission purchased a new car for his use. TOOTH TALKS Two MAN TAKES ON ALVEOLAR TEETH J. BROWN, D. D. 5. Imitated by Mi The most da life of all alleged dental we to b “AR TEETH solutely nothing new ab work; in fact, it Is the old all honorable dentists fifty ago. What is now dubbed Alv Dentistry, was the old original and was came filthy in the mouth as to endanger @ person wearing it method of making bri discarded because it b the life of WHY ALVEOLAR T DANGEROL In Europe they v @o make today attach crowns them onto the teeth could be take They remaining te dle in place o ‘There is no wa removing food upper jaw full of fo bridge for the next m: no difterenc not clean your s it is In the mouth BRIDG Modern propt haa done awa Alveolar Teeth entir est Dentists of » tation. A porce can be made « be reached and consequen foul smelling + On lowe teeth are required to make the bridg where EDWIN J. BROWN, I 705-718 Wirst Ave: it will fight 19 na Jermans include a quarter of the population, the Magyars one sixth. Forty-six per cent of people fire Slavs, but they are divid ed into various groups, speaking languages, so thelr jane, Croats,| The Ladine and bove Gorits ing & popul ound an aristocracy Vrwfeonae THE GODDESS EARLE WILLIAMS as . . Tommy Barclay Written by GOUVERNEUR MoRRIS ANITA STEWART as... . The Goddess The three richest men in Amerion, fear | and wishing The loavern in the Adirondacks, where abe ts The German name for Austria Is told by “angels Oesterrelioh. In 1910 there were 1,670,524 na tives of Austria and Hungary in the) bs United States The immigration |} since 1910 has been estimated at 900,000, making a total of 2,570,524! fe Austro-Hungarian aliens in the country, Many of thi ists who were unable to return tof Austria because of the allied com-|j\" The! mand of the se are ri “heaven, return fo eageh The Magyar name for Hungary is| touching the pete. obedicnce Magyarorszag. ® fire trap Tommy Harelay hg eu te leaving the wid : } gin be 7 caeeeae teaee | long series of disappointments in| panicky today, following yeste 7 Vie y |Tommy, they met wjth perfect 4 battle between Mexicans at tes nthe tr atin friendliness, and as if there had Matamora ind U. 8. soldiers on | Mextc t the Amerleag |never been any trouble betw this wide and Mextic t olnts, worn be them, Barclay opened the conver While there we arse slated t n the gat nation with a laughing reference to Casualties, the fe Pan-Amer ence conterenems the Octagon fire Mexicans growing bolder aa here. A pr " r recogy that a battle of more serious pro-\of Carranza seemed Ifkely, ities HE SEATTLE STAR revolution, wad that it is her destiny to and rei the worl ik to the girls there. i Hows her INTRODUCING MEXICANS ARE GROWING BOLDER; FEAR BIG FIGHT WASHINGTON, Sept. 14. 1 All reports showed the M Jnot to marry you, then, of course Governmental investigation of sniped the 1 soldi I won't.” charges that American soldiers |iicr4 way wtill doubt am a . sattiered tn het éve af made an unprovoked attack on . : » tke nadels ! Pie chs it broke f 4! Carranzistas near Brownsville [0% Carré ¢ ‘1 parti | H formally asked ‘ avictoug heart. Now 60 by Carranzista agent, Elizeo t ors bad hagge “May I come back when I've seen! Arredondo, today od my father? fficers disclaty “If you'll be good, Tommy.” BROWNSVILLE, Tex opt. 18, | respe ty, however order, wrought up for man In spite of their recent differ Th ences of opinion, and Barclay’s weeks by Mexican incursions VOYS GATHER © “I ured to look for your nam jthe sporting page of my news the fact that Gen. Funston | ble for Americar paper,” he said, “but now I have to! hay the Rio Grande patrolled from|of the Rio Grande jturn to the accounts of socialist jt, mouth, miles inland ble meetings and of fires, Was it ax sipinetith ia close a: shave as the paper made oceur any time,| such a pitate CHAPTER XV. (Copyright, 1915, by the Star Co.) out?” “It certainly was,” said Tommy “How did the famous Celestia be but charged A jury Judge Mackintosh'’s court fatled to | charging 50 50 cents a bottle for serv-| which was Clancy's defense, | y, Equaled by None. known re is ab t fashioned style of bridgework which was unt ar Teeth |107 steerage passengers, a today WORK SANSTARY AND CLEAN. Two tnvestigatora from Prosecu 4 their glasses dry with a It was booze. ON FOR VILNA PETROGRAD, Sept. 18.—A battle for Vilna h Germans are making a smash to the east of the city uton detachments have r way to the Novovilesk railway, and are now attempting to plerce the Russian lines. German cuccesses tn the Vilna region, however, have been offset by defeats to the southeast } From Derazno to Trembowla Gen. | Ivanoff has wrested three villages | 7 from the Teutons, and taken prisoners. At some points the Aus | troGermans are fleeing in disorder be this Russia: tensive. BRITISH RAILWAY MEN TO OPPOSE | scratched, LONDON, Sept. 18.—-Any attempt swath outskirts of the jyoung, sick-looking girl |denly in a loud his he hurrie He ape to calm It she was top of it. Th nied a any life ror. had been locked, hit and oe A, pushed to get at that door. ed to fight his way to |by the government to force the) i, ag oy Seve Pry : stants. jarmy conscription issue will result) ight the girls back from ft so that }in serious internal troubles, the ex- lecutive committee of the Amalga-| girls, wrought Hotes ween Gis eeemee | eee Okt eee as taey a wire. | realization was frightful. Death by Tommy made one last appeal to|in thelr laws—with the politicians|much constitution as an orchid.” |money to spend. What have This body, representing 200,000! that their one chance of safety was from the |#ch a fool | joor op smell smo d then an Celestia, i to make hat same girl ar it wa ft in se poor girls ful. They were maniacal with ter-|just then another great piece of that some one wanted to speak wit! |the Uni They screamed that the door | flooring fell in, and Tommy saw the Mr. Barclay they yelped, they | narrow hallw ft could be opened and it seemed as men, unanimously adopted an in-ito keep Tommy dorsement of the fiery speech of J.| door. H. Thomas, laborite member of par- |Mament, in which he predicted that of the civil war would follow conscription. |The union congratulated ‘Thomas fight his way out gone t The other end of the room was) Or hadn't he woot the soles of bis| Tommy had not gone mad that the whole From the great roll of shirting me under|terial he tore enough broad strips and condem tion agitation. ed “all pro-consecrip- | The organization's secretary was shoes instructed to cali a special meet-|floor was bE , side. ing if the government introduced a, *! Ae. ance at Celestia filled hie|them together, made a double bow-| was almost line (which ts almost as easy to} Along the walls of #it in as a chair) made Celestia sit fire buckets {in it, Celestia had|dow, and lowered her to safety conscription bill. GOLD AS OTHER TWO SAN BERNARDINO, Sept. 18 Two hundred pounds of gold pre- Mose mine. Rival claimints to the treasure were threatening to fi over it when the sheriff arr give up. in ff half full caught up one of running onward with bucket Int and raced off for rous to health and |cipltate are missing today from the effect of that sudden hard khower| Tommy was so dazed that when of cold water was extraordinary.|a reporter asked him what his psychol-|name was, he told him, and all bis to ogy of the crowd from fear of fire| friends had the pleasure of reading heart with pity intolerable the room were many of water. ht it seemed to change preserve the peace. He discovered to fear of water Versally condemned and discarded by |@ third claimant had departed with years |the gold :|HALF MILLION IN BULLION ARRIVES Five hundred ¢ thousand dollars’ | Worth of gold bullion from Seward girls out, straining another. It had been a slow business, and) Tommy's now the floor was burning clear) lighted cigarette butt thrown Into! so that some peninsula mining camps is at the the plate permanently in the mouth. |dock here, aboard the steamer Vic t toria, arrived from Nome and 8t Michael. She carried cabin nsign |ment of 62 tons of Fairbanks anti | mony and a shipment of furs. ‘ONE JUROR HANGS | TRIAL OF WOMAN ¢ FRANCISCO, Sept. 18.—Ry rrow margin of one Juror in her favor, Mrs, Fay Carranza Mo lera, who eloped to New York with Frank Terramorse, escaped convic tion on a charge of contributing to the delinquency of her two minor children. At midnight the jury was t| discharged by Judge Griffin. Fri *|day the case will be set for lal Let Resinol Make. | ||| Your Sick Skin Well) That itching, burning #kin jhealed! The first use of resino th the he | of resinol soap, this soothing, healing ointment usual away aA tra of ezema ringworm, rash © similar tormenting nleep preventing skin Aineanes ¢ it free ‘or a nample free, Kh, Resir F is YOUR TOILET SOAP SAFE? Many tollet ntain > injurious alkall, Resinol r tains absolutely no free alkal 1 to It Im added the resinol med tion. This gives It soothing, heal ing properties which clear the ec plexion, comfort tender skins and keep the hair healthy. y hi my by and thru in many of the last girls door to safety fe Tommy, perceiving elf caught up began to fling water on the crowd. | mt And between them clear a way to the door Tommy got to the door at and dragged It open Twice there was a jam, but Tom-| ous, too. half-witted | seif, and re-| Six months of persistent love et Hurry, Celestia ‘We can go now sur tide thereof sa tn opening the had been» hurt that way was impossible Supporting Celestia with one arm,|me, merely to breathe he succeeded in dow crowd in the low saw ares ing and lamenta Celestia be low ech could nd of speech mured over her Oh,” he thought, could love me, could he loved me, before tt Then a sudden and mo thought eame {nto his head. wan to die, he ly, and hif ey Celestia seaning ne it, saturating It the fire buckets. By some strange freak of the ter state, try in fact to keep me all sine very jepeak, A friend of mine heard her _ - - sud jaddress to the Shirtmakers’ unton Ravaged by consumption and mediately notified the coroner, whe ple nell smoke! her It's coming thru the at it! Look at it! a sudden great dread in toward Celestia length girl who had i) at the top of traversed at n firet scream her lungs ! Wild with fear girls ran this way and that, scream Jing and howling at knocked down. ‘tor a desperate effort tia as yet unburned. But between way | have been sent to go, and| excitement, the giris, med almost waiting for Tommy get her Come, Celestia,” } get out of this By this time things were happening at the pine bound door, It The first girl to reach It had fl herself against It. it moved./that and the door, to make the you, with the law on your side, and | come 894) chance in a hundred in marriage, would try to prevent . “let horrible inward, | “outward oked as trying to climb over pressure of her fren-|!mg to get you out of this.” companions shoulders yubtful them, his arms, pictured out, with # nolse|route thru the flames, drew one I'd like t& | fright-| great, long breath of fresh alr, and Freddie interrupted them to say | waste of money ushed, | of fire to It and) “ir he had not wasted those pre-| WANt# to see me very urgently, and | villy billy But tho mn terror, , if they thought He forced his way to the middie his mind broke and crowd, and then he had to|gone mad, for he began to show It was all he could do to/ and laugh at all at once. | es. Thru Tommy knew burning atrug-|for every moment the fire gained CLAIMANTS FIGHT gling mass of humanity round the|upon him, and he was unconscion jably scorched, while making the door She hurled the contents of the thick of the crowd| ment after he reached the side. Anstant-| papers et and| Barclay and Stilliter were very began to stone was #o furious with jealousy straightened hurrying places, burned! saved from a hideous death, not by * eglled Tommy.|but by the ready wit and strong did not answer saw her at a window, cn to open ft nay say, on a little {sland of floor! heart from beating a little quicker! by a sea of| whenever she thought of Tommy rising} Tommy had saved her from strug-| merely loved her. | yunded, weil, flames, but by a strongly his way, Celentia! For God's) to see her, and the first to love her. ake, don't jump!" Celestia had not succeeded yet| (his hands still in bandages from! As Tom-| superficial burns), “if only to he my reached her she staggered and|logical and consistent, you vend fell into his arms He turned with her toward the| Celestia consldered half smiling. | door, and groaned like a thing that|Then she said, wholly smiling Escape|What did you meaw the other day street be-\sound of my volece was happiness) and a kind of groan-|for you? an to revive Tommy had turned much. |doves had not in thowe| “fut marriage,” she said, more moments any great he pressed her close to his breast) itgeif, And already I've whole and kisepd her upon the eyes and) iif6's work cut out for me," mouth, and murmured and mur) “Celestia,” sald Tommy me know!do, And I~well, maybe I could| practic muat die trying to|doing—lovin } | doing K you and tryin save her looked about him wild-| ma pc # fell roll of black and white striped ma terial for making shirts, Leaving “Lam.” the open window, he made alried, you exert yourself { ) ourself in every ash for the shirting Ms unrolled| way to keep me from going about water fromlamong the people and telling them ~ is of the opinic ad 4 that Pablman fag t two hours when hy after the fire, and came away talk worried over failure to a ing Mike a lunatic, How does she quately provide for his wife and impress you?" four children, because of long = arrived unemployment, Otto Pahiman, Just a few minutes after hig 40, a bottler, living at 5823 20th was re 4 found, hin wife ave. &. shot himself thru the phoned reetown police station head at an early hour Satur- saying he was missing, and asking day morning in the woods at the police to help find him. Shei 35th ave. &. and King st. He dicated she feared he would take had been missing from home his life since 9 a. m. Friday. Pahiman recently was in the He was found at 7 a. m. by a ploy of the Georgetown Bottling street car conductor who was pass Works, but when the state way ople who ing along a trail leading to the Yes- voted dry he was one of @ numiip en question |ler cable line. The conductor im-|who were let out f A ' As a speaker? | Barclay smiled and nodded, Tom my blushed and did not smile She has a beautiful voice,” he jeaid, “ws seems to speak to one |person at a time until every one [has been spoken to.” j She claims to have been direct from heaven. Do pe lieve that” | “The mass of have heard her don’t e jit peene From the Third astaltingrh of “The Goddes Alhambra Theatre Next Week. nent ie be al-|fire, there was still quite a large/to yourself, how would ft be If we rea of flooring surrounding Celes- were married? I've got to go the “T will stake my soul, sir,” he |-tommy, simply Hut you don't, and you don't be-| “Hum!” WHY Two SHA Neve in her crusade , What ts her rhaps I should put it more ELLENSBURG, Wash, idea—the usual thing To destroy strongly. 18.—High school freshmen here! were still coming. The crowd that) “I want you eo,” exclaimed Tom. | Sl) existing | ce ghey gr the' “Do you mean that you are pay- | will not be allowed to shaw watched the conflagration was still my, “that I'll promise anything. Will | over ‘again ” , ing her serious attentions more than twice a week, | a “In so far as she will receive | wear no stiff collars you marry me?” “No, d Por y No, said Tommy, laughing, school days, must limit the Ws | crossing, seemed to offer but one all thé traditions of a man’s rights! | j said that she elieves it The last girls to leave the sew. me ing machine room had only just What {f I promised not to?” reached the street. Fire engines You'd have to promise that.” ung | Srowing, Now for {t.” thought Tommy, “I don't know, Tommy, dear,” she | « y “ them.” d : ’ that’s what you think my {dea fs ‘, wn and to Celestia he shouted (he had sald cas hint for destrovtog large | “Tm very sorry,” sald Barclay. )] of their socks to brown if, to shout to make himself heard) He drew a long breath, rose and/ fortunes (indeed some of them) “!'m sorry that you are sorry black, doff their hats to the Don't be afraid, dear. I'm go walked to the window might become even more swollen “If at your age,” sald Barclay, “I |{ maidens over 2 years old, “I think not,” said Celestia, and|\¢ ber doctrines became law), She 094 found myself seriously in love|] not sit beside the fair sex in with a girl in her station of life, I | assembly room, and must not ap #ion upon the young man’s face.| wealth In the country to mak should have had pity on her.” pear in public places except be added, “but sometimes I think |the inhabitants clean and comfor You haven't understood. I wish || tween 7:20 a. m. and 9 p. m, ae) . »le if we could do away with the to marry her cording to rules lald down by if, in other words,| “I understood perfectly, But | high school seniors. States were run to | your friends are not going to rec make money instead of to spend {t./ognize her as their equal. You can beyond the door] Tommy returned from the tele-|Plausible, isn't it? And absurd.” |never feel upon terms of real equal-| jong “Why absurd? I have no quar jjty with ber associates.” | “Oh, it’s no use arguing,” sail} “L expected to stay all afternoon,” |rel with her theory | “We should have each other.” |Tommy, rising, “I must mary He was too late by a matter of in-/he sald, “and help you with your| “Of course not ‘ou'd be one! Barclay Inughed harshly. |—1f she will have me.” mail; but it seems that my father|who would have to profit by it| “Have you any idea how long the; Barclay shook his head. 3 love of the average young couple is} “How will you support her? 1 suppose I've got to go.” The absurd part te to think that| sufficient to itself? Hate, jeal-) “Why—”" “Of course you have,” said Ce|the great American people can bejousy, greed-——those are enduring; Barclay was still smiling. made to execute #0 drastic a change| passions, but love has almost as} “You've had a great her And he gathered her strongly in then, noting the really tragic ex-| believe that there is enough what appeared to be the best was | ey bit.! buret suddenly into a perfect hell! phone looking still more dejected cious instants in kissing her, he night have saved her. The agony al that he went thru with this|/estia, cheerfully good for Celestia, going now close to her and|of all parties crying calamity. You) “There are exceptions.” saved?” |*peaking swiftly in a low voice. see, Tommy—thinkers can only! “You huve no right to try to) “I'm not a mouse,” said | Then suddenly {t seemed as if! She heard him out gravely, and|work as long as they can think, but prove that at the expense of some “And you are not a cat." that he bad/t the end of his impassioned plead. | politicians can and do work all the/one you think you love, or at the| “We've had a good many tink shook her head still more|time. But there is more to this| expense of some one who for many ences of upinion, but we've aravely. young woman than I had imagined has been enduringly fond of|quarreled, have we?” “When I know what {# right for) You say che has a following?” | you.” He held out his hand. |me to do,” she sald, “then I'll tell ‘That grows by leaps and! He smiled very kindly. “My hat off.” said Barclay, Some morning I shall wake up | bounds.” “Yourself, sir!” the best sportsman I have. knowing what | ought to do, and “Where do you come in “Myself Better go away,|known.” if I wake up knowing that I ought! “I'm very fond of her,” said'Tommy. It will hurt, but not for (Continued Monday) fire seemed almost too | Had he gone mad? to reach to the sidewalk, knotted ung ber out of the win wan|His own escape was not as easy the upper end of his line fast. A mo The walk the line burned thru and fell about the reacue in the afternoon Two pictures of Anita Stewart (the G Geas) an she appears in chapter—now showing. W ing gown is told in this pl h disturbed, and Mary Black that she succeeded in making last| Fitch, who was with her when she 1 the paper, furious and eal But he kept this to him actinic Sie imei ai is Id not have advanced ause as far as had one making ¢ ln pile of greasy rags. She, the the| messenger from heaven, had been unday-Monday-Tuesday he Third Chapter (6 Reels) of the GODDESS Tommy. Barclay proposes to the Goddess is refused, but womanlike, she changes her lany direct intervention of neaven, hands of a young man who did not believe in her, or her cause, but you! No more could she keep her) |death. Also he had been the first] “Celestia,” he sald to her one day to marry me.” |when you said merely to look at| the same alr! win-|{ breathed, merely to hear the| | “Oh, Celestia,” he said, hopeless: | "There's no answer to questions hat. Those are the things that n just has to say to the girbhe ne ‘ mind and’ says she will accept—only to |gravely, “is a whole ife's work tn refused by Tommy, Why she at first refuses the reason for changing her mind—and why Tommy refuses her—are all told in this chapter ‘ou are uid do} le life's works at once, 1} |so wonderful I believe you c sheliwo w |manage one on my own account; | but it wouldn't be work. It would} If he) be doing things I just couldn't help ALHAMBRA ] Oo c WESTLAKE, PINE AND FIFTH 5 re} CONTINUOUS—11 A. M. TO 11 P. M. j}make you happy.” at) “Tommy,” sald Celestia, “it now, | when we are not even engaged wall| “not even engaged to be mar |how the world may be made a bet

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