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i DHOUSE-GRUNBAUM FURNITURE CO. yee YOUR CREDIT—WE CHARGE NO INTE bd i + Go Shooting Doughnuts? It’s Sport, Declare These ‘Nuts’ ‘Uehman, press agent of . brought this far” invisible Bi- peetacles. at “Popular il please and con- ean duplicate any Eleven successful Phones Maia 7100 Leeal 33 Ww. EDMUNDS, Ops. D., (In charge) 78 want to keep your hatc_in ‘Pndition, the lens soap you use ‘etter. aps and prepared shampoos y t0@ much alkal!. This dries Makes the hair brittie, and lal. Just plain mulsified ot (which ts pure and en- jens) much beter shampoot thle can't Zinjurethe hair, | °°" Molaten yo. Fub it in "One Wil! make an ab {reamy lather, and a cals thoroughly out easily and re: Hele of dust. dirt, de Wve oll. ‘the hair dries iad eine, RP It loaves it maney, MSH, flutty a Bet mulsitiea wet! OUR stor fery 22? Ounces In eno one in th Advertisement hair with One or two tea- cocoanut off It ti : am : the Kitcheneed Club Today any reason why YOU should not have itchen Cabinet made? We can tell ke Stréet: STAR—WEDNESDAY, 4 INC, Reporter Who Beat Officers to Her Hiding Place Arrested. RUTHIE HAD RUN AWAY BE. E. Carpenter, police reporter for an afternoon pt archist corner, fs threatening Wed nesday to thrash anybody who a him if he {is one of Bob Hod honor prisoners. Carpenter w under arrest Tuesday afternoon, but he tired of being in durance and went home, Tt was this wa: the afternoon reported by teephone to be at Richmond Beach, whither she had fled, it later deveoped, be- ‘eause her parents would not allow her to go to the San Francisco ex Position. When Carpenter heard the news boarded a Richmond Beach otor bus, and was first on the Tanzer's mother, and County Jatler Mike Halley, two deputies and a jeity detective, speeded north, The deputies arrived first, to find Carpenter tucking Miss Tanzer into the bus, with her suitcase, and after her. i an elopement or Hovers Between Life and Death After Studio Accident. CONCUSSION OF BRAIN | LOS ANGELES, Sept. 29.— |Mabel Normand, ‘the vivacious comedienno of the Keystone Mo tlon Picture company, and known everywhere as “Mabel,” has been jhovering between life and death a») SEPT. 29, 1915. PAGE 5 TANZER GIRL IS MABEL NORMAND BOARD WILL CUT - AT HOME AGAIN HAS CLOSE CALL: GATES IN FENCE Park Commissioners Listen When Lane's Patrona Howl. MERCHANT STANDS PAT Wedneaday’s developments In the ape war between the park board and F. A. Lane, the Lesoht park confectioner, forced the belligerent board to budge a bit. Having bullt their fence, shutting custom: of Lane's found iteelf p' on ite own nose, ae it were, Lane sald nothing and sawed wood, but -the customers howled. Lane has a steady trade tn bread, among other things. Persons liv ing across Lake Washington have been accustomed to purchasing their loaves before taking the boat home tn the evening. Tosses Bread Over Fence But with the fence up, certain difficulties presented themselves It became necetsary for Lane to toss the loaves over the obstruc- tion, and for the customers to toss their nickels and dimes over to Lane. This might have been satisfac. tory had not some of the customers! found difficulty in flelding their loave#. And @ loaf of bread which| spite The deputies arrested|a result cf a studio accident here}has rolled in the sand is—well, tt! much to his disgust and amusement. She re mained in the bus, but Carpenter |was sandwiched between the two) deputies in the county auto, He argued heatedly a half-hour at the jail, trying to prove his tn ‘necence. Ho gave up in disgust, finally, and walked out. | This ts Carpenter's second esca. le. | During a bandit hunt near Bel- |Mngham, a year and a half ago, he jwar mistaken for the bandit, or something of the sort, and bad a difficult time divesting himself of the taint of suspicion. jon Sept while playing for the movies. Lapsing often into unconscious. neas, doctors in attendance feared that she would not recover, the in- Juries having been sustained on the head. It wae a week later when the first signs of rallying ewere ob nerved She was reported today as out of danger. Mabel Normand has established | & reputation of being without fear, and bas engaged itn some of the! most hair-raising stunts ever de vised to insure a thrill. Escaping unseathed in these dare-devil ventures, she waa caught) 15 by a piece of falling TRY TO SETTLE UP HOTEL LIBERTY The Central Council of Soctal | Agencies and Mayor Gill struggled valiantly for several hours Tues |day afternoon to settle the ac counts of last year's Hotel Liberty, and in the end they adjourned to }meet with the finance committee | Friday. The Central Counci! con tends that the city should pay the }$1.309, which the hotel account| }lacks to balance. The mayor says) j|not—and there it sticks | | 200 PARIS, Sept. 29.—Betwoen 200 and 200 marines perished when an explosion sank the Italian battle hip Benedetto Brin off Brindist, ac- cording to news agency dispatches today. Rear Admiral De Cervin and several other officers are re ported among the dead. It is be- leved to have been an accident. SAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 29.—~ Mayor James Rolph, Jr. has been reelected mayor in yesterday's | primaries. His majority over his two opponents is expected to ex coed 15,000. To Put On Flesh and Increase Weigh Timely special Btretchera, just when you need one for fall housecleaning Stationary Pin Stretcher Movable Pin treccher . lovable Pin and Easel Stretcher. .... @ ine { Mves in its native state. | | “While hunting yesterday, after | baving been given permission by | Mr. Hoyt, my partner and I took | our guns, which, by the way, must | be single-barreled affairs, other- | Wise the doughnut cannot be cap- | tured. “We meaked thru the dough fields, and came onto an island, | known as'the Island of Lard, taken, probably, from the classics, because the real Island of Lard is located in Grease. “One must be provided with a sufficient quantity of baking soda, which is sprinkled around rad island. This causes the ighnuts to rise. “When they rise, you shoot onee, and hold the barrel of the gun at an angle of 45 degrees. Instantly, the female doughnut will fly straight toward the gun barrel, circling it. Others follow in quick succession, “A steaming pot of coffee mus’ be near at hand, otherwise, find- ing they are caught, they might become ugly and fight. The odor of the coffee acts like a hypo- dermic injection on a human be- ing. It quieta them and they will Me perfectly still so long as the coffee is near them.” CHILD WELFARE WORKER HERE Plans were complete Wednesday for the organization here next | | | | Most people eat from four to six pounds of food « crease in welght one ounce other hand hunky fol op gaining bos to sn: the time. A individual n defective, juat} enough of the | maintain life and a semblance health and strength. Stuffing w help them. A dozen 1 won't @ them food they of ‘on’ ay th pound. productng slements just stay 80 fatty t their blood can absorb them and deposit them all out the body—nor thing too, that wil red blood corpusel thetr blood’s carrying power. For such @ condition {t ts well to 4 eating a Sarol tablet ‘ery meal scenery and serio’ | 'NOTHER KICK WASHINGTO: Sept. 29.—Am-| bassador Penfie! reported to the jstate department today that he had promised to [received a second protest from Aus jt to let v MARINES DEAD ("= recartiog “American ‘manstac |" 10st ture of munitions. Press reports had indicated that Vienna took the position that th vast extent of this manufactui made he situation different than anything which International law has dealt with and it was so enor.) mous as to be out of Bote. with previous incidents. TO LECTURE ON SELLING — H. L. Fogelman, lecturer on sales- manship for the Sheldon school ‘ot| Chicago, will speak at the Commer. cial Club Thursday evening on| “Personality {n Salesmanship,” and | again at 3 o'clock Saturday after. boon on “How to Construct Selling Argumensts.” POISONED HIMSELF AT 40!) Death by slow potson killing ™ wh ing to kidney troub! When your kidneys begin to lag off natura! poisons that your body, the first | or | a | in me y in the lem, n to lthe kidn or your money will GOLD MEDAL Haarlem! re imported direct | | STAR ETTERS. GET THE HABIT of Shopping at | WANT ADS ARE GO ie finicky stuff to masticate. | Now, one of Lane's customers is! Francis H. Fassett. He proved to be rotten fielder, and after he had finishod washing the grit out of his teeth that evening he opened up his heart. Anderson Does the Job “That fence prevents the public) from going when and where it) wants to go. It hinders the trans-| portation companies from conduct-| ing thelr business. It keeps the) barber and machine shop adjotn-| ing Lane's from doing business, | “It {# neither of artistic value) nor pleasing to the eye. | “And last, but not least, it keeps Lane from selling bread to hun dreds who go to and from the Lake Washington district, and that is what the ,ark board wants.” The park board winced, but it still remained up to somebody to budge them. Capt. John Ander- son, the steamboat man, did the Job. | To Make Holes in Fence Just what he maid of the board to the board, history does not re cord, but John admits frankly that he could be hanged for what he thought. The result was, anyway, that the park board, having built its fence. begin sawing holes in ersons in and out the Seattle Electric company, from which Lane leases his store, haw informed Lane that material is being purchased with which to build an inclined board walk from the end of the car line 4trect to Lane's front door, thru the embrasure made Tuesday by Ed Seskatchowan, Lane's ¢ook. MAYOR GILL AT PUYALLUP FAIR Mayor Gill, Jimmy Crehan, the mayor's secretary, and Councilman Haas went to tite Puyallup fair Wednesday morning in Jimmy's Ford. They expected to return late | in the afternoon. Seventy-five members of the Automobile club, with Judge Burke heading them, also attended the festivities Wed- nesd. Thousands of. school children were dismissed from school to at- tend, Wednesday being des! ted Children’s day. It is also Valley, Auburn, Kent and White River day Races begin Thureday. “Western Washington is sadly in need of more successful farmers, and anything that can be done to make it possible for the man on the farm to make good, is work along the right lines,” sald a fair official Wednes “With this {dea in view, | our intention to deavor to develop the agricultural and horticultural {interests rather than the racing end of our fair. COMPANY TO MINE MATANUSKA GOLD The Talkeetna Mining Co., head- ed by John L. Fulton, of Portland, Ind., has just been incorporated in Washington at $1,000,000 for the an- nounced purpose of developing gold ec Dougall + fouthwick ESTABLISHED 1875 Charge purchases made Thursday placed on bill rendered November lst An Attractive Proposition for Thursday on Staple and Fancy Wash Goods ITHOUT additional charge we will shrink your wash goods—a saving from 3 to 5c on each yard. Shrunk by New Perfect Shrinking Process. Clothes made of the material to your liking gives the finished garment an exclusive effect, now so desirable. Its shapeliness depends on having the goods thoroughly sponged and shrunk after being cut off the piece before making. We equipped ourselves with a perfect shrinking process that shrinks wash fabrics and leaves a beautiful finish. The eight materials listed are new—tomor- row will be the only day shrinking will be done without charge. New Fall Dress Ginghams 15c Yard A new range of colorin gs specially adapted for children’s sehool dresses, checks, stripes or plaids, 27 inches wide, 15¢ yard. New Renfrew Devonshire Suiting, 20c Yard The fabric of guaranteed colors. A wide range of colors in stripes, checks, plaids or plain shades; for New children’s wear and house dresses; 20c. Silk Stripe Poplins 25¢ Yard A 27-inch fabric of medium weight in fancy weave, with woven silk stripe, for house and aftern New This material holds its oon dresses; 25¢. Serpentine Crepe 18¢ Yard crepe effect after it has been laundered, and re- quires no ironing. Most suitable for kimonos; 30 inches wide; 18¢ yard. New 1% Wool Challis 35c Yard ; 27 inches wide, mostly cream grounds with neat figitres, for children’s house dresses; 35¢ yard. Imported Wool Guaranteed pure wool, of crepe effect; 30 inches combinations on cream or Challis 65¢ Yard plain weave; afew pieces wide; good range of color tinted grounds; 65¢ yard. Silk Stripe Shirting Flannel 75c Yard A soft wool with silk material for men’s shirts, stripe in colors; a splendid boys’ blouses and tailored waists; fast colors; 32 inches wide; 75e yard. New 36-Inch Mercerized Poplins 35¢ Yard In this new fabric we have a splendid range of shades, including pink, old rose, navy, Copenhagen, medium gray, helio, lavender, light blue, wood brown, morrow. BIG MISSIONARY CONVENTION ON | Nearly every state was caste ed whem the 34th annual convention |’ lof the board of managers of the; Women's Home Missionary society | of the Methodist Episcopal church | opened here Wednesday. } The mornin devoted to Der- | fecting the convention organization. | Mayor Gill was scheduled to wel- jcome the visitors, about 500 of whom were expected, following) prayer service, in First Methodist | chureh | | Mra, Levi Gilbert of Ohio, Mrs. |C" EB, Mogg of Colorado, and Miss | | Alice M. Guernsey of } York are associated in editing and publishing | the Women's Home Missions Daily, | the first copy of which appeared Wednesday, | About 160 girls will take part {n/ |a Queen Esther pageant Friday evenings at the First Methodist church. Saturday some 500 boy and girls will participate in children's pageant. CATARRH GERMS EASILY KILLED Only Way to Stop This Disease Forever Is to Destroy the Germs That | week of a City-Wide Child Welfare institute, to be held at the Hippo- drome from Monday to Thursday. Many subjects in the care of children will be discussed by some of the ablest speakers on child wel- fare in the nation. Dr. William McKeever, professor of child welfare in the University of K s, arrived Wednesday and | will conduct a general committee | meeting at 2 o'clock |Y. W. C. A, when he 111 outline |the work of the coming Institute | |to more than 100 prominent local |clubwomen who are on the execu tive board. Nearly every women’s club in |the city, as well as the church land schools, is interested in the |institute. Mothers will be urged from every. pulpit Sunday to at | tend. | Among the speakers named for the institute, besides Dr. McKeev- jer, are: Josephine Preston, state school superintendent; Presi- \dent Suzzallo, of the university; Dr. Frederick Bolton, dean of the school of education; Mrs, Edith Smith Davis, of the National Wom- en's Christian Temperance Union ‘OVERHEAD CROSSING CAMPAIGN STARTED As part of a plan to build over- \the city, a conference of city of |ficlals and railroad men, Tuesday afternoon, agreed on recommending to the council a bill calling for a viaduct over the rallway tracks at ° Duwamish and Graham sts. Friday at the) head crossings on all streets cross- | ling raflroads in the south part ot | ful combinat! effective and wimilative and flesh bullding ele. ts known to chemistry. It is absolutely harm) et has been wonderfully effec and « single tablet eaten with meal often, according to reports of users, * the effect of tnereasing the weight of @ thin man or Woman from three five pounds a week. Sargo! in| 14 by Bartell Drug Co.) Swift's varmacy and other good druggists leverywhere on a positive guarantees jof weight increase or money back mil Frye’s QUALITY Markets Thursday Specials: Fresh Eastern 30c Sugar Cured Picnics Choice Spare ‘hoice Loin Pork Chops .. Choice Steer Round Steak . Choice Steer Shoulder Steak . Choice Mutton “hops Choice T-Bone Steak . . AT FOLLOWING MARKETS: LYMPICO MARKET Albert Hansen Jeweler and Silveramith 1010»Second Ave., Near Madison KODAK FINISHING Let me 4o your work. “Quick service—good reaul J. 1. MENDENHA Pen and Came Im Sw iftomM Specta atm ‘Doctor Howe Treats All Disorders of! | Men and Women Offtes n st. MIC) MARKET 505 Third Ave. WESTERN MARKET | w. Hii BALLARD MARKET | i} 5443 Ballard Ave. Hours—9 & m. to & p.m. @un- 00k for U. & *urple Stamp. ¥6 10 &, mB. $0 15 mn. It signifies purity and quality | Shops Open Until 6:20 >, M, |mining claims tn the Matanuska catarrh and want te get |district, in Alaska. Headquarters |of the company will be fn Seattle, |at the office of P. C. Ellsworth, | Pioneer building. NEBRASKA ‘DRYS’ | BEGIN CAMPAIGN | YCOLN, Neb., Sept. 29.—The| 1916 prohibition campaign, almed to Place Nebraska in the list of dry|! states, was formaily launched to- day. In the convention which ‘opened here this morning, and will continue for two days, the antl-sa-| } loon forces of the state began planning their line of battle. The committee is planning to have a number of speakers of na- jtlonal reputation. Among them is W. J. Bryan, who, it is believed, | devote considerable time jthe campalgn in his home state. | DE GROVE INDICTED m cutarrh sprays, c! a, dc because they overlook thi h lodgment tn y: nd throat, and could not destroy tt if they did. T t known way of destroying the rous germs of nose and thr nt, penetrating air of Hyomet (pronounced ‘High-o-mo) ther power. rmictdat tn- | air of Myome! through th drawing Into your swoll membranes & not only reduce the and open you opped-up alr pi and positively vatarrh germ | Drug Stores and druggists in this vicinity the blessed, lasting relief ufforers Ianwed but wilt every t tO| reaches. Bo Jother leading are #0 jchat Py t they | An indictment was returned by |¢ured from ite une, Rieht now. ‘the federal grand jury, Tuesday | n ¢ it into your dru against De Forest De | next | pase his door, F |Horton National bank, _ several |. the Hyomet way up into {months ago was arrested on a and you can begin at charge of misappropriating $5,000 Gangerous, disgusting syeter Ad of the bank's money stem for All Ages | Nourishing | Delicious Digestibie Horlicks SOR ele iat v pad ru ’ Unless you say “HORLICK’S” you may get a Substitute All Hotels and Cafes green, black or cream; 35¢ yard. We shrink all of these fabrics without charge to- eration in our Wash —Third Floor. Shop, Third Floor. For $100 It Is Now Possible to Buy a Beautiful Cabinet .. .. Model of .. .*. neo EDISON DIAMOND DISC PHONOGRAPH All the new Edison styles for 1916 are now on show in our Music Rooms, and the outstanding surprise of the Exhibit is the fact that for the first time in the Talking Machine World it is now jossible to offer the great Edison’s Perfected nstrument in a beautiful Cabinet Model for as little as one hundred dollars. We cordially invite you to come up and have your favorite music or songs played on this or any other of our vast array *of the World’s Best Talking Machines. Other Models of the Edison Instrument range in price from $115 to $450. There is a style to harmonize with every possible furnishing scheme, and we will be glad to let you have any of these instruments in your home so that you may try them at your leisure. Our easy pay- ment plan can be adapted to meet your personal require- ments. All the Recorde—For All Machines—All the Time SEATTLE'’S TALKING ¢ MACHINE HEADQUARTERS OndAve