The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 17, 1916, Page 5

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HOME ON LIBERAL: CREDI YOO HOUS to the homefurnisher. true, ranging from One-fourth to One-half. ments, your home-furnishings. No extra charges. (itp January Homefurnishing Sale Coupled with our extremely liberal credit service this sale offers unusual opportunities Reductions on Dining-Room, Living-Room and Bedroom Furnt- No need for you to live in furnished apart Take advantage of our easy payment plan and let the difference in rent pay for No interest. JUST YOUR WORD THAT YOU’LL PAY “GRUNBAU M FURNITURE CO. INC USE $ 50.00 Worth of Homefurnishings, $ 1.00 Down, $1.00 Per Week WE $ 75.00 Worth ef Homefurnishings, $ 300 Down, $1.28 Per Week} Cai apce YOUR $100.00 Worth of Homefurnishings, $ 8.00 Down, $1.80 Per Week a $180.00 rth of Homefurnishings, y $200.00 Worth of Homefurnishings, $10.00 Down, $2.50 Per Week | CREDIT | 9300.00 Worth of Homefurnishings, $4.00 Per Week | INTEREST a ~ TTA CLOT pet Dresser exactly soft ivory enamel; jarge and two small lke pieture, has two drawers, and good-sized bevel-plate mir- ror. Régular price $14.75. Spectal.. $10.25 Specia! as long $9.55 each. Only a number available for this a they 416° 424 - ° Extra Special! Large, roomy reed Chairs and | Rockers, stained a beautiful nut brown, upholstered in cretonne. Regular price $16.50 to $1850. last, | © limited ike Street: 5 Bigelow Axminster Rows, 9x12 size, Regular price $25.00. Spe- cial to clowe them out ‘ - Oxi? sine: an good Rug for hard iat $13.25 Curtain Serim in plain lace edging and Ineertion Regu lar price Ibe. Special tor Tuesday only per yard c CAPITALIST DIES HOOD RIVER, Ore., Jan. 17.—| John Otten, capitalist, is dead at his home here today. He bad been| sed in business at Snohomish, | TURN HAIR DARK | WITH SAGE TEA Grandma kept her locks dark, glossy and thick with a simple mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur MY SECOND LETTER ELEANOR ter to Dick. for vou. | more than all else, courage. courage | consequenc: \haps Dick would say, your medicin The old-time mixture of Sage Tea and Sulpher mother's treatment, and folks are again using {t to keep thelr hair a| good, even color, which is quite sensible, as we are living in an age | when a youthful appearance ts of|what you told yourself w the greatest advantage. |golden hour, Nowadays, tho, we don’t have the |tinkling bra troublesome task of gathering th: sage and home. All drug stores ready-to-use product eth’s Sage and Sulphur Compound” for about 50 cents a bottle. Very popular becau iscover it has been applied. Sim-| have ever met. ply moisten your comb or a soft brush with {t and draw this thru your hair, taking one all strand ata time; by morning the gray hair disappears, but what delights the ladies with Wyeth’s Sage and) Sulphur is that, besides beautifully darkening the hair after a few ap-| plications, it also produces that soft |. inster and appearance of abundance | ti which is so attractive; besides, pre | vents dandruff, itching scalp and falling hatr. GLASS OF SALTS CLEANS KIDNEYS If your Back Is aching or Bladder) bothers, drink os yi of a and eat less for it It ts | woman the one, perhaps, other in this way when, ‘ou will see that I say “have THE ROAD TO ECONOMY QUALITY MARKETS When your kidneys hurt and your | back feels sore, don't get scared and proceed to load your stomach | Confessions of a Wife TO I wonder if we could call it moral on the pyre that lighted his vagrant this absolute facing of | holidays. being, as per | ‘able to take | pitied you, and now I tell you that ” of betng willing to |I pity Dick, because he has sold for darkening gray,|pay the price? “You have shown me |Dirthright for a mess of potta, streaked and faded hair is grand. |that you have {t, and I admire you and even yet he does not und Hleanor, I wonder if you realize that you have given up the best | know. friend a woman might have for! I think at this moment I am not the mussy mixing at/ hurt and bruised and torn so much |feeling of independence for a little Sell the over the fact that Dick has been called “Wy: | false to me as I am that another | woman has betrayed me—nand that that any more, either. It burts me most to think I—now T have not only read your letter/that I can see clearly, am able to to me but I have also read your let-| write in this way to you. I wish I Your letter to me could feel the awful desolation that evoked, even over the sense of hurt it would if I etill loved Dick. Truly |which its frank revelations of tn-|I want to love him, and I can see by timacy with Dick revealod, a feeling your letter than you feel the same. of admiration, and your letter to He Dick filled me with profoundest pity | my absolute trust and perfect faith, taken my tenderest love, nd thrown them away lightly, for I think all my life I have admired |they meant as little to him as the |tmmolation of your heart and love I told you in my last letter that I stand what he has lost. “Will he ever do so?” T do not Tam going to send in this letter your my check to you for $500 that you nd found it was only |may go to your mother’s friend and [still have enough money to make you comfortable and give you a lwhile {f you find that you can live! with her. I give it only as from one woman I\to another in trouble, and I want| nobody can could have loved best of all that I you to understa that I would give | Dick to you Jnst freely as I have | Strange, is it not, that you and I|this check if he had tntimated any can sit down and write to each /|slightest desire to leave me, it we | Write this In all candor, becanse, loved,” or I don’t love Dick any more, and even after reading your last letter to him I don’t believe you love him FRYE’S with a lot of drugs that excite the TUESDAY SPECIALS kidneys and frritate the entire urt nary tract, Keep your kidneys| Fresh Local 39c clean ike you keep your bowels|Ranch Eggs........ clean, by flushing them with a mild,| Choice Spare harmiess salts which removes the | Ring body's urinous waste and stimu- : Iates them to thelr normal activity.| Choice Loin ‘The function of the kidneys fs to fil-| Pork Chops ter the bi In 24 hours they strain from it 500 grains of acid and waste, so we can readily understand the vital importance of keeping the kidneys active. Drink lots of water—you can't drink too much; also get from any pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablespoonful In 4 glass of water hefore breakfast each morning for a few days and your kidneys will act fine. This fa-| Choice Pork mous salts 19 made from the acid of | iver grapes and lemon juice, combined ot with lithia, and has been used for | generations to clean and stimulate | clogged kidneys; also to neutralize . the acids tn urine #0 It no longer Is & source of irritation, thus ending | der weaknens. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injure; makes a delightful effer-| vescent lithia-water drink which ev. ery one should take now and then to keep their kidneys clean and active. Try this, also keep up the water drinking, and no doubt you will wonder what became of your kidney trouble and backache, 1 Pork Back Bones, 10 Ibs. for ... Choice Steer Sirloin Steak.... Choice Shoulder Pork Steak Choice Steer Shoulder Steak... 1 1 1 | Shops Open Until 6:20 P. 9c 7c .. 25c\* 8c 2c 3c Sc Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp It Signifies Purity and Quality should see each other, we would /altho he tells me he ts choosing me jstill say the things we do not mean As I sit here this morning I am |sure wondering what there {s in Dick |cholce merely to prevent the fuss Waverly that you and I have loved. ;and | because he loves me yet, I am not at he is not making this andal that would ensue had he or I decided that we must sep. arate Why do I forgive? I do not forgive ceased to feel Good-bye Eleanor Fairlow. I hope I shall never look upon your face }again, and I wish that I could, like you, put this whole life that I have |been living behind mo and begin |anew. { told Dick this morning that he would have to gain my love all over again if he wished me to live with him as his wife It's all mixed up—tt's all mixed up, Eleanor, and I can not be sure that we are not all making greater | mistakes than we did in the first |place. Only Time has the answer in his possession, and only the |future will give it to us when Time| has told the secret Good-bye. Honestly, Eleanor, I hope that at some future time you will find calm and at least some |measure of content MARGIE WAVERLY. | (To Be Continued.) I have only UNMAILED LETTERS Dear Hi: Since you've been converted to prohibition, I've become an ardent admirer of | | | you, and will vote for you even | | if you did say you're not gonna run again. Your ex-chief, AUSTIN E. GRIFFITHS | Dear Oliver: Your letter oe The Star Friday convinced me I should quit the race and vote | | for you. HIRAM, | | ea } Dear Austin: I'm sure you're the only chap to bring about | the desired peace in this town, I'm tired of scrapping with Hi all the time. I'm glad you're in the race, and I'm gonna vote for you. OLIVER | P. 8.--My friend, Ollie, Ju showed me what he wrol | wh of I add , | | too, Austy.’ HIRAM ee Spirited Session Promised| When Members a t luesday Evening to cuss Proposition Made by Outside Committees tor Consolidation — of Commercial Bodies Widespread dissatisfac tion in the Commercial club was apparent Mon day over the newest plan for merging with the Chamber of Commerce, and a sharp fight over the proposition is expect ed to eclop when it comes before the club for consideration luesday } night Tentative constitution and by-| laws for the consolidated organiza- ve been drafted by the Mer Exchange committee and approved by the Chamber of Com- merce reorganization committes and committees representing other commercial organizations Declare Pian ia Frame-Up | Commercial Club members, how-| ever, consider the new plan would result In robbing them of their voice in affairs of the organization and open for apectal intere complete control night has been nated the time for consideration by the club of the chamber's con soBdation plan, contained tn a ten- tative constitution and by-law « the proposed corporation Warm Contest Predic’ The plan will go to the tm of the club without the approy ite special committee, and will be fought for and against in what prom- inea to be one of the warmest con- tests in local history. Picked to ploces and robbed of Its robes of pbraseolo the cham- ber's tentative constitution looks tke a black hand letter, according to some club members. commercial organizations are interested in forcing a Yonsol idation, it was no other reason, } Otte Case WII! Fight | It became known Monday that Otto Case, the club secretary, re signed his office recently not wholly because of political aspirations, but that he might have the opportunity of fighting the proposed merger on the floor of the club. The submitted tentative constt- tution provides that the consol! dated organization be known as the Chamber of Commerce, and that it shall be capitalized for $200,000, represented in 2,000 shares of stock at $100 a share. Membere Classified Tt Classes members under three heads—"regular,” “associate” and “trading. “Regular” members must pay $48 a year dues and “trading” members $60. “Associate” members must pay $20 annually. Hut only “regular” and “trading” members who own stock may have the right to vote, Two-thirds of the present mem- bership of the club, ite members say, will be unable to pay the price. Government of the merged or- ganization, by the terms of the ten- tative constitution, would be con- fined to a body of 21 trustees, vent: r-jed with the right to name the cham-/ |ber’s officers. Ask All to Turn Out This, members declare, would make the new chamber a close cor- |poration, absolutely. . It Is potnted out, easily pur |chase the dominating hand and control every act of the merged |chamber. The chamber trustees are expect, ed to accept the plan of consolida- |tion at thelr meeting Tuesday after. |noon. Secretary Case urged Monday that every member of the Commer. celal Club be tn attendance at Tues day night's meeting. It promises to be thoroly enjoy- able and exciting session—if no- body gets killed. Opporition is expected to devel op over the matter of committees. The tentative constitution provid that all business matters requiring action be referred to standing com mitteen, Oppose Open Meetings At present, such matters are de clded by the entire vote of the club in open meeting. The open meeting plan is consid ered by the Commercial Club as one of its strongest features and has met with favor because each posed to open meetings, e ter being referred to a or sub-committee, which h to act for the whole organization. x Pain in te Back § mls often of the most violent character, yet it is surpris- ing how quickly it disap- pears when Sloan's Lini- ment is used, not only for backache but for Rheumatiem, , Nerve Pains, Sloa: Liaiment is remarkably effective. Sloan’s Liniment KILLS PAIN **Keep a bottle in your home, Price 25¢., 50c. $1.00 CT a member had the right to vote on} all questions requiring club action On the other band, the Chamber of Commerce has been always op. oh mat COMMERCIAL CLUB TO FIGHT | PROPOSED TERMS OF MERGER: | | | | | assed up to the |iimits without pau club without the recommendation | boys, eager f jof the epecial committee, and for | along ! | | GASES, SOURNESS. 17, 1916, PAGE 5 LOS ANGELES IS | FIGHTING FLOOD Police Rescue “People From, Homes As Waters Rise. RAINFALL IS TERRIFIC) | LOS ANGELES, Jan, 17 | With more rain forecested for tomorrow, a storm, which hae deluged Southern California, d without interruption to Streets bec torrents, ence districts were flood. ed, and the Interurban railway system demoralized by numer ous washouts. At Bam, the weather bu. reau announced that 3.90 Inches storm, fallen during the making 10.68 for the compared with 4.6! last year, The southwestern residence section of the city was report | ed partially under water. Broad streets became brawi- littered with float. of workers were to leave thelr ho Interur eepec hit. lines operated irregularly and | the foothill lines were entirely out of commi: . Telephone to the police sald the southwestern district was ally flooded. At Seventh and Magnolia, the w was two feet deep around houses A torrent sweeping out First at. ‘ rushed into the Santa Fe railroad yards, causing trouble. Detectives were sent to the) home of Mrs. A. T. Lane, on Rus well ave, to rescue flood threatened to from {ta foundation Other residences borhood were menaced Borne on the crest of a wave, | Out of courtesy to the chamber, | several trunks came bobbing down | (defeated the Turks, the Merchants’ Exchange and other) | Figueroa st whieh | ther © Nobody knew where bet they contin toward the city mall ee, hed waitng for ved thelr voy: a the sidewalk them to strand Serious Southern Pacific wash- outs were reported from Pomona and Indio 'SAN DIEGO POLICE SAN DIEGO, Jan. 17.—Police a tomobiles loaded with biuecoats| were rushed to Old Town, four miles north of this city, today to| Tescue residents from second-story | windows, following the sudden rise of tho San Diego river at that polat Homes were abandoned as the waters swept over the oldest set- ue: it in California. The present storm is breaking records. At points at — bene have left the an ranches and 1 drowning wiock. WASHINGTO? . 3 Jan. 17.—Col- lector of Customs Zack Cobb of El) Paso wired advices to the state de- | partment today, Indicating that Bert Kramer, reported massacred | tn Madera, Mex., is alive. ‘RID STOMACH OF AND INDIGESTION “Pape’s Diapepsin” Ends All) Stomach Distress in Five Minutes. You don’t want.a slow remedy when your stomach is bad—or an uncertain one—or a harmful one—/ your stomach {= too valuable; you | mustn't injure ft with drastic her when the| Caucus region had been forced to lift her home | retire. in the neigh: | p ° ? | MacDougall cfouthwick § Established 1876 - i — — | ‘The Best for the Price, No Matter What the Price _ , [RUSH TURKS TO : 4 E a} U ASIATIC FRONT B [o) UR January Clearance Sales consti- 4 iB tute a great undertaking—the y Operations in Far East Now| ~ task of forcing out by price re- i Eclipse ae in 4 ductions stocks that must be sold. This 3 Europe q affords most unusual buying opportuni- e BRITISH ARE GAINING ties which every woman should take ad- 4 LONDON, Jan, 17.—Turke treed |B vantage of. 4 jfor other service by the abandon > fcally ev, $ ment of the Gallopol! peninsula arelA ge ractically ev ery department takes part E being rushed to Asia, to meet on- | in our January Clearance Sales. 4 The operations in the East |? prehensive and complete assortments of g- eclipse those tn Europe, and speed |B ‘ * . ‘ in cxsential, as the British are gain- |B new Muslin Underwear, Linens, White ; Oat taller temare sali d | Goods, Lingerie and Crepe de Chine Bs In Mesopotamia, after varying -) H 4 P |fortunes, the Turks are retreating Blouses, and Embroideries. 4 on both sides of the Tigris, south of ‘ Kut-El-Amara. A Gen. Aylmer appears likely to) accomplish his mission of reliev- A 4 ing the hard-pressed British force , at Kut e} Amara Sereeping Reductions in the Simultaneously, Grand Duke neetacansts e SUC SSI Nicholas, on the Caucasus front, ts \ trying to ram his way thru to Mes- jopotamia to join the British | forces. The London war office announces that the Turks are retreating in the Kut-El-Amara vicinity. | The triple struggle is defined to be of importance, for Germany long | had had dreams of an empire tn the Bast, and if the battling now in| progress Hes, the Teutonic be crushed The Constantinople war office ad- mit today that advanced poets tn the Arras and Id valleys of the redu At the same time Secretary for India Chamberlain announced in jthe house of commons that Gen Aylmers’ gulf expedition had again capturing a a if | e 3 3 4 4 4 2 A Y Turkish position in the Kut-Eljf Amara region. 7) Petrograd reported that the/Z Turkish soldiers had been hurled back on a wide front. Constantt- nople admitted this. | TURKS RETREAT. } CONSTANTINOPLE, Jan y SIS VAISS SISS VORISS TOTS SISSY Women’s $6.75 Union Suits.............. -:-- $4.50 An AER TE <OPP “up a petal thousand garments ced for immediate disposal. Including Women’s Union Suits and separate garments of silk, silk and wool, and cotton, mercerized and __ lisle. Some lines are slightly incomplete in size range, but every size can be had in the lot. On wool oN Stet et Suits Women's $10.00 Union Suits 00 Women's $3.50 Union Suits . Women’s $5.00 Union Suits ..... ‘ideieetad 95. Women's $6.00 Zimmerli Silk Union Suits...... Women's $4.50 Zimmerli Silk and Wool Union Suits. . 3.85 Women's $2.50 Zimmerli Union Suits..........$1.95 Women's $1.50 “Merode” Merino Vests, gray or white Women’ 's $3. 00 Dr. Deimel’s Vests (small sizes) $1.00 and $1.25 Part Wool Vests and Pants 1.50 The Turkish advance posts In the|d |Caucasus retreated several miles |/ before the new Russian offensive, | ft was admitted today \4 — BUY GRAIN y BUCHAREST, Jan. 17—An Eng-\f Po syndicate today paid $50,000,000 lin gold for 80,000 care of grain. It} jis understood the allies intend to|/ purchase the entire Rumanian grain| 4 |supply, fn conformity with their|/Ay 2---- plan to “starve out” Germany. SPANISH STEAMER SUNK y LONDON, Jan. 17.—The Spanish | 4 8. 8. Belgica has been sunk by a) -- >> submarine. Twenty-three of her/7 crew were rescued. 4 Peon eacas etna J a uve DELAY INQUIRY > 4 "TN ACCIDENT Because most of the the capsized Victor I. coma hospitals, the inv: be held by the United States steam- boat inspectors here was postponed Monday. No date for gathering further evidence has been set. If Capt. Wood or Engineer Way- son, of the Victor Il, are thought be guilty of negligency by the inspectors, a trial will he held here. The evidence obtained in the preliminary investigations is not revealed until the trial. Only two lives were lost, it is now believed by the coroner in Ta coma, altho a search of the. pilot house will be made Monday at low ude Walter and Florence Bower, chil- dren, were drowned, MER After t capitalist at his day John Wa! room for drugs. Pape's Diapepsin ts noted for its apeed in giving relief; its harmless. ness; its certain unfalling action | in regulating sick, sour, gassy | stomachs, Its millions of cures {n_| indigestion, dyspepsia, gastritis and other stomach trouble has made it} famous the world over. Keep this perfect stomach doctor | {n your home—keep it handy—get | a largo fifty-cent case from any drug store and then {f anyone| | should eat something which doesn’t | agree with them; {f what they eat lies like lead, ferments and sours and forms gas; causes headache, dizziness and nausea; eructations | of acid and undigested food—re- | member as soon as Pape's Diapep: sin comes in contact with the| stomach all such distress vanishes, | Its promptness, certainty and ease | in overcoming the worst stomach | disorders is a revelation to those | who try it. BEST SET OF TEETH I make the best 85.00, 87.50 and $10.00 sets of teeth in the world, and guarantee them. This includes painless ex- tracting. Come in the morning and have your | HDWIN J DD. 705 and 7 rat Ave. | Unton Open evenings untt $ and Sundays until ¢ for people who work Phone Main 3640. Albert Hansen | Jeweler and Silversmith 1010 Second Ave., Near Madison ASK FOR and GET HORLICK’S THE ORIGINAL MALTED MILK Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price. | ernment. | with pneumonia, jat Youngstown, O., \DOG KILLS HUNTER, Mrs. W. 8 Yankus, hed Fourth IB CLAYTON aerates it,, opens up the | ave., asked police Sunday t id | In Da a of Yeaterday, Today an: ° goal her in finding husband. He left] we globules, enables the nie” Saturday with his last nickel to trates of the air to bring |find work : Mayor Gill to address police in- about a refreshing reaction, 4 struction school Monday afternoon puts the flour in a more re- on “City Ordinances.” Business Men's Preparedness club to start course Monday night. Annual campus opera of univers: ity to be “Red. Mill. Ole Hanson & Co., realty firm, changes name to A. H. Reid & Co. Edward McMahon, professor of American history at university, says pooling of railways is essen tial Rus steamer Yarsolav here| to load supplies for Russian gov-| Th Panama canal will reopen soon. TH Senator La Follette, threatened | PRic cancels speaking dates. H Twenty-sIx foreigners indicted for rioting. Snow storm saved Elma from de- struction when big fire started Sat- urday Mats... ’ ; \ Posing Horse |fine recipes, all tested with Children of J. Smith, mill em e recipes, a Diva, orunlisaity deken When eee OTHER B10 ACTS IFISHER’S BLEND eighted tree fell ab t Rock . . mums ee FLOUR. If you will order” a trial sack we will send you DANVILLE, Il, Jan. 14.—Kai tonis Dombrauskis of Georgetown, was killed when hunting near Cay- uga, Ind. Dombrauskis was a coal | Main 4430, miner, and had gone to Indiana to) can at the Right 169| hunt rabbits, He shot a rabbit, and | Washington st. r a 'ave. | FISHER FLOURING was holding It in his hand, when NR ht the | ‘i “a one of his dogs jumped against the Sour caap and prescribe for you. al MILLS CO,, gun in suc na ha Was ‘solutely without charg 5 2: discharged, the contents of the gun | We ‘want "your ‘patronage, and} 817 White Building, striking Dombrauskis In the abdo- offer you the doctor's services as! men, USSSA ISSSCEISSI EMSS EISSS IE MOSSE EISSS EEE FROM GAS FUMES er tube and being knocked uncon- scious by the fall, ness man, was killed by gas fumes The body was found Saturday by ticed the lights burning Los Angeles visiting AMUSEMENTS THE BEST OF 2:20—TW ICE DAILY—8:20 “The Parting of Terpetchore” Ossip Gabrilowitsch Clara Clemens NEW PANTAGES THE OFFICE GIRLS je Harvey and Her Beautiful |Clark Swezy, contains many FREE DOCTOR —First Floor. EVERETT YOUTH IS KILLED COASTING EVERETT, Jan. 1 Pilon, a youth of 12, died scnday afternoon as the result of a coaster — accident. The youngster coasted down the steep hill on 22nd st, was unable to make the turn on the hill, and plunged thru the railing of a ridge, landing on the railroad racks 35 feet below. CHANT DIES . ripping over the gas heat Dennis Keeler, and widely known busi- home, 158 28th ave., Fri Mace, a neighbor, who no- e in the hours. Mrs, Keeler Is In Sifting improves the tex- ture and sheen of the flour;> | DEVILLE ceptive mood to take the - yeast and to surrender its full strength in the baking ~ which fellows. If you will buy FISHER’S BLEND—THE PERFECT FLOUR FOR EVERY PURPOSE—and go to the little extra trouble of sift- ing it, you will get baking results that cannot be dupli- — cated with any other flour. THE FAIRIES COOK BOOK, prepared by Isabelle Musical Club PRESENTS PIANIST AND Gabrilowitsch CONTRALTO e Moore URSDAY EV ENING, JANUARY ES—o eau t to $2.00, 2:20-—Nights. 7 and 9 a copy free; we will also be | glad to mail copies to those - who already use our flour, | Telephone Sales Dept, z a 4 for

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