The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 24, 1916, Page 5

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apply on all sale articles. N $ 50.00 Worth $ 75.00 Worth USE $100.00 Worth $200.00 Werth CREDIT \ $300.00 worth OLI Oak goklen Dining Table in fumed fint with 42 six foot AMUSE! .MOORE RETURN "3 ae TWICE DAILY—8 te JOSEPH FF. HOWARD AL With Gus Elmore and Chorus FRANK BUSH World's it Story-Teller OTHER mee A acT> 3@e and | BEGIN ON SALTS Flush the Kidneys at once when) Backachy or Bladder bothers— | Meat forms uric acid No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat | forms uric acid, which clogs the kidney pores so they sluggishly filter or strain only part of the| waste and poisons from the blood, then you get sick. Nearly all rheu- matism, headaches, Mver trouble, ousness, constipation, dizzi. ness, sleeplessness, bladder disor- ders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts, or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, trregu Sage or attended by a si | scalding, get about four ounces of | Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a tablespoonfu in a glass of water before break. | fast for a few days and your kid-| neys will then act fine. This fa- mous salts is made from the acid of grap and lemon fjuilce, com- ' bined with lithia and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidneys and stimulate them to ac. tivity, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irri tation, thus ending bladder disor- | ders Jad Salts 1s inexpensive and can kes a delightful ef. ail regular meat eaters should take now and then to keep the clean and the blood pure, avoiding serious kidney thereby URDS Oph Lg fe 7th a Asses: the Reg NE Whittall's Anglo Persian Rug, ‘ae yb WEEK COMMENCING SUNDAY EVENING, OF SEATTLE’S FAVORITE DRAMA f'B]RD LA Night Prices—2Se to $1.50. Senate now selling. IF BACK HURTS kidneys btion O EXTRA CHARGES. of Homefurnishings, $ 1.00 Down, of Hometurnishing: 20 Down, Down, Down, Down, Down, Homefurnishings, $10.00 Momefurnishings, $15.00 of of Wf eg Emmerich Pillows 4 Feather Milow, $10.25 MENTS JAN. 30 CEN $1. 0 ELIENE HAS A PARTY Evidently Dick has told Jim that I have gone insane, for last night at Eliene's Jim took me roundly to task for being so unconcerned about everybody and everything the moment's pleasure. Good old Jim! I confess, January Sale of F Wesiaheetinas SAVE from ONE-FOURTH to ONE-HALF on Dining-room, Living-room, Bed- room and Kitchen Furniture. Our EXCEPTIONALLY LOW CREDIT TERMS NO INTEREST. JUST YOUR WORD THAT YOU’LL Week Week La Be —— on iisins $1.25 $2.25 $3.50 $5.00 $7.00 Complete $1.98 wine 9x12, Reguluar co. special $48.65 al Worcester Rugs, size Saiz. Regular price $48.00. Special ° Three Seamless Axminster Russ size 9x12. Regular rice $35.00, Special SIX-POUND Electric Tron, guaran 4 ter Rugs, size teed five years. $21 75 |x Regular pri . $2.50. Spectal ke Fasct. | wives and sweethearts. jand sweetheart of Mr. OOD Chiffonter tn iden finteh; ¢s tured drawers, ts sub- onstructed and sae ‘asin, as well as the men ss froee the different wards who can help him, My idea is to invite the wives and ‘eothearts of all those men here. I want to think women from Popular “!‘terent classes of society can mix as well and easily as men.” Annie's lips began to widen fn a ‘Oh, my dear Mrs. Symone—you don't really mean to ask both The wife Alexander Holmes would tear out each oth ers eyes.” Alexander Holmes {s Harry's campaign manager—a man of bri! Mant mind and great executive abil- ity, but with the moi of a Don Juan. “In the case of Mr. Holmes, An nie, I think we will only invite his wife and that ts just what I asked you over here for. I want your ad vice about the invitations You know these people, and | don't “Do you want my rea! advice, Mrs. Symone?” “Yes.” “Then don't do tt. Some way men can associate with a lot of rifraff In politics and get away with It, but I don't believe that women can be good mixers.” “Nonsense, Annie!” 1 sald, “of | course they can—anyway it will in interesting experiment. Who shalt Eliene invite, Annie? “Well, Mrs. Symone, you must not invite your motherinJaw, nor Miss Margaret's motherin law, nor little | any of the women who might act book, that I deviled him a little for | uppity, you know.” | presuming to Interfere Harry called up Dick last week and said he was going to give a) dinner to his campaign committee and that at the same time Eliene was going to entertain some of her | women friends “I am going to give my stag din ner at the club and Eliene will give her feminine affair at borne. Later we men will go over to the house and dance a little.” I rather laughed when Dick told me about it, for I could not just see how the wife of Michael Weaver was going to mix with Eliene’s friends and yet she would resent very much ff she were not among those present, for Weaver is an in fluential member of the people's committee. I called up Elfene and asked her what she was going to do about it. “I was just going to come over and see you, Margie,” she said. "My car is outside”—I answered, “I'll come over there on my way to market.” On my way over! ran took them into the car. “Shall I take you home, Annie? 1 asifed “No,” she answered, “I'm going} over to Mrs. Symone's, She is go ing to have a party and wants me to tell her something, I don't know what, about !t.” “Fine! 1, too, am going over to Mrs. Symone’s. She wants to con sult me also about her party.” 4 wonder across | | Annie and little Margaret Ann and “All right, Annie, I'll only invite those of my friends who are like Margie and myself—you write me jout the rest of the list And #0 were invitations sent out to what proved one of the most in teresting occasions of my life. (To be continue: PURE MEATS IS OUR WATCHWORD FRY E’S QUALITY MARKETS TUESDAY SPECIALS Fresh Local Ranch Eggs Pork Back Bones, 10 Ibs. for Choice Spare Ribs.... ees Choice Shoulder Pork Steak..... Choice Steer Sirloin Steak Choice Steer Shoulder Steak. . 12c 13c Little Margaret Ann { Choice Mutton fully pretty child, with that glort-| 16 ously beautiful complexion and} Chops tecveceege Cc skin that 4 ually an Irish her-| Choice Pork itage. She is a noeful little Op LES tly airs lee 5c of her associa thing and b with poise cat the of the daughter of an a policeman great miration Bi 6 little girl ts really grow ing y plain, She is a good, child, but she has neither Harry's good looks nor Eliene's grace When Annie and I arrived and Margaret Ann was sent up to the nursery, Eliene broached her plan You know Harry is going to ask ciiene’s children she has} complica-| aristocrat rather than the child of} I looked at her with} a good many of his friends to that q—— ar TH OWING MARKETS, Purpie Stamp It Signifies Purity and Quality Shops Open Until 6:20 P. M. | Seattle Women Tell 25c. 9c 18c SAVES 2 GIRLS of tene| prisonment Under Slide fobs A SLOW DEATH A kick on the shine put hope inte | two Seattle women and probably kept them from freeing to death in the Corea disaster Saturday After two hours’ imprisonment In the wreckage of the day coach that was swept down the mountain, with snow packed around them from head to foot, Miss Gatha }Lioyd, 4567 10th ave, and Mrs. | Jessie Ferguson, who lives at the same address, were almost ready to give up. The snow was them to death. “When Gatha kicked me, Mrs. Ferguson Monday mornin; knew that we should keep our blood circulating and try to keep | from freezing. “We were altting opposite other when the slide hit. Th seemed to skid down the ravi and, aside from alight cuts tn the| hands, neither of us was mach the} worse for that part “Some of the people say the car rolled over and over, I don't be Neve it did. The snow poured in on us and I had just squirmed my head out, when a second slide bit! us, This time we were packed in snow. “I thought we would be smoth- ered, It wan pitch dark. 1 didn’t| ery and I didn't get hysterical. It must have been hours when I felt) a kick on the shin. It was Gatha.| “Then we worked our way to-| ward each other. Finally I got to} where I could whis: to her { “She was ready to give up. We both were. Then I seemed to for get the cold, slowly freezing | id | eh “"We are both alive, I whisper. ed. ‘Maybe we won't die if we keep up”” “So we kept shiftin, “Then I heard th plek, “We had been in there two hours, | learned, when we first heard the noise, It was 45 minutes after that when they got us out.” | The rescuers told Mra. Ferguson that they had dug thru 40 feet of w to get to them. Only the fact that the day coach was bullt of steel saved persons {m- prisoned within ft. The diner, which was a wooden car, smashed to kindling by the slide, and burned a few minutes after- ward JINCOME TAX LAW =| CONSTITUTIONAL WASHINGTON, Jan. 24.—The federal income tax was held by the supreme court of the U. 8. today ind moving pping of a Five cases in which the Income tax law was upheld by the lower courta were appealed to the su preme court. These were grouped and argued tn October, 1915. The attorney general was allow- od to file briefs in two of these cases not involving the U. 8, The income tax law has produc- ed approximately $80,000,000 a year for the federal treasury, It applies only to incomes above $3,000, and grants many other ex emptions. It was attacked when passed by congress, following the adoption of the federal constitu tional amendment providing for the levying of such a tax. The collection from corporations of the tax on incomes derived from bond Investments, which matle tax |kineern, investigate and recommend | |traveling public f routed over Northern Pacific tracks fort. thru to Corea. J. M. Gruber, vice president, and|, P. H. Murphy, brakeman on the \George H. Emerson, general “man. \{M-fated train, reached here Sun- Jager of the Great Northern system, | 48. wan jcompany's legal department tor the an Everett hospital with her 5-year. | state, aald that the company consid. lered dangers from slides practically dodging difficult, has been con- tested. 1332-34 Second Avenue high as $25.00 SUIT The Scores of high-priced § garments are marked GEATTLE’S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE COATS— GREATLY R To Make Room for Incoming Spring Merchandise We Are Offering Final Reductions on Every Winter Garment in Our Women’s Depart- ment. of the Wostern district of the Great | Northern, told them that the com-| a pany “got a raw deal from the news-| | papers at the time of the Wellington t $10. 00 A large as | disaster,” and that he didn’t intend A to stand for publicity sortment of The pictures made for The Star Wool Coats in endless variety of were obtained with a small camera materials and colors. Sizes 16 to concealed under the rubbér poncho 44 Many of these coats sold as of the photographer same radical reductions prevail throughout our Suit Department. 16%; - (All alterations included.) i STAR—MONDAY, JAN. 24, 1916. PAGE 5. KICK IN SHINS CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 VICTIMS OF SLIDE NOT RECOVERED steel and charred timbers, all that and passenger coach that tumbled the traeks have been torn awa Snow is still falling in the mountains Phe danger of further Representatives of the interstate cc < accident scene, investigating When he learned that laborers — did not want to work along the line at some points, for fear of slides Chairman Charles A. Reynolds of the public service commission and John Reardon, state inspector of | raflronds, went directly to Corea. W, E. Weeks and George B. Win: ters, safety Inspectors for the inter left of the dining car side, is the mountain slides down uy by successive slides hourly publi¢ increases service commis and | A ty 7S are at the f ering dat i ion, mimerce mi and ga THE DEAD | K, BATTERMAN AND BABY of We matcher | W. F. CARTER, 905 tard st. B, Van-| couver, B. ©, | BERT KIRKMAN, Box 349, Sheridan, | as Wyo state commerce commiralon, went| Unidentified man supposed to have to the snow slide zone Monday | bee burned In lining car 1g morning. | THE MISHING | RALPH BATTRRMAN, #-year-old son and Federal Officers Join | o¢ Kaward atterman of Wenatchee. | vernment and state commis-| MMA. FERN WALLACE AND BABY sions will act jointly, and after ob-| 0 brome, Wash taining opinions from expert en-| THE INJURED MES, FB. ROGKHS and daughter, RUTH, jo of Seattia, slightly cut pokane, bruised. Seattle, dining car safeguarding the m wnow slide dl» asters thru the Cascades. | Great Northern trains are being) possible means of , Wenatchee, back eprained. JOUN JOUNSON, Seattle, cook, burt Internally MAS. E. BATTERMAN, dining enr| It will be more than a week be-| fore the track above Scenic can be! Wenatchee, cut cleared, and further slides may ex-|"“Syn""“feonae povst, spokane, tend that time. brulece. MKS. HENKY A. HUBBARD, Spokane, bruises amd shock More workmen were hurried to Corea Monday, They wil! relieve the squads that have worked for| more than 24 hours hunting for|were brought to Seattle and taken bodies of the missing and clearing |to the King county morgue Sunday *now and rock from the tracks. On| morning. stretches, as long as 400 feet, the| At Everett the injured were re-| tracks have been completely torn | moved and rushed to the hospitals. away by slides that got under wey| Persons rescued from the coaches | © Saturday and Sunday. |which went over the brink were Rotary Plows and Dynamite on Joh | brought to Seattle partially clothed, ; Rotary plows are working con-| Just as they were taken out of the; tinuously. A car of dynamite, 1/0 | *°0¥ men and more plows were dispatch-|, According to several of them ed from Spokane Sunday, They |there were no blankets given them left with orders to work themselves (Of BO provision made for their com are at Corea, and aided tp rescue| ‘|! remember looking at my watch work Saturday. Their offices are in|8P4 seeing that it was 6:12," he St. Paul. They happened to be in/Stid, “and a little Inter came the Seattle on an inspection trip Sat crash. I was up forward and ran urday, and went Immediately to the back In Ume to see the wreckage scene. go over, Then everybody set to} Slides were not feared by the com-| work. All 1 remember from then pany engineers at the point where on i# hurrying to get the injured Saturday's tragedy occurred. After people out.” the Wellington disaster $1,000,000 | Three of Family Killed was spent on 13 miles of concrete| Only two members of the Satter. sheds at points where slides were man family of five escaped death in feared the Corea disaster, Judge F. V. Brown, head of the| Mrs. Batterman Nes tnjured tn 5S SS ee a am old son, Elmer. Edward Batterman, who was a|} eliminated since checking up on the, Wenatchee frult grower, and their engineering work done since 1410.) >#by have been found—dead raieulen ‘Tolle of Chanaaee Ralph, age §, is among the mixs- Ing and all hope for his rescue has The dead in the Corea disaster been abandoned. All were {n the day coach that ‘ept over the ledge of the Costelio Was Aboard The train, when hit by the snow silde, was standing in an apparent- ly safe place, according to AI 87.80 and 610.00 « teeth in the world, and guarantee them. This includes painiess ex- tracting. Come in the morning ana oid roots and decayed teeth out without pain and go with your who was in the sleeping car. Tt didn't look as tho a slid could hit the said Costello any danger, altho I knew that there had been a slight slide ahead. It was ata place where slides would be least Feemen.” D. D. 8. 706 and T13 Firet Ave. Unton Bleck, x SS ray SIS WISI ICS ISS AIS ac fi * fouthwi J ougail - Jo wick 4 4 Established 1875 7 == Charge Purchases Made Tomorrow Not Billed Until March 1st y Beginning the Third Week of the January White Sale With ' 4 Hand Embroidered Gowns From the Philippines i $2.95 $3.45 $3.95 $4.95 W cSSrS3 have just re- 4} y 4 4 ceived a large y shipment of the soft- “a est, sheerest Nain- “4 sook Gowns, hand y, embroidered in the \& " Filipino’s inimitable a y manner. 4 One Gown is em- 4 broidered in butter- WY, fly design in punch- AS work and eyelet, and ", has a vine effect in , solid work. Edges 4 are hand scalloped. y Another Gown is y elaborately embroid- ; ered in a conven- tional design o © a punch work, slid? = and eyelet. Others are in floral designs, such as wild roses ; or tiny flowers. All are perfectly embroidered and delightfully dainty. Prices are $2.95, $3.45, $3.95 9 © SOIC SS ORISSS and $4.95. —Third Floor 2 a Clearance in Our Art Shop § EFORE unpacking the new merchandise for J our Art Section we are reducing many of the present stocks materially in order to have ample display space for the new goods. Grayona Embroidery Silks 15c Dozen In all colors; suitable for working centerpieces, pillow tops and scarfs. Regularly 50c dozen, re- duced to 15¢ dozen. Pillow Loops 9c Used for pillow trimming or bath robes; all color combinations. Regularly 35c, reduced to 9c. Stamped and Made-Up Novelties Half Price Discontinued pieces, consisting of infants’ and children’s Dresses, Underwear, Caps, Combina- tions, Gowns, Chemise, Brassieres, Corset Covers, Dressing Sacques, Centerpieces, Pillow Tops and Utility Bags. Former prices were 25¢, 40c, 50c, 65c, 75c, 85c and 1.00. Now Half Price. Lace Centers Half Price Odds and ends in Lace Centers, white and ecru; finished Pillows and Novelties—Half Price. —-Fourth Floor. OC ee ey S108 Open evenings Sand Sundays until ¢ for people who work. Phone Main 2640. Lunch at the Hollywood, 212 FIGHT FOR LIFE Pike.—Adv. ne’ ASK FOR and GET Almost crazed from fight for life he made while imprisoned in ORLICK’S the shattered day coach that was swept over the ledge and down the THE ORIG: 200-foot embankment at Corea Sat- mmAL urday, E. R. Kachel, G. N. dining MALTED MILK [cir conductor, lies ‘at his home, 4251 Greenwood ave. Kachel was checking up in the passenger coach when the car was tumbling down the ravine. When its plunge stopped, the |snow and dirt poured in thru the windows, and Kachel, with two| women, found himself pinned to the} ceiling of the car. The snow was bearing in on them, He managed to get at some matches that were fn his pockets The two women were near enough to him to share the little | Cheap substitutes cost YOU same price 211 Union Street warmth radiated by the burning matches, But the snow that held the packed to the car ceiling slow! chilled their bodies thru For two hours they fought to keep from freezing to death. Rescue workers got thru the car in time to pull them out, almost | frozen to death. Kachel was confined to his Monday PHOTOGRAPHERS: NOT WELCOMED Photographers who rushed to Corea to “shoot” the snowslide dis- aster were herded into a car and| shipped to Skykomish Sunday by )Great Northern officials, who took steps to keep details of the disaster |from the public | Five film camera men, who reach. jea Corea Sunday morning to get mo. |tion pictures for the movie news weeklies, and as many independent |photographers, were among those put on the spectal car. General Superintendent bed | O'Neill, | He‘ took a walk” and shot the pic ures despite the section hands, arm ed with pick handles, who were de ‘tailed »y O'Nelll to keep the camera |men Cock from the right-of-way. | | A special train was detailed to bring the car load of photographers from Skykomish back to Seattle Sunday night, to get them out of the way 1 witiy Credit’ Terms The man who stoll still—got run over, | CRAZED BY HIS |COMPLETE PLANs the present site, beginning Fel ary 1, at a cost of $40,000. ‘The old FOR A NEW DOCK) tuiicins win ve comotishes and a. Plans are complete Monday for a|three-story structure erected. w Colman dock, to be erected on! will be 180 feet long. =) Have the Best—We Have It—At the Right Price jf Butter, Eggs, Cheese, Delicatessen, Staple and Fancy Groceries and Fine Garden Truck Fresh Daily. Try our Sa je. Good, Wholesome Creamery Butter— 34 Pounds for $1.00 National Market Co. 405 Pike St. Just North of Fourth Ave. At Your Grocer’s TAFP” is now available at your grocer's. Place a trial order TODAY, and learn, as others have, how palatable and nourishing the new non-alcoholic liquid food really is. HEMRICH’S “LIFESTAFF” contains all the life-sustaining properties of the choic- est grains made into a pure, wholesome liquuid without the slightest trace of alcohol. “LIPE No chemicals or preservatives of any kind whatsoever are used in its manufac- ture, NURSING MOTHERS and convales- cents wif{\find “LIFESTAFF” — highly Strengthen and beneficial. Order today from your grocer or from us direct. * 24 large boitles $3.00. 24 medium bottles $1. Delivered to your home Usual refund for bottles. HEMRICH BROS. SEATTLE Phone Capitol 870.

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