The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 31, 1916, Page 2

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“Nature Teeth” Rival Nature’s Own UR “Nature Teeth” are the highest expression of the science and art of dentistry. They are the nearest approach to the natural teeth so far devised. And by that ts meant that they are made to suit YOUR needs—of the exact tint and shape tor YOU. They are entirely different-—vartly super lor to ordinary artificial teeth. You may bite, chew and smile with them in confidence and conifort. ‘These are our clatms for our “Nature Teeth” which have been imitated but not equalled. We can sub- stantiate all claims and we back every statemenr with ry guarantee of 12 years perfect no “strings” to our warrant rrics It means this; There are If at any time during the life of the guarantee these “Nature Teeth” of ours become in any w defective, we will remedy the defect absolutely of charge. work in In other words, when we completo the mouth we guarantee that work to be your adbeolutely perfect, and we will keep it so for 12 years. All Werk Guaranteed Painiese by Our Famous Oraithesia Boston Dentists 1420-22 Second Ave. Opposite Bon Marche READY TO CLEAN UP sity Divided Into Districts for Week eon the east by ag apy gt and 19cm | thought It too good to be true. We Credit Prone Main 1186 ts ay You Interest AS SOON AS YOUR PURCHASE IS PAID FOR IN FULL (CASH OR CRED- IT) our interest department will issue you a check, 5 per cent of the total amount of your bill. ern ideas. The new ideas are always East- Bradbury¢iin$20% Other Reliable Makes $15 to*22-% OUR MEN’S DEPARTMENT ful of the latest SPRING APPAREL. is brim- Come in tomorrow and look over our splendid stock that will dress you correctly from the new Spring Hat to a durable pair of Shoes. CREDIT at the EASTERN costs you noth- ing extra. IT’S AN ACCOMMODATION, Merchandise With a National Reputation STETSON | AND CLARKSON HATS SUPERIOR UNDERWEAR, | ARROW SHIRTS AND COLLARS. UNIQUE HOSE. 1332-34 Second Avenue i} BARRY AND HOWARD- FOSTER SHOES 2i Union Street THE STORE WITH AN INTEREST DEPARTMENT the | soon = he arrived and were mar ‘HOLDS HIM THRU | | THICK AND THIN vith Slender or Oterwish! Keeps Love of | nels HE WEDS; LOSES HOME Vinie Daly |_ There ts @ certain type of woman | which seems to be able to hold « |man's love “thru thick and thin,”| |so to speak A shining example of such a type fe Vinie Daly, prima donna and danseuse at the Orpheum this week. This ts Vinie Daly's second hon- eymoon tour with the same man. Referring again to the old “thick and thin” proverb, he married her) once, in June, 1908, when she was thin and Just a vaudeville dancer. A tew weeks ago sho returned) from Europe, adorned with grand) opera laurels and avoirdupots. | Notwithatanding the tre of paren Htal sollcitude which caused the an jnoulment of his marriage in 1909, jand which has in no wise abated, |thie headstrong young sprout of the lexcessively wealthy Kohl family [took the bit in bis teeth and did it | again. When he heard Miss Daly had ar rived in New York, he lost no time in burning up the distance between Chicago and Gotham. “He wired | me he was coming to remarry me,” sald Mise Daly, “! went to a justice of the peace as! ried. ry happy Foun P. Kohl, her husband, ts the the late Charles Edward |Kohl, millionaire theatrical man The [Aer who left his fortune to his wy | widow, Now the Impulstve young Romeo fs fn dad again. His mother refuses to let him share tn @ sou of the family treas- ure, and pending the outcome of a eutt filed by him against his recal- citrant mamma recently for his patrimony, he is “paddling his own canoe” as manager for his talented young two-times bride, ith ave. N. W. Sal bey om the = | is. Weat Seattt 7 west fF south as Eindo- prince of the Bast) ‘AUTO TURNS TURTLE After skidding 48 feet, a car driven by Frank Pfelffer turned tur- tle Thursday night, slightly tnjuring Miss Ferne Leighton, 2833 W. 72nd st., when he tried to make a sudden stop at W. 72nd st. and 44th ave, N. B. Pfetffer was booked at th Ballard police station for reckless) jariving. DIES IN GREEN LAKE Relleved to have fallen from a bulkhead while taking a sun bath, Judge John W. Meyers, of W Idaho, was drowned in Green lake| Thursday. The body was found M\ floating on the surface of the lake at noon. Two hours before, pis #in- ter, Mra, E. C, White, 2304 N, 65th st, saw him sunning on the bulk- jhead. He was visiting Mrs, White | | TAGGART WON'T RUN | om | WASHINGTON, March 21 Tom | Taggart, recently appointed to the U. 8. senate to succeed the late Senator Shively, announced yester. |day that he would not be a candi- a to succeed himself. HENRY’S CALM CHAP BIRMINGHAM, Ala., March & Henry G, Webb calmly took a train out of Birmingham a moment be-| fore postoffice Inspectors were! about to arrest him. With him was| $100,000 in unsigned currency, the proceeds of the Central West Vir ginia train robbery BLAME THE STREET PELLINGHAM, March %1,—John Lewis, Goldie Baker and Marguerite Theisen, have filed sult against the city of Ferndale for $1,510 for in-| juries recelved when their automo: | bile tipped over, after crashing into| BE vome street Improvement material | P| week ago | i STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 31, (Continued from Page 1) Yes! —So answered Stephen Mallabee and Kerrison. (Continued Page T, Cotwme 3) TWO SKELETONS FOUND IN CITY While dig potatoes tn their patch on Alaska at, in Riverside, Friday morning, a skull and sev eral bones of a human skeleton were uncovered by R. L. Hays and William Ryale The bones were badly decompos ed and had evidently been burted many years ago. The coroner was notified and will endeavor to as-| certain the identity of the skele ton This {* the second skeleton to be found in Seattle during the last 12 hours. Frank Preant, 1608 Fighth ave, S, uncovered a human skull bones while digging away a at Elghth ave. 8. and Atlantic at It wan thought the b had been entombed 10 or 16 years ago. No evidences of foul play were found in elther case Accounts Only We Are DEPOSITORS In our new location. Why not stan yc Savings Account now! Fourth Avenue Corner of Pire Ole Hanson On account of alterations now being made at our new joffice at 316 Pike St., our loffices at 710 New York Block will be open for sev- eral days. 100 at at $50 per lot, will be sold on terms of $2 monthly if seen within the next few days. | | Boats leave at 9 a. m. Sun- | day. OLE HANSON & SON, 710 New York Block. Elliott 2. | Picion between the two that may 1916. PAGE 2 'MEX PROBLEMS ALONG BORDER | Half Million Mexicans Live in| Cities Along the Line OUTNUMBER U. S. FOLK BY LEON STARMONT EL PASO, Tex., March 30— Uncie Sam has a half-million Mexican probleme! the 600,000 Me der . In many they outnumber the English. speaking residents ten to one, and they comprise the larger half of El Paso. El Pa i) le full of Vil- Itetea ‘a command. e In the ‘panett ohieftain's army, picked up by the police on information or suspicion that they were plotting to Im- pede the army's movements, or even to attack Americans in the United Sta In any town along the border, the} Amorican—and there ts mutual aus spring Into hostilities on a most |triving cause Whether the Mexicans are sullen ly hostile or not—and there are many Americans who matntain| they are not-they are looked upon! with suapteton by other residents. And the Mexicans themselves are aware of the tension. They know! MAny suspect thetr intentions, and| that knowledge breeds fear that/ they are unsafe in this country Bull, there is no refuge for them across the Rio Grande, for there the country is #0 wrecked by revolu- tions {t will ecarcely support the present meager population. The Mexicans in the United) Btates—the poorer of them, | more ignorant—are really a pitiable lot. | A gang of them fs laying a mili jtary railroad to factiltate the move }ments of the American army that may kill thelr brothers, uncles and jcousins | | A aadeyed senora with a brood lof four sits under an irrigated tree at Camp Cotton, whence the 16th infantry departed tnto her native }land to slay all who oppose them Four others, too young to care, waved their hands gaily as the jtroops rolled by, and soldterly jhands answered t salute from the train window: MEALS $1.50 EACH roadhouse keepers ha’ 5 each to agree to main tain @ standard price of $1.50 for | meals. Tho high cost of food has boosted the meals from $1. Mexican population outnumbers the|§) the| qT) 500 Charming New Hats, Each One in a Different Style, Giving You Exclusive Individuality ata Very Moderate Price Indeed decided saving if they come laden models, or tailored eff trimmings to this sale ects with ribbon of newly You'll be fairly astonished at what stylish and becoming Hats we have been able to secure at this convenient price, and you can choose from flower bedecked and fruit bows A Special Selling of Easter Hats at a Special Price, 4.95 In Large or Small Shapes in the Fine Straw Braids, Flower Trimmed, Fruit Trimmed or Smartly Tailored With Ribbon Bows and Wings Five hundred Seattle women can secure thelr Easter Hats here Saturday at a very Trimmed Millinery at $4.95 and fancies—wings and novelty —Second Floor, South. 50c Pai “Kayser” Style 403, pure Silk to 8%, in white, Fashioned Boot Silk He “Thread Silk” or “Fiber Sil a pair shown anywhere Children’s Underwear, Weight, 25c Shirts, any syle; pure kneo and ankle length Girls’ ecru color, 25c garment. black, pongee, Shirts with short sleeves, Yr Gloves, sizes 5% gray, tan and | »se—black, white, k;” sizes 8% Summer white; 2 to 16 pants to match knee drawers; and to 10. You Know You're Thinking of Easter Gloves Women’s Silk Gloves Washable Kid Gloves $1.15 Pair Women's Cape Gloves, P. X. M. sewn, with one large fastener | Ivory, pearl, navy, with double finger tips, 60c a pair, | Women’s Silk Boot Stockings 50c a Pair pul 50 of t wrist. The new shades, tan, tty and sand. Full line of sizes. —Upper Main Floor, the season’s newest shades. Positively the best Stockings at 50c Women’s “Kayser” Union Suits Priced 50c Band top, cuff or lace knee, or crocheted top ribbon run; sizes 84, 36, 38 at 50c, Extra sizes, | 40 42 and 44, at 65c a garment, —Upper Main Ficer. WOODS GETS THE JOB WASHINGTON, March 31.—Off. cers of the national republican con Eressional committees were elected yesterda: Representative Woods, of Iowa, was chosen chairman. Hippodrome Theatre | Third and Cherry EUGENE LEVY, Mgr. Today and Tomorrow Only “No. 2034 ff and | the Warden” § | Presented by DONNA VICKORY Showing the In: Workings of a | Penitentiary “4 Other Acte—All- The Devil’s Toy __SOCIETY DRAMA | Matiness, 1 to 1 to & on BC Ci p.m. p.m. Weekday ys. co. Evenings, 6 to 11 p.m Saturday and Sunday | formance Continuous | PETER THOMPSON’S PIKE AND FIRST lc to 99c Store Have You Visit- ed the One to Ninety-nine Cent Store? If not, you « yourself this call what you can get 9H for the boys, phonograph records, notions 1 kinds, hardware for the Kitchen and for the gar don, soaps, very large in var eo 10-Cent Window Boys fchool Pants made from high wrade sultings, mixture clothe and serges, These Panta are built to wear, Rig your boy up at thin price. "35¢ 3 tor 990. Saturday Special for Men One Shirt One io Handkerehtet ALL FOR 99 CENTS Open Saturday Evenings siaiissipiannabiiaiie Make a point of calling Saturd In. @pect our lin compare pric A few of the Items below should be of Interest to you, Bach one represents ® sav- « to the purchaser, end saving is earn. ing. Bee how much you ean save and earn by Visit, tomorrow a pectal Milk F ne Pans Rerlin i land Saue Nae, Dt |Sasing, ete., Pans We sell Shirts of very select patterns, made They are ave f he n's Underwear Mnew Je union suite in all Sizes 36 to 44 — 39c ., 59c Swine Hib Vesta "ei “Silman Carter Special for Men One Shirt Oue Arrow Collar One Te One Handkerchiet ALL FOR 99 CERTS |sapped his good nature. jto argue with Wileon. | proud. \Visits C ongressman GEORGE TELLS STORY‘ Says Pride Saved Partner in North BY JACK JUNOMEVER lot of ple who | muscle and fiber in me was Pea “You meet Siting pride, said |to le down with Wilson and jet the | nate are ig 6 Bh belittling pride,” Georg’ “That's peceeen they've never seen it at work in a cris! “I have. It's about the handiest first-aid | know of. I'm thinking Jof how it saved my pardner's life Jin an arctic biizzard.” Friend, grizzled veteran of the snows, b Just come to Seattle to salt y his annual share of a rich plece of Iditarod id ground. “My partner and 1,” “were on our way from the dig ‘gings to old Circle City, 30 miles away, We had determined to make the trip in one day, and had been pushing hard thru the snow. ] “Wilson was a big, husky, jolly man, Ho was, I always suspected, | a bit vain of his strength. He de- lighted to twit me about my more modest proportions Kicks Wouldn't Help } “But this day the long hike had He was tired and sulky. Finally when we came to a lake, still some distance from Circle, he sat down on his} hand sled and said he could go no further. “Tm quitting, George,’ he croak- | ‘You go ahead, I'll rest here} a while.’ | “A atorm was coming up. I tried 1 threatened | jto kick him. But nothing I did| could spark him tnto action | “Then 1 got a hunch | “Well, if you ayed out, 1] id with a sneer, ‘I « 1 have | to haul you into Circle. You lie | f down on your sled; I'll hitch it to mine, and pull you.’ Muscles Yelled “Quit” “Can you do it, George? he ked in surprise. It was a chal nge to his size, of which he was “ ‘Sure,’ I replied, tho IT couldn't Father in Capital lto | dental board ‘THE BON MARCHE Pike Street —— Second Avenoe-———Union Street ———Elliott 41 Neste Se 2 pan Fleer have dragged him a yard. world go hang whi! “ ‘Bure,’ sled.’ “Well, 1f you can do It,’ he post | up, rousing himself, slept. I repeated, ‘get on your ‘I can do it, Leggo there—I'll pull my own , darn you.’ ‘And, witb that, he sta: | such a spurt that I pen o en Fed with him until we we lars body for sleep that would have drugged him to death in the gathering storm if I had left him on the lake, “Only his pride had saved him.” PAINLESS DENTISTRY IS POSSIBLE YES—ABSOLUTELY he explained, | p b patient a bit DR. L. R. CLARK Some people who have had “ nerve-racking and painful ex- periences in dental offices are inclined to the opinion that it is npt possible to perform dentistry without-hurting the patient. It is entirely possible and we can prove it. We have on file in our of fice a great many signed testi monials from substantial citi- zens, both men and women of Seattle and vicinity, who state over their own signatures that we have performed dental work for them without hurting them a bit. Practically all kinds of dental work are cuv- ered in these testimonials. We j invite you to come to our of- fice and look over these testi- monials, Satisfy yourself per- fectly that we can do as we say—that we can and do per- form the most difficult den- tal work without hurting the We want you to be thoroughly satisfied on this point before we even start your work, We have every up-to-date and scientific apparatus for the performance of painless dentistry. Now it may be that you have been putting off some very necessary dental work on account ot have the work done. the fear that If this be the case delay no longer. it would be torture to you to You will get the very highest class dental service in every respect at this off ice We have a staff of expert graduate registered dentists here for your service. dental class |your eyes Only Clark, D. D. S If you could « have teet tate a minute. Y« your lyou possibly could MARY ARCHER GLASS She's the daughter of Congress: | in the young and her home| popular set, By adding an ounce of camphor to each five gallons of gasoline, an | nglish automobilist saya he hae | effected a fuel saving of 20 per jeent that's better health, to have it done Insist on performance o Each work nly h in the very best of materials are |All work is guaranteed with an iron-clad, {signed by both the operator who did the owner | thoroughly responsible and realize perfect just how Each and every one of them has graduated frout |the best dental colleges and passed the examination of the state and every one of them has his certificate |from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front jof his dental chair, in plain sight of all. |take anybody’s word for it that you will get intelligent, high done here You don’t need the PROOF is right before used at this office, signed guarantee= work and by Ly R. manager of this office, who is important it wouldn't he: is to youl conditior qn u would get to our offic® just as quickly a& lomorrow is the first day of the month= for NOVO-CAT) painless dentistry, most dental offices you can’t get it at all. 1 good time to make a good resolution—to make a stat better efficiency, Glass of Lynchburg, ithe first steps to take on that most desirable road is to get Va, and ts dividing her time this| your tecth put into perfect condition, and here is the place winter between Washington, where | ishe is very | congressional in Virginia. for success. One of It is essential for the proper, We have lots of it. REGAL DENTAL OFFICES DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager. 1405 Third Ave., N. W. Corner Third and Union, At ‘

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