The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 20, 1916, Page 6

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VOC CHR CHO TEETER GD eee Assets $1,000,000 The Bank for Your Savings Bavings Accounts only are handled at this dank, and no Investments are made wehout first Considering the safety of our depositors, all transactions being posted in the bank Conducted along economical lines, we are able to pay our depositors the highest ot 41% Either small or large accounts may be opened, as littl $1 being suffictent to become a de iso have the advantages of the Joint Account—adding the name of your wife, mother or any person you choose, thus avotding legal complications at death 3 The Bank forSavings NOW LOCATED IN OUR OWN BUILDING Fourth Avenue at Pine Street rate in, CHeSSHSHSSSSE SSS SMSO SESS OO HES OC SECO A ? ‘+ | Tacoma, ia in Olympia today for the purpose of filing an initlative pet! tion to be passed on by the voters lwhich, {f enacted tntg.Jaw, would legalize the manufacture of beer tn | the state of Washington, permit Its jsale for export or direct to con- sumers by delivery at residences. | Here are the things it provides in cream and del!- fresh—this will de- it your palate. alleen value fe esusual. Age t terior fair tennis player on the lawn As happy as a brides, Her aching feet she promptly cured By using Cal-o-clde. Gecide: For Aching, Bu the pores cause. ‘Reaurts posit : box from any drugs e. Teeth SAGE TEA KEEPS | * YOUR HAIR man Feet By EDWIN J. BROWN fe vacation week. and ebildren should ag cleaned and “aled. week my c eS fil! back color, youthfulness and luster—Everybody is using it again tient, le. ant next Sun- ay. April Gray hair, howev andsome, f [notes advancing We the advantage of a youthful appear-| jance. Your hair is your charm, It| |makes or mars the face. When it |fades, turns gray and looks jstreaked, just a few applications of Sage Tea and Si r enhance its {fold Look young! prepare the recipe at home \or get from any drug store a lcent bottle of “Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound,” which is mere. ly the old-time recipe improved t the addition of other ingredients. Thousands of folks recommend this ready-to-use preparation, be cause {t darkens the hair beauti- fully; besides, no one can pos sibly tell, as it darkens so naturally and evenly, You moisten a sponge or soft brush with it, drawing this through the hair, taking one small strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears; after another application or two, Its natural color is restored and it becomes thick, | glossy and lustrous, and you appear years younger Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Com |pound is a delightful tollet requ |site. It is not intended for the cure, mitigation or prevention of disease. evenings until Sundays until 4 Ne ae Bellingham of- is at Elk and ats. AY’S AID TO BEAUTY ‘An especialiy fine shampoo for! ‘weather, one that dissolves and ly removes all dandruff, ex oll and dirt, can easily be at trifling expense by simply olving @ teaspoonful of canthrox & cup of hot water. Pour slowly sealp and massage briskly. This &@ soothing, cooling lather. } leaves the scalp spotlessly soft and pliant, while the (takes on the glossy richness natural color, also a fluffiness makes it seem much heavier ft is. After a canthrox sham arranging the hair is a pleasure. vertisement. work April 24th to 29th Inclusive AT THE MOORE Six Nights, with Matinees on Wednesday and Saturday STANDARD GRAND OPERA COMPANY with Florencio Constantino as “Guest” Star Presenting in English “THE WILD HUNTSMAN OF BOHEMIA,” by von Weber; Humperdinck’s fairy fantasy, “HANS E L AND GRETEL,” and Gon nod’s immortal Popular Prices—Faust” Nights, 26c to $1.50. Ati other performances, 25c to $1.00. Box seats, $2.00 and $2.50. Seats Now Selling at the Moore LES INITIATIVE TO PERMIT THE MANUFACTURE OF BEER, William Virges, former brewer of} 1 | interested all know | 50- | BY KENNETH W. PAYNE NEW YORK, April 20 She's been a pawn tn the diplomatic | game, has Countess Von Bernstorff, and {t's brought tragedy to her un deservedly." * A social acquaintance of the Ger “Manufacture of beer in the ati Payment by brewerles of an | nual state license fee of $1,000, A barre! tax for all beer con- sumed in the state, no matter where it is manufactured. All beer taxes shali go Into | highway funds. Beer may be delivered to prt- “ ie residences without per mali beer to be sold In bottles. Drug stores must get permits to buy beer. Smal! of ¥ kno izing ‘hotel of Mquor tn large ted In Se r cities of the state a » and oth Thursday The bill, which | brewers of the | brewertes shall backed by state, provides that be permitted to | manufacture home use and ex port and Hiquor Itcenses may be granted to hotels of 60 or more | It was fi The 4 Thursday Olympta. handbills read “Are you in giving renewed ao itivity to our industries and show “. hospitality to our: ¥' he bi bill will be vo CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ‘MAYOR AND CHIEF SEE GAMBLING RAID Jout in a dose In spite which Powers scended, thay only four men }J. Lanky and rest were gone. Typical Gambling Joint a typical Chinese gam extending into other os, all equipped with ret means of exit. Lad to trap doors the it's Grandmother's recipe to bring! his men able to Ung Kong, Ah Lay, Demonto The de- der in floor | There mysterious passage | ways and a half-dozen different ex- its into the alley All about the main room were tables, recently deserted—poker, |blackjack and chuck-a-l Inspector Powers Chief Becking ™. Ten minute ater the chief and | Mayor Gill descended the stairway |thru the big tea chest Taken to Headquarters the paraphernalia,” the chief, and, one at a in 18, and other were carted abov were telephoned | dere | the gambling |street and up to th police head hoisted to s the first time a mayor and of together had person-| vised the cleaning out of| joint in this city. m looking for more of these joints,” sald Beck! am. “When I told the gamble they must | close meant 8 it” I POLICE CLOSE HODGE’S CAFE Hodge, son of Sheriff H. Van N n, hh Phalia cafe t corted to lay ed on @ charge of vi law a up, William Hodge, and R partner in th in a were | f dr | Leonard, ted von walter after Patrol was served with a drink of wt at the cafe | Hodge was released, Chief Beck- | Jingham holding it unnecessary to| book both proprietor The cafe | was temporart! A few hours before, Chief Ne r » had ordered th tion 2,000 worth of 1 led in r t raids. | M Gill was pre affair,” wh pulled the ity wh were knocked in 1 |tents poured Into newer A large crowd gathered to ness the ceremony, | arre R | Peter n ¢ off barrels their wiiil | States. 'Better Than Slow! k \* STAR—THURSDAY, APRIL 20, 1916. PAGE 6 “Now the American-born Count Von Bernstorff h seen her father’s and husband's country at war with the land after whose queen her daughter wan named, and faces the possi- bility of a rupture between her own native fand and the country of her fathers!” The countess is not well America, ® small ealthy| Her ryi ag | mever: ‘ tune the importing business { New York in Paris Por 17 years her Orman Right, ‘Count Von Bernatorff; | center, her daughter, Countess Pour tales; below, Count Raymond Pour tales; left, Count Von Bernstorff, German ambassador to the United nis danbaneaten’s tainly known tn outside of menting was com » strange roman the ty soctal father, 1 York Lucke iF ade a for ckemeyer, girl who, Bernstortt eat and sristooratic in o most ar ar ambasna es of ( involv fan m history “An American girt by birth, an intimate of the most exclu. sive London society, a lover of Paris and the Parisians, her in fluence and charm were hailed In four capitals as likely to ac complish a rapprochement of America, France and England with the ka ‘es empire. Instant. Hair Stain muntry Gunther, | achooling, was brought | ocratic American way, 1d until th age of 21, when he went to G many for bin military service, h |was o humble clerk in » Wall st bank Ww cour after his in a dem: | a w the war » remained tn Red Cross nurse, he the front and her hust his diplomatic du United States, GO UNINSTRUCTED SEWARD, Alaska, Apri! After defeatiag a motion to In Alaska’s two delegates to the re on to go for Roosevelt, the territorial con vention here yesterday decided to send them instructed. The two delegates are Lewts P. ford | of Juneau, and William A. Gilmore broke out Munich as a} son went to d returned | in the “Restorers”’ NEW ORLE | Telegrams ree from William J deliver an address nounced that he would come. Ho enid his presenc quired at Wasbin ; | WET TOWNS G0 DRY D., Ar went ipal SIOUX FAL Fourteer | South to muni 8 Dakota da » dry towns went wet Pierre, "si! | state capital, and Hot Springs are| Jamong the drys now. Sigux Falls | stayed Aberdeen stayed dry | FIGHTS TO GET GIRL A wet SISURAT nTED r'lAG cauned by A simple. SAN JOSE hat 41 20,—After fight for 6. id Marian, her whom she was comp to abandon two y Ernest Von Wussow, { left today for Colusa to fight adoption proces: dings instituted there by the child's foster parents, Rey. and Mrs. F. G. Pollette, Palo Alto. Cal... as oor a | ars ago, of relleves excess stomach wate, pa stoma of sorders | | a | - REAL PAINLESS DENTIST S MUSTEROLE—QUICK }It Soothes and Relieves Like a Mustard Plaster Without the Burn or Sting ° STEROLE is a clean new | Cintiner ade with the the | mustard, It does all the tho old-fashioned mustard plaster it better and does not blister ot have to bother with a You simply rub it on—and the pain is gi sand nurses u ond Construction will begin shortly of | the Sherwood apartments, a six- latory building to cost $70,000, on the triangle bounded by Me Olive 1 Harvard ave white of of! work In order to (whalebone) lightest and does not cover mouth; you can cob; gfaranteed introduce our plate, which {s strongest plate known, the roof of the bite corn off the 16 ye MUSTER-| to thet Gold crown $3.00 $15 set of teath (whalebone ) 88.00 $10 set of teeth $5.00 | Pet Bridge work, per tooth, gold $3.00) White crowns 83.00) ir Gold fillings $1.00 up | Asthma Silv ings 500 | Pleurt Platina fillings 750 | Pains Joints, ears. | yy Docte | OLE recom it tell Sore tier Ce you what Throat Neck tion, adly from Croup, N ralgla Rheumatism, 1 und Aches of the Sprains, Sore Chilblaing, Fr of the Cheat (it | vents Pneumonia) ete} At your drug They ¥ c nchiti imbago, | Back or] Mus aclea, | osted Feet, | | often pre Al % guaranteed for 16 Have impression taken in the morn- ing and get teath same day. IExam- ination and advice free. Call and Seq Samples of Oor and Bridge W We Sta © Test of Time. Colds n t's, in 2be and Boe |Jars, and a special large hospital | for $2,560. | ure you get the genuine MUS ROLE, Refuse imitation stomers who t you ask for, The Muster ring this ad with you, Cut - Rate | OHI Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY #7, Opponite Wreser-Paterson Co, ur present patronage t= by our early custor till giving mood 1 eapeciatty |} f the ‘BILL | BRYAN IS busy: whore lit |take so much cc | would certatr ‘RELIEF! NO BLISTER! WOULD PAT LIKE TO SEE OWN STORY IN PRINT? You don't know what asking, Pat,” T paid, as nx began to go at trip-hammer Why, do know course you that tn little book, that ri in tt b to that t an! ing person, Pat all the Hives of my Every and therr changed — the I've confided to 1 ke ha your rom ship Chad like to see that {n Pat turned pale. ms rather yught It was & n document pages of your litt Margie, d wretches of ourselves of friends let the world’ to perhay little a sincere HIS heart apee but y uld not you are the all ave talked d to no li cannot fol unfo friends ith How print My trivial, but part of the stor not 0 66, we to world us ts 8 one book errors, sorrows thought of the oyn and b analysts a greatest to men t, my no saint almost fed n't you ses ™ lam preter et Iwhed by the storm. —Ten persons were reported cl have been tornadoes of Kansas and Miseourl during the night. In southwestern and central sour. alized and details of the dis aster are meager. Six are said to have met death | has ewhe | into stories things writers never dreamed of 1 4 not u& » misunderstand you have told little were & MAN H ny Some za having a had wished y« "| ou know that Interrupted Pat, his voice] bling with emotion | ply are ju being as iS | “You no more than I ways live up to your ideals. | 1 men feel that ‘art ts ne our writ too bh lovely because you human the same T ane can ee, 1 some ction,’ knowing make th th | e ectt care-| f r heroes role, | and only hu hu thel t sweet. without hero! + saints are not but without without t r sinners lities. ing to tell you some ng that very I have fe between what we call evil t# all of of an eye sin, to , I'm ee the space wo good and what the etightest the Nic only tongue at times. lead temptation’ | us all, for] in mortal | ¥ withstand | a red Mrs LINCOLN, returns from th Scott. BRYAN BEATEN ential primary continued to ulated both had been deft for governor, and the former secre- | ought tary of state is seventh fn the list of ¢ pur deleg M 8 h gentle reminder when the time comes to order coffee FOLGERS Goulen aig 45c Coffee 45c Quality J. A. FOLGER & CO., San Francisco SS SS) “= TORNADO IN TWO STATES. KILLS 10 AND INJURES 100 KANBAS CITY, Mo., April 20. ! Elmer Packared, trying to out- jan the cyclone by driving at ter- rific speed in his automobile, was overtaken by it and killed when the his machine near was pinned under d today and 100 believed to Injured when thr opt different are: ined He uth Fairbanks, 7, was killed | when Rich Hill, Mo,, was swept by the tornado. Her home was demol- | ished in Rbinebart | was reported wrecked. The report that ev Rhinehart, Mo., had t nd 30 injured was, confirmed. Heavy A special trainjdone to Lowry remove the in-| Rockville, It was reported that Jefferson City, California and baby of the|Olean, all in Missouri, had been killed near Fort | struck Near-by Property damage Is enormous southeastern Kansas and Mis- Wire service is demor- ry house tn en destroyed however, un- damage was City and Stover, Mo., which was demol sent to Miller ‘on family cities rushed aid. WILSON RAPPED BY SEN. JONES WASHINGTON, April 20.— Senators Jones and Poindexter, of Washington, expressed to- day, opposite views of the pres- ident’s ultimatum to Ger many. “I don't see why the president did what he did,” sald Jones. “If we are going to break our diplo- relations with Germany, we to break off with other na- that are persistently violat- ing our disputed international rights, and who, if they were in Germany's place, would do exactly 1 States Senator bert M.| a8 she is doing, and probably go k has arently beén re-| much farther.” ed. Judge Kennedy \s run-| “I agree with the president's pol- ead of ex-Gov. Aldrich for|{cy, as f plican # torial nomina- | said. fighting, the issue is robbed of tten are in a| what might otherwise be tragic.” publican nom-| Congressman Humphrey refused to make any comment, IN HOME STATE. Neb. 20.—An prefer-| tab-| indicated that | W. Bryan April raska i today Ww. J an and C. ted. bebind Keith ocratic nomination Bry Ne den matic tions ates for delegates at large fonal convention, with tes to be chose Kelvie o race a rt ©. P. presidential pri-| Representative Dill said be be Henry Ford still has a lead,|lMeved even if diplomatic relations Cummins second and Hughes! were broken off, the United States sor third should stay out of the war, tn | right time uxta i others in such n harsh Pat, leasant That plac {s the re why book, It th me be perfectly sincere human “And Margie perfect! that Is it she just nid b y why, my make people think more charitable derstant it, Pat? Would them make them u “But would one understan ple truth of it Pat I 1 not the things I have to my little book clarified life f I know ¢) are human—expe daily paper chronicle t | know that m: ld t make 1 the H all? Tn TELL to TOLD 80 1 know Nt in it riences wo} those ‘ritics who think that in all t of which we know, an ever stood the teat of perfec TOM | BE good friends with VELVET an’ you'll be better friends with yourself and f the world. A 3 tion.” (To be continued) NO LUMP SUM CLAIMS Injured city ally be awaré claim Ce Caldwell r |tin ance committee. FRENCH MAKE GAIN PARIS, April 20—French troops piured a fortified work northwe) Vaux during the night, taking prisoners and much booty, tated today FIX GOOD ROADS DAY OLYMPIA will be in a mployes canr Couns the city 0. od Roads | Lister de Wednes- | ril May 1¢ proclamation day Gov clared day. MERRIMAC HERO Osborn Deign 6, coxswain on the Merrimac when Lieut. Hobs¢ and his band sunk it et Santia, dead at Canyon City, ¢ to word rece Deignan, superi station DIES in accord br tendent W at W Fran} the postoffice Seattle. WADHAMS, OIL MAN, Word was received Wednesday b officers of the local branch of hi plant of the death of BH. A. Wad hams, president of the Wadhams Oil DIES Prices Ordinarily Charged ON ALL CASKETS We Manufacture and Maintain Our Own Factory A COMPLETE FUNERAL $47.50 Including the use of our private parlors and the use of pur own private crematory, (NOT A PAUPER COUNTY CREMATION), Because we are manufacturers of caskets, and because own our own modern crematory in our own building, we are enabled to give this remarkably low price on a complete funeral We invite you to visit our establishment and see for your- self what we furnish BLEITZ-RAFFER1 Y UNDERTAKING AND CREMATION CO. 617 Kilbourne St. Lady Attendant. Phone North 525, we

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