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

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ODHOUSE. GRUNBAL i. di FURNITURE CO'INC IM WE'LL TRUST YOU your own individual ideas. UR credit service has been established for your con- venience. To assist you to furnish your home along Our terms are casier and our prices are lower than will be found anywhere. No extra charges; no interest. JUST YOUR WORD 00 Worth of Homefurnishin; .00 Worth of Homefurnishings . 100,00 Worth of Homefurnishings . 150,00 Worth of Homefurnishings . 200.00 Worth of Homefurnishings THAT YOU'LL Pay 1.00 Down, $1.00 Per Week 3.00 Down, 1.25 Per Week 5.00 Down, 1.50 Per Week » 7,50 Down, 2.00 Per Week + 10.00 Down, 2.50 Per Week 300.00 Worth of Homefurnishings ENUINE Guernsey Casserole in 2 nickel-plated brass holder, exactly like tustration, § quarts. Regular price $2.50. Special ‘Tuesday, while they last TLL quarter-sawed oak Dress er in the dull golden fintet has swell front, large 42-inch dase and a beveled plate mirror fase spect... $14.45 HARD Woop Dining Chair in the golden finteh; hi the white enamel fint as two-inch continuous p and five fiutes rods. Regular price $10.50 $ Bpecial at 7.65 inches in diameter, holding 2 95c LOW-Back in fumed has ful covered in leather. ¥ price $9.50 Bungaiow Rocker or golden finish spring automobile seat genuine Spanish “specter. $6.15 Spectal EAMLESS Tapestry Rug the ox extra heavy y. 1 long _ wear qu Regular price $16.50, Speci $13.95 saddle seat $1.95 Turn inc 416% 424 +Pike Street: PRESIDENT SIGNS RURAL CREDIT BILL 17.—Ac WASHINGTON. July companying the act with a speech paying tribute to the farmers of the country, President Wilson today signed the rural credits bill. It pro- Video establishment of a system of Jand mortgage banks to handle long | time mortgage loans to farmers. Marvelous Chemical ole Medicine Chest in Itself With a hottie of Benetol handy you can do av with arnica famphor, Ja ginger, witch hazel, peroxide, carbolic acid, bi thioride of mercury tablets, lin Mente, fodine, and all such old Weak or dangerous household medi- ¢ines—-for Henetol will do the work of all of them quicker and better. Try a bottle. Follow directions. Benetol for sale by all druggiate, Cantion—Be sure to secure Bene tol In the orig red cartons For any desired information re Rarding Benetol preparations, ad Green The Benetol Co., Benetol Bldg., Minneapolis. ‘. |PLENTY OF BULLETS FOR TEUTON FORCE PETROGRAD, July 17.—Pro- impressed by the Steady advance, which see- saws first at this point and then at that, the Germans are foundly massing enormous forces be- fore Kovel. They are bringing up every available reserve in the hope of stalling the new Russian mowing machine. The present comparative calm is deemed here to be a mere prelude |to resumption of heavy and im |portant fighting. The Russians apparently do not lack ammunition Printed on the cartridge cases are the phrases “Don't Spare Bullets Don't Spare Courage. ‘There's enough aplenty for all.” WANT TO ENLARGE For the purpose of determining methods to enlarge the organiza tion, the Women Roosevelt Hughes Republican club will hold the first precinct meeting in th | University district y 20 at 3:30 Dp. in the University school. All | Interested women are urged to at tend NATIONAL MARKET Always has big money sav Olive Oil, Macaroni, Groceries. Whipped Cream Choco ing specials. Butter, Eggs, Delicatessen and ancy lates, 5O0¢ Ib NATIONAL MARKET 405 PIKE ST.. NEAR FOURTH RAILROADS IN ST. LOUIS, that the July 17 government prepared now than ever before to Operate the railroads of the coun try, J. J. Keegan, of the department of labor, predicted today the gov ernment would take over the roads should the four great railroad brotherhoods call a strike of their members He said that once the govern ment took charge of the roads the men would go to work He based bis assertion on the fact that the Declaring} government had long since recog was better| nized the eight-hour day, one of the STAR—MONDAY, JULY 17, 1916. pins SAYS THE U.S. WILLTAKE OVER CASE OF STRIKE bones of contention In the present controversy | Keegan wouldn't say plane had been formulated to take over the roads, However, he sald that, ac cording to his information, this step cannot be avoided if the men leave their posts | ‘But I cannot conceive that either the railroads or the broth erhoods will let a break occur,” he sald, “A compromise seems more probable,” FRISCO VOTES | STRIKEBREAKER TO END STRIKE SAN FRANCISCO, July 17. Striking longshoremen here today | prepared to while awaitir ders of the resume work at once action by Longsboremen’s union in Northern regarding between local Southern cities ment reached and the agre stevedores and em ployers jted to the San Francisco strikers at a secret ballot, was ratified by & substantial majority According to the agreement, the junion men wiil re 9 work under the same terms ® before the strike, and a committee will be ap pointed > employers and em ployes to vork out a new of wag THREE KILLED AS TRAIN HITS AUTO Milwaukee The compromise, submit t sched The passenger trats claimed th « th of three ersor and injured two others at Firw station, near 7 o'cloc Sunday night The dead are: Jobn Conginske, Loretta Conginake and Ed Able, of Firwood. Conginske was a prom! nent berry grower The injured: C. FE. Andrew Conginske The auto had just topped the rise at “Dead Man's curve” when the fast moving passenger train ap- peared. The antomobile was cut in Puyalinp, at Carlson and half. he thre s hurl track. The hurled into a The tonneau, carryir victims who we ed 150 feet down front portion was pasture, throwing the occup into a clump of bushes. The t | broke the fall and probably |the men from death | The tajured ones were rusts to the Sumner hospital. KAISER SEES MEN RETREAT | | LONOON, July 17.—Kaiser Wiiheim was at the Somme front when his army retreated under battering British blows in Saturday's fight, it became known today. An official statement {ssued at Berlin confirmed previous reports of the kaiser’s presence on the front of the great Anglo-French of- fensive, where he bas been visiting his troops and inspiring them to more stubborn defense. The Berlin statement says the kaiser confer red with his chief staff and commanding generals, visited the hospitals and conferred several fron crosses. Press dispatches from the British front today brought new detatls of the successful attack, on Saturday in which the woods of Delville and Pazentine le Petit w captured and British at one point pene trated enemy third-line trenches PEACE IF ‘GRAND’ PUSH NOW FAILS | the BY CARL W. ACKERMAN BERLIN, July 17.—That the al Nes’ offensive will end in defeat a few weeks and will be | tollowed by negotiations for pei |is the opinion of well informed per jsons in Berlin The check administered to the British in the death struggle north of the Somme has given rise to the national hope that peace wil) follow the fighting in Picardy which has been marked by un precedented slaughter. The German people are practic ly united in be’ ing that the at | tempt of the allies to force the Ger man line 1s doomed to failur RUSSIANS AGAIN LAND IN FRANCE 17.— jan BREST, France, July Another convoy of Ru troops landed here today. Five Russi had previously landed at Mar and some of them have been in action on the French Champagne front. It is belleved that more than 20,000 Rugsian troops are in | France. LUNDIN RUNS AGAIN convoys of the mem KILLED IN AUTO } TACOMA, July 17.—Prose- cutor Remann is today holding In custody five striking long shoremen in connection with a Sunday riot, in which a strike breaker, Rangval Leinann, aged 22, wae shot and killed, and Sam James, a union man, 32, was wounded, probably fa tally The five are: C. Carlson, George Daigetty, Victor Atota, W, C. 8, Peaks and F. F. Bar | row. Some of the strikers in a mob |that had hurled stones at the ma chine in which Leinaon was going to work, boarded the car and at tempted to drag its occupants out A shot was fired, then Superior Judges are to decide to day sitting n b whether a | grand jur all be called to inves Ugate riotous conditions in Ta-/ coma due to the strike | Seattle and ‘Tacoma longshore- | }men in great number will attend | |the funeral of Alexander Laidlaw. }a striker shot and killed by J. F.} | Dowling, a spectal deputy sheriff, | |iast Friday, The services will be! held Wednesday Sheriff afety Comm Public have Longmire and Pettit ed the Le inin that pi wtr ust Stop ed t lice to disperse all « ing crowds VICTIMS OF BIG RIOT | HERE RECOVERING | FA. Webb, keeper of a etall in the Pike Place public market, and William rk, a union longshore an, are recovering Monday from bullet wounds re in a str riot at First ave. and Pike at., @wwly Saturday ev ne O. W. Bridgefarmer, a special guard employed on the docks, and King Robinson, a negro strikebreak-| er, are nursing broken noses and many minor hurta, sustained in the riot. A number of other negroes were beaten up. The atrikebreakers were return- ng to the city from the Great North- ern dock about 7 o'clock, when thetr ear wan boarded by strikers at the] | foot of Pike st During the running rtot, Bridgo-| mveral men shouted, pigeon!” They farmer says |“There's a stool | grabbed him, he said, knocking him |down. His nose was broken. He; said ho was robbed of $46. | Detectives arrested F. Exell, union longshoreman, for carrying j@oncealed weapons, when they found a gun in his pocket | Nearly 5,000 persons were attract ed by the shooting and hurried to the scene, regardless of conse quen | As the excitement died down, the began searching participants. A lonk dagger was taken from G L. Abenath, a negro, and a gun was found in the possession of George) Minor, another negro. Under the which |seat of James People’s auto, }had been loaded with strikers, was! |found another revolver, Me t# a ne- gro. A. W. Biggs, another negro chauffeur, had a 45 caliber revolver, | GET IN WRONG CAR Arthur Dahl an open charge by pending an investigation Sunday morning when Capt. Chas. Sullivan, of the |police department, caught them at | tempting to run off with his automo: bile | Harry C. Gray, of the Washington garage, 1215 Fifth ave., says he saw the men try to crank another ma-! chine in front of his garage, and after an unsuccessful attempt they turned to the poiice car. | | | George Kehoe and are booked on the police of their actions A WIDE RANGE OF CHOICE MEATS | FRYE’S QUALITY MARKETS | TUESDAY SPECIALS | Choice Steer Boiling 124c Choice Shoulder 15c Pork Steak.... |Choice Steer |Shoulder Steak..... | Pork Backbones, |5 Ibs. for.......+... Choice Spare Ribs.... Full Cream American Cheese.... WING MARKETS: Ave. MARKET atern Ave. LAKE MARKET Prosecutor Lundin has thrown ine his hat into the ring for reelection oT and announces he ill nat use nT but will rely solely on bis record, | Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp | W.F. Van Ruff, city attorney, has] It Signifies Purity and Quallty lformally declared his candidacy for! Shops Open Until 6:20 P. M ‘prosecuting attorney AD | aE ae PAGE 5 Now Playing to Capacity Houses Frank Keenanii 15c | STRAND SECOND AVE., BET. SPRING AND SENECA STS. — and Enid Markey In the Strongest and Most Startling Production Ever Shown in Seattle WAR'S WOMEN { 11 A. M., 12:40, 2:20 ] 3:55, 5:30, 7:05 [340 and 10:15 P. M.J ADMISSION Matinees and Evenings —> 15c

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