The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 21, 1916, Page 9

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geo Brass rdinieres, Yooh, made heavy mored » Regular — 79¢ WATER GLASS for preserving eres Very quality bam ers. ten pensortes: Elastic tH Air and Cabinets, fons, Rut ing — in carry — me thing. tn Supplies. Second Veesertp none SS rites SALES n e=- ngs COND AND PIKE One Cent Specials Solldified Alco- One Cream, and tan bottles bottles Sec Yale's Almond Cream, for . Boe A. BR Blossom Ic Yale's Face Powder, EES Sle 2he O'Cedar Polis! 2 dottles for ..... $00 size Grape Juice, 2 quarts 26c |} Armour’s | 10c Sic “Tle $1.00 Princess Comb and $1.00) Hair Brush. meg 1 01 2 for Carter's Be size 26c Little Liver Pills. 2 for 1) Raffer and Nail Briex, Be N od 26c Be eee *, Doxes . 2.6 Sle 1c Court Plaster, 2 pkgs. OP i... ee, for 100 Corn for . ibe T 2 cans for $1.00 Watch Guarant lock Xu rup of bottles for .. Bathing Capa, new stock, cach Be and S50) Bathing Shoes, fit all tor HUT WAY CHARGE ARSON R. Gillard, alias P. Kelly, ts fac {mz a state arson charge Friday, fled by Prosecutor Lundin. He is ted of starting a fire In the Bee house, 517 King st., Mon- all Keenan and Markey Women Thestrangest drama that has been shown in Seattle in many months. TODAY and Saturday Only 10c Afternoons 15c After 7 P. M. —_ THE Second Ave. Bet. Spring and Seneca Abdominal Electric Vibrators, Vapor "SWIFT is -Cent Sale ey ought to b SATURDAY ONLY for sunburn Nal! Buffer and 1 10e Camphor 2 cakes, Adhesive Tape, juaranteed Writing $ Gloves, sizes 2 Are Hot Water ‘Clana t are you bled w na tipat! and sou n? i And tr you are, try bottle of Ad ler-l-ka, You will be 8 prised at how much better you will fee Always, 00 tie. $1.0 the apy ater Bed Pans atery Alr ber fact vet « and Pike Phone Kiltett 1 for Your = ECOND AND PIKE Cent Candy Special Swift's High Grade Choeo lates, neatly boxed, "regular $0c Ib. Special, full 25c¢ pound .. Bunte’s Burnt ate, regular » | Special pouna .. 16¢ Bunte’s Fru Jelly Drops, reg ular 300 1b.’ Spe full 20c pound Ruthymole fog Cream. 2 6c quality Hazel 26c 26c lle good Brushes, llc Plasters, lle m Powder Milk ¢ 3 2 bottles 800 Grownall ney Remedy 5le 2 bottles Iron and Beet. 76c Wine, ; bottles Zhe Tinctite Green a, for shampoo- ing, for . 26c Tie Amertean Hair Dye brown, black and dark brown, 2 bottles for . 16c Sy Pepsin, Tab- lc FREE Wright & Diteon Tennis Balla with ever irchase of any Wright & Ditson sie $1.01 WILSON URGES POLISH RELIEF WASHINGTON, July 21-— President Wilson has signed a personal letter urging a quick solution of the Polish relief problem, and it will be dis patched Immediately to the rulere of England, France, Rus- sia, Germany and Austria FLEETS IN BATTLE? | LONDON, July 21 |Danish sailors arriving from —Reports that the | North sea today heard the roar of | heavy guns at sea, led to rumors that there may have been an en- gagement between Russian and | German vessels. | There have been no official dig- patches yet to support the rumors, ‘SULPHO-SAGE DARKENS GRAY HAIR Used by Thousands Because So Easy and Safe—Not a Dye To have your hair just exaotl you would Iike !t—radiant, hi Glossy, lustrous, soft and dark, with- out @ af gray streaked hair showing—Juar Sage Hair Color Restorer to your hair tonight, and do it every day for le of weeks ay, streaked, beautiful, even, faded hair dark shade, harmless and dy to use, Prove to ur hair can be as 4 beautiful ax you want it Perfectly lye tell Drug Mone Giris’ and Children’s TS KAVANAGH’S First and Union. 1006 First. at Madison. Boys’, - DEUTSCHLAND as ithy, Sulpho- see how quickly turns the stops falling and the dandruff fe not a STAR—FRIDAY, JULY 21, PAGE 9. BRITISH SWEEP (COLLARS GO UP; ON IN FRANCE) 15° STRAIGHT! 3 | | | on|Use German Crown Prince's im * t aise Ante a Wirthas Mus Cracker Manufacturers Raise Ante and Method Seattle Prices | st os Go Up o's STILL AT ANCHOR|FLOODS AID GERMANS costs. BY CARL D. GROAT ye “ BALTIMORE, duly 21— Father used to wear blue cel- | Germany's firet undersea lulold ones that'd last a life. | 1916, AWAITS STORM | Report Germans Plan Elements Helping U- Boat Liner | HIGH BLAMED LONDON, July 21.—The Ger. man crown prince invented the nuteracker style of attack, where enciroling arms strove to Squeeze out resistance about a given section, but it has re mained for the Franco-British offensive to put this etyle of of- fensive to another use. Briefly, the scheme Is to ad vance a wedge—the fulorum of the nut cracker—and then push outward the two arms of this wedg The Germans squeezed an opened nut cracker together; the allles are opening a closed nutoracker, Such a scheme Is In opera- tion today In the Peronne sec- tor, the British swinging for ward their arm of the nut cracker with terrific attacks In Longueval and Delville wood, and the French pressing for- ward south of Peronne. Floods are helping the Germans withstand the allied onslaught, not only In the Westera, but the East ern battle front So devastating freighter, the Deutschiand, time if they didn’t catch fire. still at anchor here to- day. All “inside” Information as to her departure time has gone ow, Capt. Koenig and the others to |the venture merely smiled knowing jamiles today and replied to ques. |tone with the now threadbare Pleasantry: “We'll go some time between now and Christmas.” It was another night of watchful waiting Press boats scoured the bay, while the tug Timmine, watchdog of the Deutschland, played her jdlinding searchlight tn every direo tion. | A strange tramp steamer, show- ing no name, planted herself in the bay beyond the Deutschland pler, Jat a point hitherto avolded by big {ships | This vessel, equipped with full | wireless, was a target until dawn for the ceaseless light aboard the | Timmins | Hatled by press boats, the mys |terious stranger answered uninte! |igibly in broken English A German naval officer told the | United Press that probably the Deutschland will head out tomor- row or Sunday. “You may rest assured,” he said, “that Capt. Koenig will not ven ture out of the Capes If the water is calm and peaceful. He wants a storm to drive the allied ships} In Galicia, Petrograd reported to- further out. He then will be able| day, overflowing of the river Dnet-| much |to avoid them, and the ruffied wa-|ster has hampered the Russian ad-| “pitteon conte st ter will prevent their sound de-| vance 1,” replied E. | 1 tectors from picking bim up. Once} On the northern Russian line} pers boosted the price becaus out of the capes, he is safe. {Gen, Kuropatkin was hurling his|manufacturers in the E: Weather conditions early men forward today in a continu®|/them pay moro to cover the co gave promise of a storm tion of the assault on the Riga sec-|of buying scarce material and next 24 hours tor. ing workmen at higher wages.” Yesterday's gains by the French} And so ‘t ts all over town—16 around Peronne give the Franco-|cents straight for linen collars for British forces a perfected link of|men—-90 oents for half a dozen, seam ation in the railroad from /or $1.76 a dozen. ‘ler nearly to Combles, following tn is quoeral way the line of the front. | Combies had been used by the |Germans as a depot distributing jcenter, but today with the town In the direct zone of the French arttl-| lery fire and Ikely to fall at any moment, the German forces have been compelled to change their sup | ply base to # point farther back SEIZE BOOZE CARGO i An auto delivery wagon, two cases of bonded whisky and 48 bot tles of beer were seized by the dry squad while investigating house |‘ ; at 2816 Second ave. Thurvday. will artdeally given’ Savos and John Soter were mplexion. nt ap arrested when they drove up fn the mA ete ot Age auto while the dry squad detatll was |afternoo at work. Nick Vanzel and A. P|!" & lot coming reply will be an accept- | |Dracobly were arrested tn the pint wite ance of the Mexican proposal. | | how The auto belongs to Harry | more refr { | |Dallimetroe, 200 Third ave. 8., be —@ | cording to the license records, MEXICO CITY, July 21.—Antici | pating acceptance by the United States of its suggestion for discus sion of the border question by a commission, !t was indicated here today that the three commissioners who will represent Mexico will be) Roberto Pesquetra, formerly the first chief's representative in Wash-| ington; Luis Abrera, minister of; finance, and Alberto Pani, director | of railways. | Publication in newspapers here of the note which was sent to the U. 8, on July 11 aroused favorable} comment. Three lines of discussion were) suggested to the U. 8. in the note a co-operative plan of hunting down bandits by pursuit of troops of both |nations on either side of the bor- | der, plans for withdrawal of Ameri ean forces from Mexico, and in vestigation of the instigators of the raids on American territory. It was expected if the U. S. gave) acceptance of the note the commis sioners would meet at Niagara) Falls. ride Whenever they got solled, he didn't have to send ‘om to the laundry. He'd wipe ‘em off with his handkerohlef, If he had one. There'd have been nothing to it, but they were high priced. They cost father two- bits. Then along came a Yankee tn- ventor who started making ‘em out of paper. They were cheap, but you couldn't wipe off the spots with your handkerchief, and when you perspired they'd wilt, It wasn’t long until another fel-| low found a solution to the wilting | problem by making ‘em out of/ linen, The price was two-forequarter, and you could send ‘em to the laundry four or five times without them getting a saw-edge. But ey thing is all pleces ag Our sporting editor went to his regular haberdasher to buy a couple of new ones Thursday aft ernoon and they cost him 15 cents aplece. | He roared. It didn't do any good. The storekeeper stuck to his price, and got {t. But our sporting editor Is an 1n-| credulous chi | He called up the Matton-Oliver Co. “Hullo,” shot to has been the French artillery fire that on the left bank of the Somme, across from the Peronne, a new marsh was created by the blasting aWay of the earth by shells. Water from the Somme has seep- ed into the sbell craters, making a veritable inferno of mud, fire, amoke, steel and fumes of explod- fog shells. nald he, boldly, “how are linen collars now? Aight since July | er. “The J the today 3s Raps in the! ir MEXICO PICKS COMMISSIONERS: NN \ To Look and Feel Bright in Hot Weather This tn the ;would have canon when she wt WASHINGTON, July 21.—The | probability of a reply tomor- row or the next day to Car ranra’s note suggesting a com mission to take up the Mext- | can problem was intimated, after a conference of over an hour between Mexican Ambas- | sador Arredondo, Acting Secre- tary Polk and American Am- bassador Fletcher today De cision on the plan as far ae de- termined is up to the state de- partment, it is sald From the “favorable pro«- reas” report, ft is believed the | | | Improve the {| | | il even the deeper ones CAESAR Won't Fool You There will be no attempt that Olive Oil is made from anything or by any proce er than that which give the pure oil, untainted nature. We more respect for your Good Sense What you do want to know i ting the most wh me, olive oil, with a guarantee of it. That’s what you get with CAESAR Extra Virgin OLIVE OIL to make you believe but Olives you from have that you are get- flavored, tasty behind , fine satisfaction SHORT NEWS BEARING A cargo of fish and) treasures valued at $200,000, the) Southeastern Alaska steamer Hum- boldt docked Friday at Pier 7, MAS, G. RUBISG, 1417 Seventh ave., who was struck on the head | last Saturday night by a man who followed her from a moving picture : | Excursions East , 3 >| THE FIRST full cargo of soya| VIA THE thru Seattle, reached More than $5,000,000 worth of this) Every day until September 30th |Thursday on the Ten ofl has been shipped during the last| few months MRS. CARRIE OLSEN, 82, a reat dent of Seattle since 1893, Mied Thursday at Thomas st. | was a widow. | MEMBERS OF Carl M. Thyges- |sen camp, Spanish War Veterans, A Free optional side trip over the Shadowy St. Joe, fea's highest navigable river, ts offered between and St. Maries to holders of transcontinental tickets, Also side trip from Butte to Yellowstone Park at small addi tional cost—a short night's ride to Yellowstone station, the Amer- oT yokane Dental Reduction Dy Hagin J, Brown D, rading Den- on 718 n Wash nion Bike so many who have not n able to take ad- vantage of rm of teeth f fave decided to tinue the reduced rates until August 1 JULY GOLD FILLINGS During the entire July 1 will tin 4 fillings $1.60 ‘lings for fillings for PYORRHBA TARAT. VY REDUCED vonth of July teeth $1.00 and treatment ea will be from $2 to $10. J. BROWN, D. D. & 6 years. All eu years. Open % unl & and Sundays until Du ng cleaning for Py Western gateway to the Park Information and Literature City Ticket Office, Second and Cherry, Elliott 4812 Glasses $2.50 on Earth TO ENJOY YOUR PAPER your eyes and eye glasses must be per- To them the result of ex Stock Eyes passed a resolution of condolence| lover the death of William J, Both well, Thursday night NAVAL MILITIAMEN aboard the erisers Marblehead and New Or. }leans, and battleship Oregon, are ldrilling hard and expect to reach Sitka Saturday, according to iscaee reports. A CELEBRATION in all of the| large cities of Japan, commemorat ing the conclusion of the Russo-| Japanese peace convention i treaty insuring peace in the Far} East, has just closed RAINY WEATHER {a responsible! for the dearth in fishing licenses according to Game Warden Rief. whose records show only 9,599 I censes have been issued for 1916, | compared to 12,000 last year | TACOMA ROTARIANS won a sil-| ver cup at the close of the Cincin-| nat! Rotary convention for having] the largest delegation from m| MARCUM OPTICAL CO. Home of the Best pectly in accord have so ‘the glasses must be pert examination of each eye 4 glasses are alike in both lense need of it here the get Hence You are seldom alike. expert eye service i 917 Near First Ave. Madison, greatest distan Thirty-five Ta comans had a total mileage of ‘ if, a people who work, Phone Maia!) G47 stiog, | present jarmy plan. {was spent in bringing them to the | insist i) At Cheasty’s Special Clearance This Great 165 heavy Overcoats. Clearance ae 4 of men-are Nts the wisdom of saving money on their Clothes. $11.25 for $15.00 for $18.75 for $22.50 for $26.25 for $30.00 for Si Suits Regularly $15.00 Suits Regularly $20.00 Suits Regularly $25.00 Suits Regularly $30.00 ts Regularly $35.00 Suits Regularly $40.00 started with 1,000 Suits, 300 odd Trousers and They're going fast, but if you come now you'll find just what you want at 25 Per Cent Off You've been wa : SHEPHERD STUDIES ARMY ON BORDER ship to get the story to the world Entistment Expires Szpkowski, d Mlinols infantry, will march up { his little home in ago within a couple of | % days, give his wife a hug, and say, Weil, I'm home. | He's got a check from Uncle Sam for $6 2, and if he’s careful, after paying his fare, he ought to have about $20 to hand over to his wife, He was born in Poland, but has served in the militia six years and} his term of enlistment expired to, day. Worry About Home Folks It was from Szpkowski that I got y first inkling that thousands of jcans here who were snatch y from their families ir breeze of war which| a three weeks ago are < about fc home and wondering whett are getting fo ties of Il It was not so ed suddenly the little struck bad with me,” sald Szpkowski, “because my wife was a dressmaker and I could quit} my glove cutter's Job and go to the front without her starving, but there are jots of fellows whose wives don't work, and they are worried stiff.’ Tragedies Come to Light There were thousands of trage dies as grim as many in Europe in| American somes three weeks ago| which are just coming to light here | on the border. Gen, Funston and his staff offi-| cers are hearing them. Szpkowskt | put his finger on the greatest | fault with the American “Can a man be a good soldier and do good work if he’s wonder. ing whether his family at home has enough to eat?” To Release Thousands I asked Gen. Funston after leav- ing the jitney and making my way to his hot office. The general, whose perspiring ead was leaving patches of damp-| s on the leather back of the| huge chair in which he sat, leaned | forwa saying earnestly “ot! course not. I permitted 14 men to| return home yesterday because their dependents were suffering and I havo so many requests for relief én like grounds that it will prove necessary to release several thousands wi(hin the next fow weeks.” Must Keep the Familles These men are given 3% cents mileage homeward. Money which outfit after two border, feeding them and ting them, and_ then, weeks’ conditioning, sending them | back home, is not wasted | It {8 our payment for the lesson | that in our new army plan we must provide well for the care of sol diers’ tamilios if we are going to on taking men away from |their families Into the army ‘RECRUITS TO FILL | UP GAPS IN RANKS, WASHINGTON, July 21.—Milttla don the border because they have dependents at home will be supplanted by recruits now be ng obtained by militia officers kept at home for that purpose, men relea This, the war department said to day, Will take care of the situation created by the necessity to release thousands, as told by Gen. Funston in an interview with Wm. G. Shep- herd today at San Antonio. There will be no serious gaps in the border patrol, it was asserted. Even if the regiments there fall be- low their minimum they will not be mustered out, since it is expect-| ed the ranks soon would be refilled. As for the hardships inflicted on the militiamen: “We can feel little sympathy with men who enlisted in an’ organization ing for Cheasty’s sale—take advantage of it today where “VALUES that might have to go to war with out anticipating the possibility of a tragedy,” said one official. “Every man on the border who — has depeadents will be mustered out of service, howev We will not see any one suffe: —>— PLATTSBURG, N. Y., July 2L— Acting Corporal Quentin Roosevelt is blacklisted and confined to his company street today in the mili- tary instructions camp here be cause he dropped his rifle. He was disciplined by his brother, First I Sergeant Archie Roosevelt. MILLINERY. REDUCTIONS Trimmed Hats in black, white and colors, in large dressy styles, good qu and style One lot of Trimmed Hats, about 50 Hats in lot ality $5.00 Sport Hats in two assortments— $1.95 $3.95 Untrimmed Hats in sailor and medium styles, two lots— $1.95 New Felt Hats colors, smart with new sport clothes $2.95 in all the new $5.00 1822 Second Avenue.

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