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Slightly Used SteelCoilSprings $5.95 Five only in the three-quar ter size thi str Sf in $15.00 for m Chair for $10.00 Maple Rocker $6 Six Odd Kitchen Chairs, values to $1.50, each 39c are on sale Friday at $ special price These ong rings every are exceptionally coil new steel vl and rigid and way aS gO as Chair $1.95 00 Golden Oak Desk Chair for $1.45 Redroom $3.05 $4.75 Block for 83.05 Velour upholstered 180 " Chroasetan Walnut 00 Revolving Book Ten Dining Chairs, reg- ular price up to $2.75, each $1.25 Hardwood KITCHEN CHAIRS 85c Ea. Three dozen are in this specal lot. Built of hardwood and finished golden oak. an extra bargain at the s Two-Inch Post Steel All are well constructed and are pecial price. $7.95 Ten three-quarter Beds have twoinch continu filling Vernis rods, Martin. These Beds have only been used a short time and are in perfect condi- tion. posts, heavy finished G.R.FURNITURE EXCHANGE 51 Pike Easy Terms AVS DEFEAT 80,000 TURKS PETROGRAD, Aug. 24.—Ruseian | troops have defeated four divisions of Turks (90,000 men) in a great battle near the village of Rachta.| near Mosul, capturing two entire Turkish regiments, {t was officially stated today. HOW | CURED MY CATARRH Told ina Simple Way Without Apparatus, Inhalers, Salves, Lotions, Harmful Drugs, Smoke or Electricity - Day and Night“ It fs @ new way. It is something different No lotions, iy smelling salves or | y appar- | mok ing or rubbin, lectricity or vi- No powder; no no keeping in the house tn . or Injections. bration or massage. plasters; ing Of that kind at all. BSome- new and different, something htful and healthful, something hantly successful. You do not Ve to wait, and linger, and pay out lot of over nigh and you how—F REE. tor, and this Is not a s0-c doc- tor's prescription—but I am cured, | and my friends are cured, and you | can be cured. Your suffering will stop at once like magic. I Am Free—You Can Be Free! —— My catarrh wan flithy and ‘capitan. | made me ill. It dulled my mind. It my health and was weaken tn 4 ed and timely he day ly sap ping my. vitality Dot I found « cure, and I am ready to tell you about it FREE, Write me promptiy. RISK JUST ONE CENT preys no mon t your name pag and aAdreas on & p rd. Be fam Katz Sam Katz, Room A.L.246| 2008 Indiana Ave. Chicago, LL, jthe Pacific CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 “LOVE PILLS” LEAD TO FATAL SHOOTING so it would reach the ears of his children that he is alleged we sought to take the phy- sician’s life. Wyne has asked that his children be brought to his ceil, but has refused to see his wife. Mrs. Wyne says, however, she will do everything she can to aid her husband. The Wynes lived at Henderson. Ky., where the shooting is said have taken place. Wyne was ) brought to the Owensboro jail at the request of relatives, who feared violence Wyne, according to his attor- neys, will stake hie chance on cause of the sins of the father, The laws of Kentucky do not per mit a wife to testify for or against |ber husband. This fact does not disturb Wyne. Had Happy Home will tell my own story to the sesors They will understand’ says, simply. There will be witnesses to |the jury of Wyne's home life. | will tell of the Joy he found in his home and his children; of long evenings at play with Winfrey and Beatrice; of other evenings at the movies; of the peace which for merly hovered over the Wyne home at Evansville, Ind Then, too, there will be one to tell of the toys the wood- worker made for the little ones. If the la of evidence wil! per. mit, one will tell of the toy boat Wyne shaped for Winfrey the day before the shooting is al- leged to have occurred. The state counts on other wit nesses to testify that Wyne shot the doctor as the latter was leaving a patient's home, Blackboard draw- ings will show how the doctor tried to escape Wyne by running behind an automobile Records of the Indiana peniter tiary will be brought to court in ar effort to prove that Wyne served a sentence there Wyne's attorneys will attempt to offset this by presenting evidence that Wyne was pardoned, and that j another man was guilty of the lerime for which the wood-worker was sentenced MAYOR GILL will make the ad- dress of welcome to delegates to Coast convention of tell electrical engineers and the North west Electric Light and Power as sociation, to be held here Septem ber 5 to 9 MRS. KATE E SARGENT, 72, , Widow of Frank M. Sargent, Wash lington pioneer, died at her home, Me Ralsiev ove, Raini e EMMA GOLDMAN THE NOTED ANARCHIST Delivers Five Lectures, August 27.30 Tivoli Theatre First Ave. and Madison St SUBJECTS Sunday, August 27, 2 p. m., “Anarch. lam”—8 p. m., “Education and One| KANSAS CITY, Mo., Aur Dr, Fred M, Larkin, mantac, is de today, and Policemen P. V. Neff and 8, Glenn Marshall near death the result of a battle which ed attempts to arrest the demented man. Five months behind in his rent Larkin's effects were moved into Ithe atreet yesterday during his ab sence When Larkin returned he became ja raving maniac. He smashed the ENGLAND FEARS |” | | | } LONDON, Aug. 24.—-A pelin | raided the east coast of England shortly before midnight last night the war office announced today No damage was dove, and there were no casual Last night's Zeppelin visit: and thers of the past few weeks are ‘ed to have been reconnoiter ice flights to test England's air cefenses in preparation for a great aerial attack. For the last fortnight word has been coming from Germany of the construction of hu pelins capable of car rying sev | tons of eaplosives, CONTINUED | Yo FROM PAGE 1 { GIANT DIVER IS SAFE IN PORT merged only for 110 miles. The weather was splendid. at the be ginning of her voyage, but became stormy later. The biow ceased as the Deutschland approached the English coast, but some difficulty was experienced because of heavy fog. The necessity for feeling her way slowly tn the thick mists de layed the Deutachland’s arrival sev- f eral days. Upon entering the North Sea the| submarine ee a mera storms. She proved that excellent sea craft, b gre Be * working perfectly, despite the fact that she was being tossed by mourn as Waves. See No Icebergs But few vessels were sighted and not a single iceberg was en countered. The Deutschland sub |merged when another ship appear. ed on the horizon and her captain | expressed doubt that she had been |seen by any other vessel | It was 3 p. m. yesterday when |the Deutschland anchored in the/ Wenser river, after short stop at Heligolan4. Word of her coming was t raphed to Bremen and the city was Instantly beflacged. Messengers were dispatched to the homes of members of Deutschland’s crew and bells were rung thruout the city, Two-thirds fot the city’s ulation gave the submariners a at ovation I they drew up to the dock at o clock, Affecting Reunions were affecting Deutschland’s There when the pressing thru the swarmed in about greeted by relatives. In some instan scones sailors, crowd that them, were families of the men knew ‘nothing of thelr de perture on such an adventure |trip until after their arrival in Atmerica The men were al! in good health jand showed no signs of having un dergone acy hardships, Captain Koenig said the United| States not only protected the #1 marine in every way in her de-| |Pparture but increased precautions tish warship entered th p ore one night, pr sumably to reconnoiter. DEUTSCHLANDIS DAMAGED SOME THE HAGUE, Aug. 24.—The Deutschland was slightly damaged jon her return trip from the United States, according Bremen dis patches today. She took the same route on the return trip as on the voyage to Baltimore, members of the crew stated The Bremen dispatches also car ried the statement that the Bre men, sister ship of the Deutsch land, only left for America a few days ago. She was held until the| Deutschland’s owners received pos lilve information that the Deutsch land had eluded the enemy patrol | along the Atlantic coast and prob-| ably would reach Germany safely to Capt Koenig is being lontzed 18 a hero, The Deutschland Lrought three bags of mail from Ambassador Bernstorff and a cargo | ¢ jof rubber and nickel valued at 1,000,000 mares See Dr.Edwin J. Brown, D.D.S. HIMSELF aprye* DENTIST * $25.00 for $20.00 net for tsk Ay NION BLAS t or a $15.00 00 These prices ‘include extracting without pain. A lal h ular $10.00 Gold Crowns Bridgework am, now making | It ts admitted b bent dentists in & that Crown | Bridge « equa Hie Dr. dw D. &. himself, 7 ¥ —_ ~ Union Block. one? evenings until § and Sundays until 4 for people who work, Tele- phone Main 3640, MONSTER ZEPS . lyoung wife, |northeast of Verdun, STAR—THURSDAY, POLICE KILL MANIAC WHO WOUNDS TWO or to his apartment and began { breaking everything left in the place, Police were called Yelling "I hain't afratd of any policemen,” Larkin opened fire on Marshall and Neff, pouring seven shots into the body of the former Neff grappled with the wild mao but was shot five times before he shot Larkin dead Mrs, Maude Behord a window 50 feet away by @ stray shot sitting near was grazed WOMAN SEEKS TO BREAK MONOPOLY OF 120 SOLONS MRS. EDITH DOW MOULTON, of Stocktoo, Cal, who is seeking to achieve the distinction of being the first woman legisiator in Call rnia campaign 120 a She ts making a vigorous to break the male members of state embly have iron £ for years. Ope woman and 119 men that fair? gan. mon which pd ton't is Mrs. Moulton’s slo-| : WIFE WATCHES TEACHER DROWN Thomas W. Moreland. structor at Broadway high school was drowned in full sight of his who stood helpless in shallow water because 4! not swim, while they athing in the Sound near Poulsbo Tue afternoon. After he had disappeared below the surface twice she summoned ald, and the body was recovered b diving. Physicians say he |stricken with heart failure while the water Moreland, who came here ears ago, Was a graduate of Upper lowa university. He had married Miss Rena Benton, of Oskaloosa Jowa, 13 months ago, and a baby had been born to them His body will be taken to bis home in Colesburg, lowa, Thurs evening. ‘FRENCH REPULSE GERMAN ATTACKS PARIS Aug. Two court at tiller pulsed by the French in last night's fighting, it was offictally announce today, In the Champagne region the French repulsed several surprise attacks. | On the right bank of the Meune, the Germans bombarded poritior | recent! captured by the 2 Fleury-Thiamont frortt ¢ ch took 250 prisoners on t! ators brought down ge German planes during the day \Stomach Troubles Due to Acidity SAYS NEw A YORK PHYSICIAN ably nine cai evidence that place In stomach nis the food contents of th causing the formation ¢ gas and acids. Wind distends the et n auses that full, op metimes know hile the acid irri tea and in dete ie] Ining of the « The trouble In the fermenting food f loxcess best corrector « MISS EUGENIA LAMB, daugh.|ncid should be ter of John Lamb, Seattle, and Misa| taken In @ quarter of a glass of hot Miee| or cold ‘or immediately after Helen Brown, of Jersey City, N. J..| eating, or whenever wind of acidity have taken veil of the Ursuline|ts felt. This stops the ferme: fon nuns. aweetens the stomach contents and neutralizes the acidity In a few mo. mente Fermentation, wind and| acidity are dangerous and unneces sary. St ent them by the |NOT A DOLLAR NEED BE PAID TILL we where solicit camer other m fail, Investigate a you will be Conmlt me Asthma, Rheumatism meals you are eating * | Ronney-Watson’s For further particulars ask | beta su an FUNERAL SERVICE for FA MILWAUKEE TICKET OFFICE MW Bart p t » dle n New or Satu a ~ tions? Sa jeaeusrentee of welaht Increase or [os Olympia place, at 3 p.m, Sun-| or Puget Sound Navigation Co,, Colman Dock. 2nd Floor Epler Hlas. 4 B11) ané Av. box. SATEEN held in an} could) t a jerees in the. shade at Greenland,| year ‘round The average WASHINGTON, Aug, 24.—In Ca July 1 191 the highest temperature there is 77 de- Death Valley, Cal., there is a shade temperature ever registered grees, the highest in the m city hotter than the hottest |in the United States United Stat The mercury, My reputation and stan | te dion pe lipthee seal fait | In other parts of the world, the) however, has never climbed ing is sufficient assurance! lea Mend “Gite ta fave -anunte. it abara desert and the interior of! past 100 in Key West. that I will not prescribe ed Greenland ie In Inyo New South Wales furnish the near. Yuma, Ariz, is another “hot|— Gy} 1 -|far from the other Greenland, 82 Jest competition in hot weather rec-|town."” The highest temperature | classes Un less they island in the Arctic circle, bins ords. On August 27, 1884, at Warg-|qver recorded there in 118 degrees, absolutely necessary. CURED AUG. 24, 1916. PAGE 7. $250,000,000 1 United Kingdom of Great Britain ; | and Ireland : ‘ TWO-YEAR 5% SECURED LOAN GOLD NOTES Direct Obligations of the Government Dated September 1, 1916. Due September 1, 1918. Inte: March 1 and September 1 tt Payable Principal and Interest Payable in United States Gold Coin, at the Office of J P. Morgan and Co. Without Deduction for Any British Taxes, Present or Future, Coupon Notes of $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 Redeemable at the Option of the Government, in Whole or in Part, on Thirty (30) Days Notice, as Follows: At 101 and Accrued Interest on Any Date Prior to September 1, 1917. At 1004 and Accrued Int Any Date Thereafter Prior to Maturity. ton September 1, 1917, and on Te Be Secured by Pledge With the Farmers Lean and Trust Company, of New York City, Under a Pledge Agreement Executed by the Government, ef Securities Approved by J. P. Morgan & Co. of an Aggregate Value of at Least $300,000,000, Calculated on the Basis of Prevailing Market Prices, Sterling Securities Being Valued in Dollars at the Prevailing Rate of Exchange, viz.: Stocks, Bonds and or Other Securities of Corporations Organized in the United States, Value $10 Bonds and or Other Obligations of the Government of the Dominion of Canada, Either as Maker or Guarantor, and Stocks, Bonds and or Other Securitws of the Canadian Pacific Railway Company, $1 100; Bonds and or Other Obligations of the Several Following Governments, Lither Maker or Guarantor, viz., of A , Chile, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Switzerland and or Holand, $10 0. Pending the Arrival and Depesit of Securities as Above, the Government Is to Deposit Temporarily With the Trust Com. pany at the Time of Issue of the Notes, Either Approved New York Stock Exchange Collateral of Aggregate Value Equal to That of the Then Undelivered Securities and er Cash Equal to Five-Sixths ef Such Value All Such Temporary Cellateral Is to Be Exchanged From Time to Time in the Same Relative Proportions Upon the Deposit of the Above Mentioned Securities, If the Pladged Securities Depreciate in Value Because of Change in Market Price or in Rate of Exchange, the Gevernment Is te Deposit Additional Securities With the Trust Company, to the End That the Aggregate Value of the Pledged Securities Shall Equal at Least 120% of the Principal Amount of the Notes at the Time Unpaid and i‘ot Secured by Deposited Cash, The Gov- ernment Is to Reserve the Right From Time to Time to Sell for Cash Any of the Pledget Securities, in Which Event the Pro- ceeds of Sale Are to Be Received by the Trust Company and Applied te the Retirement ot Notes by Purchase, if Obtainable at Prices Not Exceeding the Then Redemption Price, &nd Otherwise by Redemption by Lot at the Redemption Price, The Gowern- ment Is to Reserve the Right Also to Make Substitutions of Securities, But Such Substitutions Are Not to Vary the Relative Amounts in Value ef the Above-Indicated Three Several Groups of Securities at the Time Heid by the Trust Company. Valu- ations of Securities Are to Be Appreved by J. P. Morgan & Co. This Offering 1s Made Subject te Verification of the List of Collateral, and te the Appreval ef the Necessary Details by Counsel WE OFFER THE ABOVE NOTES FOR SUBSCRIPTION AT 99 AND INTEREST, YIELDING SLIGHTLY OVER 54 PER CENT. Subscription Books Will Be Opened at the Office of J. P. Morgan and Co, at 10 o Clock A. M, August 23, 1: and Will Be Closed at 10 0 Clock A. M., August 28, 1916, or Earlier, in Their Discretion. THE RIGHT 1S RESERVED TO REJECT ANY AND ALL APPLICATIONS, AND ALSO, IN ANY EVENT, TO AWARD A SMALLER AMOUNT THAN APPLIED FOR. AMOUNTS DUE ON ALLOTMENTS WILL BE PAYABLE AT THE OFFICE OF J. P. MORGAN & CO., IN NEW YORK FUNDS, TO THEIR ORDER, AND THE DATE OF PAYMENT WILL BE GIVEN IN THE NOTICES OF ALLOTMENT. Temperary Certificates Will Be Delivered Pending the Engraving of the Definitive Notes. J. P, MORGAN & CO., FIRST NATIONAL BANK, New York City; NATIONAL CITY BANK, New York City; HARRIS TRUST & SAVINGS BANK, Chicago; WM. A. READ & CO., BROWN BROTHERS & CO., LEE, HIGGINSON & CO., KIDDER, PEABODY & CO., J. & W. SELIGMAN & CO., GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY, New York City; BANKERS TRUST COMPANY, New York City; FARMERS LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY, New York City; CENTRAL TRUST COMPANY OF ILLINOIS, Chicago; UNION TRUST COMPANY, Pittsburgh. New York, August 23, 1916, | j highest ever recorded at this point is 116 degrees. This is very much higher than Corpus Christi, Tex., where the thermometer once hit 98. El Paso, Tex., never got hotter than 113 degrees. The average for the year is 63. AS HOT AS SAHARA---RIGHT IN U.S. Death Vallev City Registers 184 Degrees in Shade | & GREENLAND REENLAND » CALIFORNIA thermometer registered 134 jla, on the Sahara, a temperature of |The average for the year {s 72, or EXAMINATION FREE |1274 degrees Fahrenheit was reg: : degrees below that of Key A = Thin People Can Key West, Fla, holds the 2a is aan cae inyon ° record for average heat the ae0 tem erature ot ry Ppa bo 116 Ist Ave., near Seneca PORT ANGELES EXCURSION Increase Weight - fat shoul a try eating ‘a little Sargol worth trying First welgh yourself NEGOTIATIONS FOR the pur |with their meals for a while, and and measure yourself. Then take Sargol tablet with every meal [tor tl et vee ons |chase of 12 acres on the East wa- |how you took. or feel or what your |terwWay were reported under way by friends say and tt J. H. Duthie & Co., who contem- | if wiate tnventingy $800,000 oF $000,000 Sunday, August 27 ‘a daily add {in shipyards ; mpie dis) L, L, LOCKER, a citizen resident $2.00 ROUND TRIP At new |of the Puget Sound navy yard, will ‘do nae fat sy over the pies, 1 One. of bw " From Colman Dock 8:00 a, m., Steamer Sioux to Port ut mix! it alms | Boeing's new seaplanes next week, _ . " to turn t *. sugars and starches in q tryout for an aviators license. Townsend, thence Seattle, Port Angeles & Western Rail- jog cwiat vou haveveaten Into rich. iio" with Aviator Martin Wed. | way along the shore of Discovery Bay, arriving Port An- |the ‘tissues and blood-—prepare it tn nesday, | geles 12:55 noon. Afternoon for visit to lighthouse on PF gray oeeaaliy accept. “htuon of FUNERAL SERVICES for Mrs. Ediz Hook with three miles of interesting beach fronting this nourishment now passes, from | Jessie L, Hooey, wife of Dr. L. E on the Straits. Leave 5:25 p. m. same day, arriving orks to atop the weete, and ao it | Hooey, who died Monday, after anf} Seattle 10:20 p. m. iickly, and to make the operation, were held Wednesday at fat pro of day.