Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
on 30 days’ FREE TRIAL “NO CASH DOWN” make your own terms!” —make your selections of homefurnishings up to # OU a cash payment at Ume of purchase. W the Seattle homer her, to "make your own t well-known liberal credit kervice will fit you needs No Cash Down add a heater to your account no additional payment! —if you have an account here, we wil! place a heater your home without any additional payment! credit is surely good here!” just 27 of this fine lh EXTRA SPECIAL $3.75 regular price $5.75 AlN) HAN \ good rocker value —exactiy like picture; wide solid oak. golden Tintsty —regular price $5.73; —spectal for uesda y TRITTING COR THIRD & UNIVERSITY Rr pe A on] Week “YOUR CREDITISO K Brown walked into quarters after the fight, police immediately up a dozen witnesses and has not been booked All urday night affairs there. dinand Schmitz, Seattle left Saturday for St States army, at West Poin DR. L. We Invite You to Call at, Our Office And have @ thorough and examination made of you one of our expert den R. CLARK eee ee enews Serer yer oeorsy complete cost you a cent or pl ou under any obligation whatever—-and it ts Iikely to prove a great blessing to| you | We have at this high-grade dentiats, ever hanging right on ee ee eee 4 his dental chair, in plain | of all Th This certificate ix your protection|f . 5 —it proves to you that be knows his || California business and knows it thoroughly—| that "he has spent yearn of Water study, under competent. instru fn learning the dental business and| Sprites fearing ft right | fo have one of the finest equipped offices in the Northw very de. |p Daring vice that human ingenuity ham de-|] Feat vised_for the advanc e of : methods of palniens de Aquatic ound. here ‘e ha Seats vse them, too. We best of materiale Exhibitions lowest, and we « with # our fronciad guarantee of Each Afternoon 4 1 || and F y responsible |] Evening « Come in at once. You will be sur-| | prised to find how little It will come || Crystal to have your teeth put into perfect | B condition, and one thing ie certain |p oO! = it will be worth a whole lot more to} = you than it will cost | P Admission Pt 2 Regal Dental Offices 18 . 2 Dr. 1. 1. Clark, Mannger Bathing : 1405 Third Ave. N. W. Corner Third | Privileges C and hon. i Diagonally cron 25e ice, Be sure to eo Fight place. ? “letus send youa VICTROLA oak rocker on sale Tuesday only at a saving of $2.00! (NEGRO DANCE ENDS IN FATAL SHOOTING Louis, he has a botanical scholarship TONIGHT ye “Your jeorge aq , In a fight over a woman, | killed Art Walden, negro dock work er, at 4 a. m, Sunday, after an all night dance at 1424 Jackson st police hea ined expl what had happened, and was locked aid he shot in self-defense. rounded The woman in the case, however, | got away before the police arrived @ negrces, and the dances | are said to have been regular Sat-| HENRY SCHMITZ, son of Fer banker where | university DAN PULLEN, former football star, has been elevated to the rank of captain in the United At 8:30 FRENCH WOMEN |Wear Old Clothes So As to Help Swell War Fund RUSSELL ‘SEES EFFECT By CHARLES EDWARD RUSSELL PARIS, FRANCE, SEPT. 18. —WHAT DO YOU THINK OF A PARIS oF PLAINLY | DRESSED WOMEN, WITH- OUT STYLE AND WITHOUT DISTINCTION? YOU DON’T THINK OF IT; IT ISN'T THINKABLE, YOU MIGHT AS WELL TRY TO THINK OF HOT ICE, BOILING SNOW, WALKING ON THE SKY, BREATHING A VAC- UUM. “THE POOREST SHOP GIRL IN PARIS,” RUNS THE OLD SAYING, “DRESSES WITH ART AND STYLE.” Plainly dressed French women would be like an Intelligent con an unselfish politician you say, produces no such Sees New Marvel Yet I have looked upon that mar. vel of marvels—exactly that ary The men of this extraordinary pation have astonished the world on the battlefield and in the man aging of thelr government. Ite women have been just as wonderful in thelr household and \personal affairs. For the aver French woman to sacrifice her artistic taste in dress ts like asking her to give up her soul immortal, |bat she has done it now. To such an extent that on a Sun- ‘day you can drive all day in the javenves and parks and see scarcely a Frenchwoman not Greased with extremest simplicity and pinching economy Wear Old Dresses | They wear their old dresses and fold styles. In the department fers for such cheap stuff as for. |merly they would not look at What is more, they did al! this on their own motion. No government had to lecture, to exhort or even to ask them to save. They seem to have feit, all of them, that when the life of France hung in the balance wae no time to be thinking of dress, and they put the clamps down hard on every expenditure, big and lit- tle. Tho whole nation {fs doing it. | Thrift was always a preeminent French virtue, but since the war jbegan these people have found new wrinkles in it that make their old time thrift look Ike extravagance. Fight War on Stockings M. Ribot, their financial genius, says they are fighting the war on their stockings, meaning their sav lings. But the amazing thing is that as fast as they empty the stockings at one end they put something into it at the other. To beat a people like that is some job. For this reason | (with some | others) France is far and away better off than any other country in the war. High prices and all, she is in the best condition, and the least likely to get hurt when e thing is over. DOUBLE FUNERAL Mrs. Margaret Cunningham, 72, |mother of Frank Cunningham, and Mrs. George White, 62, mother of |Mrs. Frank Cunningham, who died |Friday within three hours of each other, were biirled in the same [plot at Calvary cemetery Monday | | | The double funeral service was held at the Church of the Sacred Heart. Mrs. Cunningham was married 46 years ago and ts sur- vived by four sons. She came to the Northwest in 1870. Mra. White {has been in the city for 26 years |Rev. J. G. Cunningham officiated COLUMBIA, 8 C., Sept. 18 President Wilson today brought to |Columbla the body of his sister, \Mrs. Annie E. Howe, to be buried Jin the church yard bodies of hig father and mother have rested many years, The lfuneral party reached Columbia lahortly before noon. The city refrained marks of where the from formal sympathy, the there many persons at the |train when the president, Mra Wilson and others of the party ar publi Driven by a kerosene motor, a | motorcycle has n invented that carries four persons seated ahead of one another and ts controlled \by the man on the back seat One Berkshire, Mass., man buys |shoes so large that they fit either foot. te also buys trousers large enough so in case he gets them on wrong side to, he will suffer no j discomfort, rived. The absence of ceremony } was in obedience to the wishes of the family SAVE IN DRESS) | | | | the French used an aeroplane| ten of the Luzerne apartments, | squadron to lead the succesrful at-| Boren ave. and Pine st. were |tack on the village of Bouchs-| being checked over Monday by of the Somme, it | Yeanes, north Jeach moun three machine} Carstens, widow of Ernest guns, one pointing forward and | Carstens, has been defrauded | |two downward, charged the Ger) out of thousands ef dollars. |man lines before the French in-| "ane exact amount of the al- fantry left their trenches jatr officers who several hundred feet below 19 | charge of grand larceny, together jmuch the same manner that an of-| with Karl Baumgartner, timekeeper ficer directs an Infantry charg®| who was arrested 10 days ago for stores they raid the bargain count: | |from a sheltered dugout. STAR—MONDAY, SEPT. 18, 1916. PAGE 2 MEEKER ARRIVES OVER OLD OREGON TRAIL AOC A ROIANAP OL! ie a SQUADRON [BUILDING GRAFT | IS VICTORIOUS CHECK IS MADE | French Birdmen Swoop Down! on Trenches of Teuton Soldiers iy Prosecutor Checks Up on Man Who Robbed Mrs. | | Carstens | |GUN CREWS DESERT $60,000 IS THE AMOUNT 8 and accounts kept by Chari: Drake, as superinten- | dent in charge of the construc- Y HENRY WOOD } U. P. Staff Correspondent PARIS, Sept. 18.—For the first} time in the history of the world, | Prosecutor Ellis, who ys Drake hae confessed to a con- epiracy by which Mre. ida M. was learned today wenty fast armored aeroplanes, leged frauds, Ellis says, cannot be determined until accountants have finished with the books. Drake is in the efty jal on al Fiying high above this charging column were French aviation | directed the attack | padding payrolla. Tho French flyers swooped low |” Mrs, Carstens’ suspicions were | over the German lines as the ar-! sroused some time ago, it is waid, tillery lfted and raked the Ger | when she realized that the building man trenches with @ murderous ‘the cost of which was estimated at fire. Prisoners report that this $60,000, was actually piling up to form of attack had a remarkable over $100,000, Ellis says effect upon the Germans who bad |total close to $120,000. survived the artillerying and were! In his confession Drake ts said| awaiting in their halfruined lig have admitted that thousands of trenches the coming storms of | qo} worth of materials and French infantry. It sent them fly- labor was diverted to other jobs ing down communicating trenches and charged against the Luserne and in some cases caused machine | apartments gun crews to desert their posts. A8| Drake formerly was manager and the French infantry came on With | superintendent of truction for 4“ rush, the alr chargers drove for |the Central Realty Co. and had ward to the second phase of thetr| charge of all the bullding operations work. They flew along the roads, com > turning their machine guns on Ger pod eg ee man reserves belong brought into action along the roads leading to Bouchavesoes. it will ECONOMY QUALITY FRY E’S' QUALITY MARKETS TUESDAY SPECIALS AMUSEMENTS VAUDEVILLE THEATRE Fifth and Pine EVERYTHING NEW | Choice Steer 9 mail aplds (opr dette Short Ribs............ Cc Choice T-Bone ALL RESERVED SEATS | GET YOURS TODAY | Steak... .......... 20c Choice Breast 10c ILKES PLAYERS |eetpepnarsenee Crean | Rib dele oe eA o-06 9c | Choice Pork Tonight, 420—All Week WO i vas van aan 5c Anch it Phe — ea \4 cans Wild 25 { PALACE HIP Rose Milk... Cc Afternoons, 1:20 to 5; Fives., 6:30 to 11 TODAY. TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY HOWARD BROOKS @ CO. CHEST MYSTERY A. Loader & Co Boston Butts Cottage | Butts. . 16c) 18c! jAT THE FOLLOWING MARKETS) OLYMPIC MARKET 1422-24 Pirst Ave AMERICAN MARKET 505 Third Ave. WESTERN MARKET 1100 W Mate, 10¢ Any se Shows Change Thure. T and 9 LONG TACK SAM CO, | Chinese Wonder Workers | KENO Famous AND GREEN neing Winarda OUR OLD LOCATION AT 118 PIKE 8ST. HAS BEEN ABANDONED Biggest Comedy Hit of the Season ARNEY ERNARD ‘The Original ADF. POTASH ot Tht Vingene Levy, FOR— 5 Weekday C Matinees —AND— Evenings Sundays The BIGGEST, BEST SHOW and Cherry Mar. POTASH a PERLMUT- ne ‘The Great Stage Succens, in “Phantom Fortunes” Five’ Acts Full of M. GUTERSO RUSSIAN ORCH MUSICAL, PRC Tri” TA RAM Tartini Wineland “Pideles W! Komaack Orchestra Number FLORENCE ROSE FASHION pURES PATHE CLEMMER Seattle's Best Photoplay House WERKLY Jan part of the landscape plan ap-| | Dr. Atkinson leaves for the East! SHORT NEWS KILBOURNE & CLARK CO., Seat- | tle manufactur of wireless tele graph instruments, will be reor ganized to increase the capital) stock from $100,000 to $1,000,000, | J. D. HOGE, Seattle banker, | leaves shortly for the Chicago con: | ference of the republican national committee, Later he will attend) the American Bankers’ ton convention. SEATTLE CLOSED its park con- ert season Sunday with two con-| certs, at Woodland and Voluntess | parks, FULL GROWN tre will be planted in © | and shrubs Hall park proved by the council THE BODY of Rey T. Tyson, who dropped dead Saturday in his study at the First M. E. church, was sent to Philadelphia Monday for burial DR. GEORGE V. CALHOUN, 78, Seattle pioneer and former prest-| dent of the board of university re gents, died Saturday after a lin- gering Iiness MISS MYRTLE HAMMOND and/ J. T. Thomas, deaf mutes, were married at the home of the bride's | mother, 1009 Summit ave. N., in| the presence of a large number of the deaf colony of Seattle } A. 8. CORY wad reelected presi: | dent of the ethodist Laymen's association Friday at Everett. C. W. Lee, of Seattle, was elected | vice president, and I. H. Bennett, of Seattle, treasurer. J. A. FRITSCH, of Salt Lake, who fell into a crevasse Friday on | Mt. Rainier, was brought safely to | Paradise camp, it was learned Monday. EDWARD CALDWELL, 6, of Walia Walla, injured himself tn al pushmobile accident in such ba | manné®. that he could draw his | breath easily, but could not exhale. | He pimped his lungs so fall of air) he died. J. H. BINNS, of Shelton, passed | thru Seattle Saturday for New| York, where he will join 26 recent. | ly appointed Rhodes scholars Binns is a graduate of the state college DONALD SIMPSON, 12, of 2414! Bigelow ave, suffered sertous to juries Saturday when a bicycle he | was riding was struck by a jitney driven by H. L. Dow at Eastlake | ave. and Roanoke st THE FIRST exhibits from Alas ka for the Northwest Land Prod-| acts exposition to be held in Se-| attle, beginning Oct. 4, arrived on the steamer Admiral Evans from Anchorage, Valdez and Skagway A MEETING called by the King | County Antl-Tuberculosis league to wage a fight egainst the white plague will be held Friday in the! YM. COA | MARKING THE revival of ship-| building on Puget sound, the Seat- | tle Manufacturers’ association will | give the shipbuilders a banquet Thursday night in the New Wash-| ington MEMBERS OF the First United Presbyterian church will give Dr. ; Ralph Atkinson a farewell recep-| tion Monday night at the chureh at I4th ave. and East Spring Wednesday W. F. RENNIE and M. E. Hamp- ton have been added to the boys’ department of the Y. M.C, A., with the opening of the fall and winter seasons. Frank Skinner will de vote part of his time to boys’ work. | SEVERAL HUNDRED Seattle Boy Scouts visited various churches Sunday and aided in the inauguration of Boy Scout week incidentally selling 3,000 tickets for the scout entertainment at the Orpheum this week ARRANGEMENTS HAVE been! completed for raising the tug Man-| | ette, which sank recently at Ho- quiam. SIXTY-FIVE MEMBERS of the businessmen'’s encampment at Fort Lawton awoke Monday morning | with sore arms as the result of | the anti-typhoid vaccine given| them Sunday W. L, JENNINGS, former super. intendent of the Colorado School of Mines, was found dead Sunday at} his home in Long Beach, Cal., from} fumes of chloroform, which he ad ministered in too large a dose to a cat. BRITISH BOMBARD GERMAN AERODROME LONDON Sept 18.—British naval aeroplanes successfully bom: | barded the German aerodrome at| St, Denis, in Belgium, yesterday, | the admiralty announced today. | Wo Sing, laundryman to the ul- tra fashionable sei in San Fran-) cisco, is erecting a two-story! school building, in which a Chinese instructor will be employed to teach Chinese children Asiatic as well as English language u The Star Want gains in acreage. | DENTISTRY Today marks the beginning of the eighteenth week of Dr. Sipes’ remark- able free demonstration of one olsci- ence’s most precious gifts to human- ity-genuine painless dentistry. The wonderful new anesthetic is no longer an ex- periment but a demonstrated fact, as the several thousand grateful patients who have been treated at the Boston Dental offices during the free demonstra- tions have good reason to know. In not one single case in all this great number did the patient feel even the slightest sensation of hurt or pain. Unlike any other method heretofore used, there are no unpleasant after-effects; no nausea or dizziness, no headaches. The new discovery ts so simple that medical men marvel at its work. Just a little of it applied to the gums and every tooth in the head could be extracted at one sitting without a bit of feeling Dr. Sipes and the Boston Dental staff are the only dentists in Seattle, if not on the entire coast, possess- ing a supply of the precious, harmless fluid that is bringing relief to countless thousands throughout the world ‘ The free demonstrations will continue all this week. All are welcome to test its marvelous powers without one penny of cost. No charge whatsoever will be made for extracting teeth—no matter how many—and you don’t have to order other work. Dr. Sipes’ own faith in the new painless method is evi- denced by the fact that he is spending hundreds of dollars of his own money in conducting the free dem- onstrations. Come, any day, between the hours of 9 and 5 o'clock. If your time is limited to certain hours, a special appointment card will be given you so that you can come at a time most convenient to you. Remember, every operation is absolutely painless at the Boston Dental offices—this we guarantee. Specialists in all departments do the best work ever turned out of a dental laboratory at very mod erate Gold crown and bridgework, and arti cial teeth that cannot be detected from your natural teeth, ete The Boston Dental offices were established in the present location—1420 Second avenue, opposite the Bon Marche—more than fifteen years ago. It is one of the biggest, busiest dental establishments in the United States. cost survey, who was here cruising VARSITY N around on inspection Monday morn- tng. He came from Washington, D. C,, and was taken out by Capt. earn Charles Basford, v Ss Hamilton Wolf, artist, and 800 igator of the aiity tian oconttnaer: of the famous wood engraver, has | ors cruiser, Gov. Elisha P, Ferry arrived to take charge of the art a6 classes at the state university, ee John Brodin, committeeman in ° charge of the Dovre club dance, at Strand hall, Fourth ave. and Pine st., Sunday night, was arrested by Greek letter fraternities on the the police for violation of the ordi campus pledged 170 freshmen jnance against conducting Sunday during the first week of college./night dances for revenue. Police Sororities, by their own rules, are say he let them in free, but charged not permitted to pledge until the {50 cents for hat checks. end of two weeks. | - _ RAID GAMING DEN eee | “The test of a college man is his Police swooped down upon Ab Sam's Chinese gambling game, 608 willingness to serve the state un selfishly,” President Suzzallo told Weller st. Sunday afternoon, and arrested the alleged proprietor, the men at the Freshman Riot Sat Ernest Stone, B. Peterson and A urday night Gunderson for being in the place. Miss Margaret Chinn, age 8, is the first Chinese woman to matricu- late in the state university She will take drawing, design, Spanish, botany and English cee The awakened interest in Span ish, as a commercial language for Americans, was noted at the uni versity last week, when 540 regis: | tered for instruction, This 4s about | 100 more than ever before. | B viet : | WS \ WATERS OF SOUND |... Mosquito or Other Insect Bites. More aids to navigation in Puget sound will probably be recommend enioves oped P of ins tion. Rane y Dr B . full direct n booklet packed ed soon by Dr. K, Lester Jones, | With ‘each Mea Carton. For sale at chief of the U. S, coast and geodetic Ini druggists.