The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 18, 1916, Page 5

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WE'LL TRUST YOU OUR credit service has boon established for your conventence-~ to assiat you to furntah your home along your own Individual fdeas Our terme are easier and our prices are lower than will be found anywhere, Ne ira charges, so tntereet. Just Ue WORD THAT YOU'LL PAY finish y priced for $22.75 $28.75 $27.75 T° HUNDRED Pairs White Wool - fintshed Blankets with pink and brue Dorders; extra large weighing 5% pounds Library Table, special $47.50 Fumed Oak Library Table, spectal. $3450 Pumed Oak Library Table, special . Hh: food Values at the $37.50 Golden Oak cemular price, $3.50. Extra Library Table, special $29. 75 Special 7.60 Golden Oak | $2.75 Linracy Tate $21.75 Wendiowse- : ssage aX urn ike Qyte ARREST MAN WITH HAVE NOT SEEN AUTO TAG TOOLS § BREMEN AS YET) NEW LONDON, Conn., Sept. 18 “New London was agog today both again and yet--expecting th German merchant submarine Bre men to arrive at any time. The tug T. A. Scott, Jr, hired by the Eastern Forwarding Co., put out last night when reports were re special Caught with a complete outfit of tools for changing auto license numbers, Louis Lan, a Russian me ehanic, was arrested by Patrolman Ed Hagen at Railroad ave. and Washington st.. Monday morning, and held on an open charge, pend- ing investigation ceived of a submarine being off The police believe Lan may be Block island. Nothing has been connected with a syndicate of auto seen or heard of the diver, how- thieves, who redress stolen cars ¢ver. — ve se ee = remy | num plates and licenses, an GILL CANNOT HELP | JAILED STRIKER then selling the machines. A committee of union longshore men appealed to Mayor Gill Satur day and asked him to release the! 60 men arrested by the police on| | the water front last week. The mayor explained that they were being held on state charges and could not be released by him. FALLS TO DEATH Little John Berens, age 8, son of 8. E Sevens, 215 Nickerson st. climbed out om one of the steel |girders of the new Fremont ave.| | bridge, near Nickerson st., Sunday | afternoon and fell 500 feet to his death “I'm all right and I won't fall,” jhe had called to F. A. Mellon, 3117% Fremont ave, who warned him not to climb out. R IS DYING Supports, reducing abdomen and hips. Give tight waist measure over corset, also tight a! measure, 0 Inches below watet. not deduct for lacing. ‘aist over 25 inches, 25¢/ Sand cash money seder'or Now suck | REGINA, Sask. Sept. 18—Hon.| Graft. No st = 0. D. orders or| Walter Scott, premier of Sas Senne chemks. Soceptes. katchewan {s belfeved dying bere HYGIENE CORSET FACTOR today of asthma. Visitors are |barred. Secrecy guards his actual West Twelfth St, Cincinnati, 0. The National City Bank SEATTLE, WASH. condition. OF Report of Condition Made to Comptroller of the Currency at Close of Business September 12, 1916, RESOURCES LIABILITIES P Capital paid Loans and ¥ rs discounts $2,496,081.92 in ....---$ 500,000,00 Overdrafts . 195.89 Surplus . 100,000.00 PG tends Undivided ‘.- eeude Profits 85,044.77 circulation. 50,000.00 = Circulation . _ 50,000.00 itacdl ce é Deposits ... 3,439,779.95 serve bank stock .... 18,000.00 Furniture and fix- tures .... 1,000.00 Real estate. 16,828.11 Bonds and warrants . 523,581.27 Cash and ex- change 1,069,137.53 $4,174, 824.72 $4,174,824.72 Deposits under call September 12, 1916... $3,439,779.95 Deposits under call September 2, 1915 2,593,366.90 This gain of deposits in one year of oe 846,413.05 —represents three things: | 1st—Additional amount of money in Seattle; 2nd—Those depositing it are among the upbuilders of the community ; 3rd—Proof that hundreds of men and women ap- prove our standing and methods OFFICERS W. MAXWELL, President ¥. W. BAKER, Vice ee mident IW BLOK Vice President N. HM. SBIL, ¢ E. B. ANSLE ant Cashier | thusiasm of the people. jtentiary was doomed to fall, |ranga officers ran thru the corri- |thru |fm and rescued | nounced | diately | good order. | woman jeontinuing her story, | CELLS WHEN VILLA RAIDS CHIHUAHUA By Webb Miller EL PASO, Sept. 18.—All northern Mexico is in turmoil today as reports of Villa’s attack upon Chihua- hua City early Saturday spread thruout the country. Four thousand de f being. rushed to Chihuahua and other points while two} columns of cavalry are pursuing the — flying jtoward Santa Clara canyon, according to reports given out by Gen, Gonzales, Carranza commander at Juarez. Despite reports given out by Carranza officials that Villa was badly defeated, the effect of his attacks fol- lowing his threat to shout “Grito” in the huahua on Independence day was to rouse the In Juarez troops are patrolling levery street in order to prevent an outbreak of pro- | Villa feeling. Three Carranza officers who de ~ sorted wate the ay —. fy {cupy Chihuahua elty, but that his Chihuahua commenced and rode] pursone was to make « demonstra north to catch a train, arrived ID )tion for its effect upon the Ameri Fl Paso early today. According to can-Mexican mediation commis thelr stortes, the Villistas attacked |), yi ( | the town in two columns, one Villa's men started evacuating | marching straight to the pentten. tlary without a shot being fired upon them, the other column driv the Carranza soldiers bet them to the palace. | Shoot Prisoners in Cells When {it was seen that the pent Car the prison bef shell fire opened on them SETH LOW DIES AT RURAL HOME was dors, shooting political the bars. About killed in that manner. Then the doors were broken down by the Villistas, who rushed jen. Salazar. Gen. Trevino, Carranzista com mander, wan shot by one of his own mon, these officers declare, and about onethird of the garri son mutinied and went over to the bandit leader. Villistas Lose 200 Men The Villistas lost about 200 men, according to best estimates, while the Carranza losses were not an-| but were sald to be very | prisoners 20 were heavy As the Villistas left the prison and started to cut their way thru the government troops, hand-to- hand fighting took place in the Streets, The streets were swept by shell fire, killing facto sol- diers and bandits alike, For an hour after Villa had evacuated it, cannon fire was kept up on the palace | The Carranzistas did not imme} pursue when the bandits finally cut their way thru the lines. Once outside the city, the bandits reformed and marched away in Seth Low NEW YORK, Sept. 18.—Seth Low for 11 years president of Columbia university, and a former mayor of both Brooklyn and New York city, died Sanday at his country home, at New Bedford, N. Y, of « compli cation of diseases, Lew wae born in Brooklyn 1850, It was his investigation of the practices of the Tweed ring which led to his mayoralty successes, He traveled extensively tn Burope, and tn his 40th year was elected president of Columbia. He resigned the presidency in 1901, but continued until 1914 as a trustee. At the time of his death Low was interested in labor prob- lems. Even on his sickbed he was active in the settlement of the cent ratlroad atrike. He was a per- sonal friend of Samuel Gompers and other labor leaders. ITALIANS SWEEP NEAR TRIESTE By military men here it is be |Heved Villa did not intend to oc- Cn PAULA HOPES HER STORY LL © HELPFUL TO GIRLS MEETING LIFE’S TEMPTATIONS The day “after the visited me,” newsp said Paula. I sat down and took stock. It seemed to me 1 had learned more in the few months since the death of my dear parents than fn all the 18 years before. ROME, Sey The Italians have broken the Austrian third line in the region of Monfalcone. after three days of flerce fighting. On the whole front, from Goritz 1 wish I could make clear to|,outh to the sea, the new Italian you, Margie, bow far in the dim|arive on Trieste is proceeding sat and distant past all my happy and |isractorily. A whole series of Aus Irresponsible childhood seemed. It was like a dream. I had learned every one of us must stand alone trian positions from Oppacchiasel- ja southward, thru Pietra Rossa, has been carried, and the Austrians Gold Crowns temptations that have beset me. Natural Crowns “So long as nature's great urge Is that of propagation of the race, | Bridgework, per Tooth men will hunt and women must} protective Guarantee With All hide behind the wall we call fem Work inine virtue. Some day, however, I hope men and women will work side by side without a thought of anything but their work.” (To be continued) | National Painless Dentists Fourth and Pike Open Sundays, 9:30 to 1 P, M city of Chi-| en-| STAR—MONDAY, SEPT, a PRISORERS SHOT IN HUGHES IS OFF bandits| for what wil be one of thé most | | } | | |imoment that she could arrange facto troops from Monterey are |aftaire so as of republicanism io Mlinols, Wis jeonsin, Ohio, Indiana, ~ Pennay! jvanta, New Jersey and New York |ly stated today | Seattle, took 125 hours and 12 min- |BADGER GANGSTERS jthe matter kept quiet?” 18, 1916. PAGE 5 ON LONG TRIP, one | BY PERRY ARNOLD | U. P. Staff Correspondent NEW YORK, Sept tnvig Jorated by w five days’ rene, Cha BE. Hughes .oft N York at 5 a m. today on his eqnd ¢# tour and from now on will be the road until election dw Mra. Hughes found her to, accompany hor and was with the candi thelr train pulled out at the \y urband. \date when energetic campaigns ever attempt: | ed by a presidential candidate. Hughes will spread his doctrine | he returns here pt. 2 hedule calls for an averag weoches a day FRENCH SURROUND | IMPORTANT TOWN PARIS, Sept. 18.—French troops completely surrounded Deniecourt, south of the Somme, in heavy) fighting Imat night, it was offictal-| The Germans com ter attacked agely on the whole) front south of the Somme, where the French scored Important gains > t, You Save $10 to $20 When You Buy a Buck’s Range $1 NO yesterday Three violent attacks were made! east of the village of Berny and/ = WE south of Dentecourt, where the French repulsed the onslaughts) and made further progress, com-| Your handsome new Buc pleting the encircling movement. | Twelve hundred prisoners and ton mitrailleuses were ta GIRL IS HELD AFTER MAN’S FOUND DEAD promptly on payment of On ROOM PORTLAND “Rept 18.—Mins Eva} Young married people and engaged couples are especially invited to visit our Home Gibson, is held Monday by th Outfit Exhibit Section on Second and Third Floors. police as a material witness in con nection with th mysterious death Fumed Oak Living Room | 6-piece Living Room Suite, in fumed or golden of Axel Nelson, 28, a structural $1 10. 50 sults arge comfort | waxed oak, consisting of genuine Pullman dav- steel worker, Who was found dead 1n a vacant building on the East Side late yesterday | ak Wh There was « bullet wound in his} a te terns pow Aki sims WET. breast, but bis watch and money! #7.50 NOW AND 81.50 WEEKLY $7.50 NOW AND $150 WEEK were undisturbed Relatives of! $86. 50°" ned Oak Dining Room Suite, oon- $80. 50 piece Quactered Oak Dining Room oe 7 le onial buffet, planked Suite ting of buffet, 45-inch the ée04 man say be spent the top 48-inch exte 6 gene: ee extension table, and ‘ ‘genuine evening with Miss Gibeon. S750 NOW AND SALONIKA, Sept. 18 —Serbi T f ene Wal | BLANKETS pea a’ 7 oe HEATERS Pa ies! M A GOTTS TEIN Ties Kamakchalan, northwest of Os-| ovo lake and he Serbo-| RANGES COMFORTS nounced, Ten machine guns were ADDED TO SEATTLE S POPULAR HOME FURNISHERS ADDED TO captured. ACCOUNT ACCOUNT SECOND AUTOS SET RECORD $7.50 Groceries 42 Packages Staple Brands Absolutely N YOUR OLD STOVE TAKEN IN EXCHANGE ine leather slip-seat chalts, SPECIAL $1.25 WEEKLY WITH EVERY Buck’s wis! Range MADE Sold During Our Sixth Annual Buck’s Range Demonstration! Select any range from the entire exhibit on the unusually easy terms of $1 WEEKLY CHARGE NO INTEREST k’s Range and 42 packages ¢ Dollar down (Free) delivered rhe most practical premium ever offered. of Groceries OUTFIT SPECIALS tonne uphol ary table; genu 4 firenide chair | $84.50 enport and leather upholstered auto seat chair and rocker: large quartered oak library ¢ and teed rocker upholstered mattress $74. 50 | leather slip-seat chairs, SPECIAL. . $59.75 $1.00 NOW AND $100 WEEKLY AVE., BETWEEN PIKE AND PINE The war department test run by volunteer auto messengers from Plymouth, Mass. to Fort Lawton, | utes, Capt. Bunn reported Monda) The message was carried by re-| lays, in which 0 autos took part.| Jim Parsons brought the messenger) to Seattle from North Bend Satur day morning. There was delay on the last lap, due to a wheel break {ng and road construction between Walla Walla and Pasco. LONDON, Sept. 18.—British troops began closing In upon Thiepval last night, after cap- turing Mouquet farm, and took several German trenches south | of the village, Gen. Haig re- ported this afternoon. Thiepva!l village position, which| has held up the progress of the| British left wing since the Somme/ offensive began July 10, was made most precarious for the Germans by GET COOL MILLION |the loss of the well fortified Mou-| to have been used to entrap rich |quet farm yesterday. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 men into compromising positions Germans Lose 40,000 and then blackmail them. The/ Forty thousand Germans have men are sald to have similarly en-|peen killed, wounded or captured trapped rich women. The persons held in the county jail on federal warrants are Ed since the Anglo-French armies re- sumed the offensive on the Somme with battering blows that bent back Now, 4 c ' “ ce rie Bagchee Kap oP tag to trench positions 10) \4-q° alias “Doc” Donahue; Mrs.|the Teuton lines do it. Can I stand alone for what-| advanced Italian lines are now ward Donahue Mrs, Helen) The fighting continued last night ever any woman or man shall do|jess than 12 miles from Trieste, |@vers, alias Mrs. George | W.|north and south of the river with for me? When the actd test of | — shies “ ‘te. _|Brown; Henry Russell; Jas. Chris-/the greatest fury life and success is applied, it will |tian, alias MH. J. Cross; George! ‘The allied successes have had a remain for me to stand it alone. HAIR GRAY? THEN Mrs. Frances Allen, alias! profound effect in Berlin, according | | may be able to get thru with | . | Mra, Frances Chapman. ,, {to The Hague dispatches today. few scars, but I know now that The number blackmailed in Chi-/The Germans had been led to be-| only thre hurte--which, altho they cago is estimated at from 75 to 100.|Ijeve that the Somme drive had may heal in time, always leave APPLY -BAN $10,000 at a Clip been halted by the inability of the scars—can I succeed Hauls were as high as $10,000. | British to capture the Flers-Cource: Paula,” 1 eni4, “why G16 you Only one was as low as $000. But lette line and to break thra the Ger- not then come to some of your old - the biggest money was made iniman defenses around jepva friends? Why did you not come ta| It Darkens Gray Hair |New York and Philadelphia, De-| Armored Tanks a Surprise me?” | E 1 tectives arrested the supposed| ‘The German papers are now pre | “I might have done so, dear Mar-| ven ad blackmailers. paring the public for the early evac- gie, if you had begun to teach| Ry taking charge of the apart juation of both Peronne and Com- school. But {t took me only al !f your hair is gray, streaked with} ment house where they were stay-|bles, and pointing out that a retire- week or so to understand that the|®™ Prematurely or just turning jing, one detective operated. the/ment on a wide front may become | point of view of the sheltered and|*®™” °* if your hair i* dry, harsh,/awitehboard and listened to all = cared for woman is as far from that |‘! oF falling, simply shampoo hair |conversations. Dictagraphs were Pole from the South, When | was| '*'* ie od Restorer, Soon every) watted until most of those bgp bea } oe hag sl age strand of halr (whether gray or not)|were in their rooms and then RUMANIA RAILROAD — iced spony by arate. becomes evenly dark, soft, flossy.| swooped down ‘ fluffy, full of life and health, full Pictures Tell Story mother. A year afterward, when] is heavy and fascinating, and er x . “ BERLIN, Sept. 18.— Russo-Ru you lost your mother and began to|°"° © - re H, G. Clabaugh, government teach school, I was in New York,|{iT¢ head of hair ts so beautifully lagent, ordered the arrest of a May |manian forces already have retreat- far from the old town where we suspect you had applied Q-Ban, It] Traub, in St. Louls, In the rooms jed more than 50 miles from the Bul were both born, striving to forgot) (* aneaiutely “harmless and of the band were scores of pletures|garian frontier, and are falling it and everything pertaining to It Fee sot on a Monen back [of men and women fn unconven:|steadily back on the Cernavoda “It was good of you, dear Paul: guarantee, 6c for a big bottle at|tional poses These were to be/Constanza line, where a great bat I sald, “to tell me the story of your| Hartell’s drug store, Beattie, Wash..lused as evidence to demand money It}9 jg expectod. adventures. It 1s #0 different from ve "Pid ett from the persons trapped In an attempt to relieve the Ten the books that try to tell girls what Aber Spsreate by working /tonte pressure in Dobrudja the Rus- they must encounter on the stage of th eged blackmailers a8 fol: lsians are attacking in force at sev and other places in seeking work.|| YOUR TEETH jlows eral places along the Austro-Ger What they say is either sentimental || Can be saved without pain. Suppose you were president of man front. At only one point, be or brutal.” Medical treatment precedes ac. J)" Dationally known bank. Suppose fore Halitz, did the Russian attack Paula nodded, “Any woman with | tual work. you had two daughters known in|meet with any success the least personality,” she sald,| It costs you nothing to come |) Society and club circles. Suppose! ‘The Rumanians have abandoned “who works with men day after\} in and he convinced. jyour wife was a social® leader. |many guns in their hasty flight be day, is bound to attract some one | Then suppose that you had met an |fore Mackenzen'’s forces, German of them. Then the decision rests attractive and charming woman, |air men report that the Rumanians with her. | say at a roof garden are strengthening their lines south | “Besides, | know my life is not a | Wouldn't You Pay? of the Cernavoda-Constanza rafl-| bit more interesting than any oth- | ‘She flirted with you. Then you! way, whose capture would prac- er working girl's. But the knowl-| called. Then suppose two or three tically cut Rumania off from com-| edge of my experiences may help men who said they were govern: |; unication with Russia via the others when they meet with the ment officials discovered you in a| pack sea. | compromising situation and threat ened you with exposure, publicity | and a prison sentence WOMEN Alb MASONS Don't you think you would be willing to pay a good sum to have Nearly 200 prominent sive coats,|women will assist in the Masonic raid were|carntval, October 2 to 7, tnclusive, women's |in the new temple nearly complet- ed at Harvard ave. and Pine st. | Seattle Silk underwear, expe’ rich gowns seized In the sald to be part of the equipment for these operation THIEPVAL TOTTERING BEFORE HARD SMASHES BY B south of the Somme yesterday to/the new British armored cars, or warn the Germans not to withdraw “tanks, troops from that sector to reinforce |such an important part in the the battered lines north of the river. ture of Flers, Courcelette and The assault was successful, and tinpach in Friday's attack. deepened the wedge in the German! One correspondent reported that line between Peronne and Combles./they are not armored cars at all, Delayed dispatches from press |but huge land battleships that shed head ters are full of exploits of ordinary gun fire like a duck does necessary for strategic reasons, | water, and can only be damaged by The French shifted their attack a dead hit from a big shell. cap- Mar. STATEMENT OF THE CONDITION OF THE First National Bank of Seattle, Washington September 12, 1916 RESOURCES Loans and discounts........ U. S. Bonds...... sees Other Bonds, Ww arrants and Stocks. . ‘. 1,040,640.23 Real Estate, Furniture and Fixtures. 38,488.20 Cash and Exchange..........s+ee+e0++ 2,314,063,71 + $3,484,076.82 100,000.00 $6,977,268.96 LIABILITIES $ 300,000.00 131,182.25 Capital Stock Surplus and Undiv ided Profits Circulation ; 99,995.00 Bonds Borrowed ; es teks. 34,649.49 Deposits °.... seeee 6,411,442.22 $6,977,268.96 M. A, ARNOLD President MAURICE McMICKEN Vice President A. R, TRUAX Assistant Cashier DIRECTORS Thomas Bordeaux Patrick McCoy 0, D. Fisher H, W. Rowley R. D. Merrill Hervey Lindley D, H. Moss Maurice MceMicken M. A. Arnold D. H. MOSS Vice President Cc, A, PHILBRICK Cashier The First National Bank of Seattle For COURTESY is known—Through COURTESY has grown " the monsters that played ~ =enxneel 4 eee

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