The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 4, 1916, Page 5

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)ODHOUSF -GRUNBAU M FURNITURE CO int WE'LL TRUST YOU UR credit service Nas been established for your conventenc to Assist you to turnlah your h along your own tndivid ideas | Que terme are, easter and a fh be found anywhere, Ne JUST YOUR Word” Thar vo Che ee Werth of Nometurstenin, 1 Dews, Thee Werth of Nomefuratnines..” Ree Brass Red in royal satin finish 2-inch continu: ous posts and five filling rods. Is quaranteed not inch top that extends to to tarnish: regular price six ar price Kenora $16.28 fs et"$11.95 for Th V he dhouse-Grinbaum 7 424 urniture (se et: EYS CRIMP CONGRESS IS SOLID Oak Dining Tadte in tum r waxed fin square pe TACOMA CARS COMING HOME -: "s TACOMA, Oct. 4.—Jitney bus) PORTLAND, Oct 4.—Moving competition is blamed for loss of! stowly northward under her own fevenue which has induced the Ta- steam, the Pacific Coast liner Con | toma Railway & Power Co. to file) gress, which burned off Coos bay | with the state public service com-| recently, was opposite the mouth ‘mission a complaint against this | of the Columbia river today on her ity, oft to be relieved from | voyage to Seattle. ite gross earnings tax, d&| ‘The tug Oneonta it is impossible to find cap | her The lner's blackened to carry on operations from Its} rode high out of the water Present income. | porary ‘The company also askw to be re-|gines and boilers so the ship _ WHeved from contributing to the doing ten miles an hour. The ost of bridge construction, from crew is housed In a wooden shed maintaining or repair-| built among the debris streets, and to be freed from) Repair work will be started ao F any further provisions of the fran-| mediately. It will probably cost | * chise under which it operates, ex) more than $600,900 to put her tn! Cept to give adequate and suffl-| shape for the passenger traffic cient service at fair and reason - <a | ROLAND COTTERILL, secre tary of the board of park commis | JOHN P. DABNEY, Seattle bust- {stoners, left Seattle Monday night! man, died Tuesday afternoon|for New Orleans, where he will at Chicago while awaiting a train|tend the [Sth annual convention of It Is believed he died fromthe American Association of Park} Superintendents accompanted shell Tem- repairs were made on en From the frozen north to the blazing tropics Baker's Cocoa known for its by and high 18 Foal SRA Baker & CoLtd. CSTABUSHED EO KRESTER, FASS SHOW will positively open tonight at 7:30 ARENA AND MAMMOTH TENT ANNEX 70,000 square feet under steel and canvas, presenting Seattle’s Biggest Show Opening Concert by FERULLO’S FAMOUS ITALIAN BAND ADMISSION Adults 25 cents. Children 10 cents. Season tickets, covering all events until close of Exposition, October 14, now on sale at $2. DON’T MISS THE LAND SHOW | 4 more than |tnjurtes feared STAR—WEDNESDAY, As INTERURBAN GOES INTO OPEN SWITCH About ured, 25 persons were in- three seriously, when a Seattle-bound two-car Tacoma Seattle limited interurban train ran thru an open switch, Tues day afternoon, at Willow junc tion, jumped the track and turned over on its side The accident occurred at 5 p.m. An ambulance call was immediately sent into Tacoma and the injured sent to Taco- ma hospitals, Three women, Mrs. Clara McLean, 2211 Fed- eral ave. Seattle; Miss Irene Epperman, Auburn, Miss Ethel Worden, Taco were unconscious when they were removed from the wreckage The most sertously injured are Mra. McLean, Seattle; injured internally Miss Ethel Worden knocked unconsctous tro and Tacoma nd suffering shock internal injuries. Mise Irene head tnjured, feared Frank P. Frank P. Dow brokers, Seattle face and head by Mise Anna Banks, Ferguson a tel, Seattle; leg injured Miss Anna ikle, Seattle; Auburn; ussion of brain Dow, president of the company, customs badly cut about broken «lass internal Thomas Melviland, New York head cut and wrist artery severed.) F. W. Buderis, New York; cut *\ bruised W. Pickering. wound roe orn. Australia; scalp Hioka, Seattle; wrist ar-! Prank Lamborn, Olympia; bruices John Chee, motorma: to explain the acetd I don't believe we were cotng 15 miles an hour when ft happened,” he said. “If the cars had not been heavy, that several deaths would have re-| sulted.” The cars ‘BULGARS HIT RUMANIA HARD LONDON, Oct. 4—The Ru- manian army that crossed the Danube into Bulgaria is under at’ Small Buigarian forces, de- tached from the garrisone at Rutechuk and = Silistra, ad. inet the in rs while Ger. and Turkish, the Varna railway al assault. The battle Has been raging since Monday, with the result still in doubt. At the same time, the fighting in obrudja and Transylvania, where he Rumanians are on the of naive, @ growing more violent ith thelr Russian allies, the Ru sanians are attacking with the ut- n08t vigon, seemingly to prevent 1@ enemy from shifting reinforce ents to meet the Rumanian in aders. o anxiety is felt afety of the Rumanian ulgaria, despite the German of cial statement that a pontoon idge has been destroyed by en ny monitors, The fact that the smasians were able to transport urge army across the Danube es held to be sufficient proof that command _the river crossing "T WILSON WANTS | VOTE OF PEACE BY R. J. BENDER U. P. Staff Correspondent PITTSBURG, Oct. 4.—(On Board President Wilson's Train.)—President Wilson is rushing westward today for his first big campaign speech in the western part of the country. His mission this time, his manager says, has the same object as when he fol- lowed the same route last win- ter. He goes to urge prepared s for peace. The “peace insurance” then de sired and later secured was a vote | from congress materially strength: | ening the army and navy. Now he wants a vote from the people on whether his “foreign policy of hall be preserved or ther the republican party shall be placed in power and this policy changed 1 e pr a change state printer,| | . Was unable were practically de- here for the army tn ey evident has declared such , would draw the nation into the embroilments of the Eu ropean war.” The new rallying of the democrats is, “Prepare | peace by re-electing Wilson.” Omaha, where the president speaks Thursday evening, is the heart of the great agricultural dis trict, where the peace appeal has always found welcome. BEAUTIFUL INEZ TO | MAKE SPEECH HERE) Subsequent to the opening of the headquarters, Tuesday, for the na- tional woman's party in the Henry bullding, Mrs. Inez Milholland Bots- sevain, national suffrage speaker, will begin the fight against Prest- dent Wilson because of the demo- cratic opposition to nation-wide suf. frage. She will speak Wednesday night, in the Moore theatre. She is mak-| ing a whirlwind tour of all of the suffrage states, The new headquarters will be in jcharge of Miss Dorothy Gibbs and| \will be used as city and state cam-| neien headauarters. ory for | moltahed A ‘tion to place smal! building n the wreck was torn to pieces, Wal ter Bowman, brakeman, and K. | . conductor, escaped unhurt als refuse to make a atate until the wreck is investl gated. Others who were slightly injured are - R. BE. Cogolon Wash. ; J Merriman. w Bryant, Seattle Kyle, Stanfield, Ore; C. W. Rowley, 1118 First ave, Auburn; Miss M. Mas cont, Waldorf apartments, Seattle C. N. Keith, Lumber Exchange building. attic; J. H. Gordon, Ta coma attorney; J. B. Snyder, Ever ett; F. Scully, Stanley apartments, Seattle; H. N, Wilkerson, 1417% Fourth ave, Seattle; E. N, Clinton, 103 13th N., Seattle; Charles M. Morgan, 7746 Sunnyside ave., Se attle Hight of the ifjured were remov ed to Seattle late Tuesday, Inter urban officials assert an investica the blame will begin Pullman. wattle James M immediately I feel certain! | | | OCT. 4, PAGE 5 PAYS MILLION 1916. FOR MILK FIRMS Milk condenseries at non and, Ferndale were old iday by John B. Agen to ©. EB lhody, of New York, for cash Agen refused to state were behind the purcha believ that some of the |companies were in on the buy is rumored the Gall Borden Co. the purchaser, This company ready has a plant at Auburn, an agent recently made an ex sive study of the dairying in the state K. H. Stuart, of the Milk Co., denied that bis ¢ When Officer Harvey, dry squad, noticed going at break-neck speed, regarding all traffic ordina stopped it Tuesday at and Western ave. ‘Then discovered a barrel of whisky cargo. Arthur King, manager of King Transfer Co. and bis helper, J were arrested for violating liquor law, and released on he , PRESADO | A blend to os ageercf when you go to bua I “S*cigar PRESADO Reached thru udgement, selection and skill in hand ling PRESADO For that blend comes only in the Tox KEENE ToM KEENE ToM KEENE cigar at 5° | Presado blend | be sure you et | the mame righ —TOM KEENE Schwabacher Brothers & Co., Inc., Distributors. Seattle , Wash. Mount Ver TT Pea $1,000,000 in and situation Carnation mpany had anything to do with the sale. SPEEDING UNCOVERS TRUNK OF BOOZE of the an auto truck and dis A. McLean what men but ft ts arge milk BETTER WAY OF ENTERTAINING OR EDUCATING THAN BY A MODERN TALKING MACHINE Union st. | 50-gallon sine" I] $15 $25 $40 $50 $75 $100 $150 who was driv VICTROLA $75 OTHER STYLES THERE’S A VICTROLA TO SUIT YOUR HOME ATA PRICE TO PLEASE AND TERMS TO MATCH YOUR PURSE $200 $250 $300 THREE POPULAR GRAFONOLAS GRAFONOLA $100 Oak or Mahogany Bet. Pike & Pine VICTROLAS DID T.R. AND BILL | SMILE WHEN THEY MET? WHO CAN SAY? BY J. P. YODER Staff Correspondent YORK, Oct. 4 Strains from the ex-presidents’ harmony duet still cloyed the atmosphere around republican headquarters today, William H. Taft and Theodore Roose- velt had met—shaken hands— AND spoken. Two years ago they met ata funeral, L night it was a sort of christening bee. The christenee was Harmony. The Union League club was the christening spot. No mere re- porters were permitted to dese crate the scene—but— Roosevelt and Taft did shake yands. They both asked “How'd you do?” but neither answered the |question. There was not any one who heard ny Dear Will” or “Dear Theodore” stuff. The two merely nodded A Good Scout Eats Without Fear Fancy Dishes and Rich Food Have No Terrors if You Use Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets Taft Prove It Witha Free Trial Package Half or more of the good ies to eat are either under suspicion or banished altogether to those who haven't learned of Stuart's Dyspep- sia Tablets Instead of berating breakfast sausage, sardine wiches and roast duck with dress. Hing, wise people eat a Stuart's Dys ‘Ipepsia Tablet after ench meal and one just before you go to bed, then there is no harm in the rich, fancy dishes Your stomach lacks digestive juices to meals easily digested Dyspepsia Tablets give the stom ach and other organs of the di gestive apparatus the wherewithal to digest food Get a 50c box drug store and try the coupon for free the proper make your Stuart's today them, trial, from any or send Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co,, 230 Stuart Building, Marshall, Mich.: Send me at once a free trial packag of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets. Name .. I stuck sand GRAFONOLA $75 Oak or Mahogany 1519 Third Ave. SONORAS Oak or Mahogany OUR PARLORS ARE ON THE GROUND FLOOR prshsiane Pian Bet. Pike & Pine GRAFONOLAS hin grabbed it, pump and two. with standing between line while all hand out. Roosevelt fave it one up-and-down dropped it. Then the Chauncey M. Depew) them, stood in he big republicans n New York passed along behind spen-faced suits and with ont- stretched hands that itched to be vhaken by two former presidents ind a would-be president-—-he was ‘haries E. Hughes—on the same right | That much is agreed to today by every one who was inside while the reporters were kept outside, looking in As to just who got the colonel and Taft together there is differ- ence of opinion ne said they were cordial said neither smilai, This was refuted by still others, who said it would have been im- possible for either to keep from grinning. But there were other |high spots that made it almost as interesting as if the colonel and | Taft had hugged each other. For instance when Roosevelt got into the elevator, who should crowded against him but W. + Maia Crane, who is said to have accumulated as many unsaid words jas he has dollars The two spoke Roosevelt jalone spoke above a whisper. Then Roosevelt ran against Root, who guided Taft's “tank” in Chi jcago in 1912. Both smiled broadly land shook hands. But the incident no one forgo’ to mention when the news-hungry reporters were being tossed the of- ficial scraps information was the meeting between—well, you'd never guess—between Boies Pen- |rose and Roosevelt. Penrose pon- dérously paraded to the receiving line and got a real smile, so every one insisted | Wm, Barnes was a late arrival |He says the crowd was so thick he was unable to get close enough to the colonel to speak |BULGARS CAPTURE | RUMANIAN TOWN but | SOFIA, Oct. 4.—Bulgarian forces have occupied the Rumanian town of Malakkalafat, near the Danube, it was offictally announced today The war office admitted at the same time that “considerable units” of Rumantans crossed the Danube and invaded Bulgaria before Bul-| garian monitors destroyed a pon- toon bridge. ‘VILLAGE IS TAKEN BY BRITISH ARMY LONDON, Oct. 4.—The village of Haucourt L'Abbaye, three miles from Bapaume, was completely oc-| cupled by the British last night, ini umption of the Somme offen-! “ Gen, Haig reported today. The Rritish lines were pushed forward) into the village several days ago, head of hair become healthy, soft, but the Germans clung tenaciously | to several houses. These were) were cleared of the enemy in last jnight’s fighting. | SERVES DOLL DINNER © Eleanor Ernst, daughter of Fred- erick A. Ernst, entertained Tuesday the dolls and their girl mothers of the Seward school at a dinner party. The hostess, who is 9 years old, — presided over a doll table on which real food, cooked in toy utensils on a toy stove, was served. Aronson’s Rose city Importing Co, 404 14th St. Oakland, Cal. Offers its cus- tomers in Seat- tle and Wash- ington com plete lines of choicest . Cali- fornia Grape Juice, Mineral Waters, etc., at lowest prices. All orders ship- ped day re ceived. SHE DARKENED HER GRAY HAIR An Atlanta Lady Applies a Simple, Harmless Prepar- ation That Restores Color Glands A prominent society lady had gray hair, but now has beautiful, evenly dark hair, radiant, lustrous long. This lady simply ap (ike a shampoo) Q-Ban to hair and scalp two or three times a week. Most any well- stocked drug store can supply you and plied her with Q-Ban, which, while harmless _ and no dye, has the effect of re- storing the color glands of the hair to activity. So if any one has gray, harsh, prematurely gray or streaked with gray hair, will sham- poo hair and scalp with Q-Ban ey- ery day for a week and then only two or three times a week, they will be delighted to see all their gray bair gradually turn to a beau. tiful, even dark shade and entire fluffy, evenly dark and fascinat- {ing without even a trace of gray showine~ *?~~*‘sement,

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