The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 7, 1916, Page 8

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T Fourth at Pike—Continuous 11 11 Now Showing To Crowded Houses SEE Thrilling Fire Scene Actual Burning of a Ship at Sea Vivid Fight With Octopus Ever Shown in Pictures Before Sensational Escape Locked in a Coffin of a Prisoner on Convict Ship “Th = —_ SSS Beene from ‘Shicl WE ing Shadow’? No. 2 “Into the Depths’? Pathe The Wonder Serial—Greater Than the “Iron Claw” —BEAUTY— —LAUGHS— 2Act Comedy Mix-Up “THE RIGHT CAR BUT THE IVY CLOSE in A, “RIVAL ARTISTS” wen SheetemLL 10G—No Raise Children 5c SEE EPISODES NO. 1 AND NO. Shielding Shadow’ Pathe’s $5,000,000 Masterpiece of Mystery, Adventure and Thrills —NEWSsS— lewspaper LATE NEWS IN PICTURES No Raise—10c NN COLONIAL SUNDAY | MONDAY TUESDAY 3 DAYS MORE A Quartette of Stars Grace Darmond Ralph Kellard Leon Bary Madeline Travise AND MORE THAN 100 OTHERS 2 “Se DAIRY DAY |RUMANIALOSES |AUTOISTS MUST AT LAND SHOW} 50,000 TROOPS! QUIT SPEEDING the high cost of/ BERLIN, Oct 7.—The Rumanians dairy prod-|have lost 50,000 men fn the last be a puzzie to anybedy|two weeks of fighting in Transyl- they ve suffered defeats at the hands it’s the slogan of/of Field Marshal Falkenbayn. m who held sway at the| Budapest dispatches today assert- thwest Land Products Expost-|ed that.some of the crack Ruman- ‘It's “Dairy day” at the Arena, and Chief Beckingham has issued a general order to have al) reckless automobile drivers arrested imme diately upon report of serious acct dents. His order followed reports of five fan. regiments have been entirely yooh ped ladatalaa ee 9 hea wiped ont. Il-tratned troops are | Serious. the big tent annex. now opposing, Falkenhayn's victot Mrs. A. J. Austin, 901 28th ave. ‘Bome of the who have| {ous advance against the army that|!# at the city hospital, with concus- i highest in the dairy league) invaded Transylvania. j ston of the brain. She was struck the last year or so were on by H. J. Burtge, of Cle Elum, drtv- Industry,” and,J. E. Dorman, of the |{9® at Westlake ave. near’ Pike. maids were scheduled to| federal department of animal hus-| He was released on $100 bail. behind Ferullo’s band be-| bandry, talked on “Dairy Herd Im-| Edward Bryan, 19, 1631 North 12 and 1 p. m. Buttermilk | provement. | 53rd st. nas a fractured leg and cheese were to be free for the } internal injuries sustained when he ; Japanese have invented matches ¥2s run down by a truck on the Chief Milk Inspector A. N. Hen-|that light perfectly even when wet. | water front. of the health department,| Appendicitis was known in Egypt, Saturday morning on 5,000 years ago, and accurately de- as Applied to the Dairy scribed. Florida's highest point is 300 feet above sea level. ATTENTION — HOUSEKEEPERS AND MARKETERS! Grand Opening of the Pine Street Market SATURDAY, OCT. 14, 1916 Come and See for Yourself—Seeing Is Believing We are proud of the NEW PINE STREET MARKET, and if you come to our Grand Opening we know you will experience the same satisfaction. We think we have the latest and most COMPLETE PLANT in SANITARY MARKET CONSTRUCTION. It is now being stocked with an array of food merchandise that will please the eye of the most fastidious and satisfy the purse of the most economic buyer. We have collected under one roof a number of merchants, who have been selected with the Greatest Care on account of their expert- ness and experience as food purveyors, and their presence is a guar- antee of the best and most efficient service in a modern and well regu- lated PUBLIC SANITARY. MARKET. OUR AIM will be not only to handle the best quality of goods in the food line, but the greatest varieties, and at prices which will appeal to the most careful buyers. With these aims, which we will strictly observe, we hope to merit your patronage and support. We think we can be of service to you and invite you to be present at the opening of our enterprise. Visit the building before the Grand Opening, so you may note the splendid arrangement provided for the merchants. And by the way, we will have a row of Farmers’ Stalls on the side- walk along Seventh Avenue. Respectfully, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 ‘OLE CONGRATULATES FAIRBANKS ON HIS PRAISE OF WILSON |men to force Intervention and pos: |sibly annexation to the United States. “The exploiters of public utili. ties and of the mineral and agricul-| |tural resources of our neighbors} |have undoubtedly thought that | they would gain much {f they could force intervention by the United| | States, There are soldiers of | fortune in Mexico who would un- doubtedly welcome such a con- | tingency. “‘Sensationalists are adding to the confusion of the situation and making more difficult the solution of the problem. Intervention in Mexico is, of course, not a matter) to be considered lightly; for inter | vention means war, and war means the destruction of human lives and | the expenditure of hundreds of mil- lions of dollars. No Right to Shed Blood “It means, furthermore, the re-| jponsibility of the government of 0,000,000 people for an indefinite period. We are now engaged in overning 10,000,000 aliens as the |result of the Spanish-American war—a war which could very prob-| ably have been averted if we could] {have exercised a little more pa tlence, patriotism, and self-re- straint. | “‘If our speculators in Mexico suffer pecuniary loss as the result} jof recurring revolutions, that ts a matter for further consideration, | when stable government and peace are fully established in that coun try. It is not warrant for shedding the blood of Americans. | Uphold Wilson's Hands “'To sacrifice the life of one soldies for all of the dollars investors or speculators have ventured in Mexico would be the supremest criminal folly, without a deliberate affront on the part of the Mexican gov- ernment, whether it exists de | jure or de facto, is no good | ground on which we would be | justified in sending our armies beyond the Rio Grande. Wilson gs dealing with it situation) as best he| can, We may not entirely agree | that his course is better than that of his distinguished predecessor, | nevertheless we should endeavor to uphold his hands, There should be no differe#ce of opinion as to pthat. By doing #0 we shall make| | his task a comparatively easy one. | “It is not an hour for either | ittle politics or sensational journ-| allsm. The clamor of the jingoes ‘should not be allowed to drown the | volce of rational, deliberate states. |manship. It Is a pretty safe rule, | when we come to deal with grave linternational problems, to put our faith in the president of the United States and follow where he may lead. He speaks for the country |when we come to deal with interna tional affairs. | ‘The president of the United States is a safer guide than sensationalists and the soldiers of fortune who come to the surface whenever international controversie: ™ President (the SUICIDE ENDS HER HUNT FOR MISSING MATE Danlel B. Donnelly of Kerriston ended a week's search for her husband late Friday night. when she found him dying in the city hospital from self-inflicted knife wounds uries recelved when he Jumped four stories down the air shaft of the Georgian hotel five hours earlier. He was an employe of the North weet Lumber Co, and bad disap peared after acting strangely, Earl Friday afternoon Dr, N. D, Miller was summoned to the Georgian b the clerk, who wanted Donnelly ex amined. He was acting “queer the clerk sald, After the physician had failed to discover anything rad ically wrong, Donnelly made the Jump. Bill alive, and apparently not seriously injured, he took out bir pocket knife, slashed his throat and then stabbed himself in the abdomen before hotel employes could take'the knife away from him Donnelly died at the clty hospital at 9 p.m, Friday, He was 38 years of age, and had | & watchman at the Kerriston mill for etght years FAIRBANKS IS SEATTLE GUEST Mra. Charies W. Fairbanks Arriving from Portland at 6:50 a. m. over the Northern Pacific, Charies Warren Falr- banks, republican candidate for vice president, who has visited thie city several times, receiv. @d many visitors at the Wash- ington hotel before setting out on a big day's speaking and so- clal schedule. Fairbanks appears much @rayer and older than when he was here three years Beginning at noon, Fairbanks’ program was crowded with one event after another. He will address a masse meeting at the Moore theatre at & p. m. Doors will be opened at 7 o'clock Senator Miles Poindexter will preside. Gov. McBride and others prominent in republican circles will occupy seats on the stage At noon, Fairbanks uled to speak before the Young Men's Republican club tn the Com mercial Club rooms, after which there will be a public reception, At 2 p. nm. the visitor was sched- uled for a tour of the clty by auto, stopping at the Sunset club, where the women will hold @ reception for him At 4 p. m., he was due at the Land Products show at the Arena. | Following the meeting at the Moore thoatre, Fairbanks will be guest of the Press club Fairbanks will leave Sunday evening. He will probably attend rervices at the First Methodist Episcopal church in the morning and visit with his fraternity, Phi Gamma Delta, in the afternoon. FAIRBANKS ROUSES PORTLAND CROWD PORTLAND, Ore., Oct, 7.—-Ore gon republican leaders consider that the speech of Chas. W. Fair banks, republican vice presidential | nominee, at the armory here was one of the best campaign orations ever delivered in the North west. Fairbanks addressed a crowd of 5,000 people, packing the building to its capacity, He directed his attack principally at the demo. cratic slogan: “Wilson Kept Us Out of War.” “Aak the fathers, mothers, brothers and sisters of the brave boys who fell at Vera Cruz if there was not war in Mexico,” he de manded The mention of Chas. FE. Hughes’ name provoked a riotous demon stration, There was another out burst of cheering when Fairbanks chanced to mention President Wil son. Fairbanks left for Seattle after his speech. 200 HEAR TURNER George Turner, democ date for senator, address mately 200 at tle candi 1 approxi two meetings held Friday night. He spoke at Phalen's hall and Hillman City. He declared that a8 senator in 1896 he secured the first appropriation, amounting to $500,000, for digging the Lake Washington canal, Hazen J, Titus, dining car super intendent of the N. P., who estab: shed the “great: big baked po tato” service, 1s worried, He can't. find enough weighing 24 ounces or over. “Some shippers have offered to supply us,” he says, “but I'd lke to hear from any others who have big potatoes, My reputation ts at stake.” spude Sa was sched- HE SEATTLE STAR COLISEUM SATURDAY—LAST TIMES—BILLIE BURKE SUNDAY TO WEDNESDAY PAULINE FREDERICK “ASHES of EMBERS” —OR— “The She-Devil” SOMETHI yee seein EARNEST LAWTON, A HAND- j SOME ACTOR, 18 AT- | | TRACTED TO PAULA! I! 1 wonder, Margie,” continued Panla, “if you ever met a man who | hypnotized you at first glance. | “The late Elbert Hubbard once | |wald that on one of his lecture; trips he looked into the eyes of a }woman in the auditorium and a flash passed between them, some- thing that would ever after make| |her life different. He recognized she had felt the shock to her whol |physical being ae did he. “‘T have n seen that woman since,’ he sald. did not speak to her at the time, but oftimes in the midst of something that woman's | |face appears, and my heart beats | heavily at the memory of it’ “Mr. Hubbard used this expert- ence to illustrate magnetic influence that sometimes exists between man and woman “I am not talking wholly, Margte, of physical magnetism. It must be jsomething stronger than that. |There comes a mist, a sudden shiver, and life is never, the same again,” “Margie,” sald Paula suddenly, it has been many yeara since I |looked into the eyes of Barnest Lawton, and yet that first look still ling He saw me in the man ager’s office, and as he opened the door to the inner room he turned jand shot back one parting glance |fraught with meaning. I sat in a trance fully five minutes, only to |be jolted out of it with, ‘Miss New the Big Nolse wants to see ton, you, | “I felt my knees shake, I won |dered if I could walk to that door without swaying. Then came Em |ma's words, ‘Play the game, child [pl the game. Remember, you |ha to do this or leave the table. “I straightened up and entered the inner room, A big, perspiring man sat there, uis feet on the desk Jand his hat the back of his| head, There a slight look of | Jcurtosity on his face. Beside him rnest Lawton, hat in hand, | “You remember Earnest Lawton, | Margie; he is one of the handsom est men on the stage. “Both men spoke at once. |manager bruskly, ‘What's line The actor courteously, down, Miss Newton,’ ‘Acting, I hope,’ I said fn_an- |swer to the manager's question, as | sank {nto the chair placed for me |by Biarnest Lawton. “Don't you know? was the man- ager's surprised query. “ No,’ was my answer, ‘1 have act: ed only in amateur theatricals.’ “The manager grunted, ‘ never do, Lawton, She's green, was The your ‘Bit | he'll DANIEL HOLMEN, carpenter, sustained a skull when he fell 25 feet from the Marion st, viaduct to the rail- road tracks Friday evening. 4, G. N fractured the wonderful | NG SENSATIONAL—DON'’T MISS IT! Coliseum Orchestra, Under ADELMANN, in New Music 15c—Children 5c—Loge Seats 30c DEMO POLITICS [LEVY IS HIGH, ALLMESSED UP, TAXES LOWER Democratic state politics are con- State, county, city and school dis- siderably messed up just now. | trict tax levies for 1917 will total Which, incidentally, affords the| 44.337 mills, it was determined Sat- republican captains heaps of amuse-|Urday, which is 1.109 mills higher ment as well as optimism. jthan 1916. The other day Gov. Lister public-| The port commission levy will ly repudiated Democratic State| Probably be about the same as last Chairman Fogarty, and appointed | /¢&P—1.332 mills. his own campaign committee. The| This makes the total levy for tax- governopig reason was that Fogarty | P®yers the highest in mills ever was a and is supporting in-| Called for, except in the “old lim- {tiative bills 18 and 24, the hotel|!ts” city texing district. and brewery bills. | The actual amount of money to Comes now Fogarty and says the} spent, however, is about the governor is sadly, grievously and|*@me as in 1916. The reduced val- painfully mistaken. Fogarty {s|U@tion schedule is responsible against both these {nitiative meas-|/argely for the increase in the mill ures, he declares, refused to sign) !¢vy figures. them, and {s as “dry” as anybody. For instance, the totx! King conn- Fogarty jen't bitter toward Lis-|tY Valuation is $262,556,998 this ter, he 8. He'll support him in| ¥€4r compared to $273,677,092 spite of Lister's attack on him, be-| 4st yea “Spit as to the ewet® and “dry"|GYPSY CHIEF DIES OUT WITH PEOP issue, Fogarty intimates, he became a “dry” just as soon as the gover-| . ¢ nor did—right after the prohibition] FA TRREON, N. J.. Oct. 7.— law was adopted by the people. | pe hd oe. pape rates | {ts leader for 60, died “in the field with his followers,” as he wished, after escaping from a hospital here. An Invitation Borrowers on Real Estate The facilities of our Mortgage Loan Department have recently been enlarged so that we are now handling Building Loans. Applica- tions are invited. The United States pays rear ad-| mirals $8,000 a year; Japan pays! hers $1,643. To If you want a loan on improved city real estate, you are invited to come in and talk it over. We particularly desire applica- tions for loans of $1,000 to $10,000, though larger and smaller ones are accepted. | SAVINGS: Lack of decision to make the start has kept many a person from belonging to the get- ahead class. NOW is alw good time to start a savings ac- count. Alaska Bulking home qf ‘The Scandinavian / We welcome Savings Accounts from $1.00 upwards. Call or write for our booklet, “Banking by Mail.” ; Scandinavian American Bank Use Our Ballard Branch if More Convenient Resources Over $13,000,000 amma? |

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