The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 24, 1916, Page 6

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ae Avo Coats are Sut an index fo the MANY S12U we Ascommodation. Beaver, Raccoon, general utility Coat, also sketched above, is shown ir striking plaids and mixtures Our Fall stock of fine Coats is very com- plete. Prices Are From $18 Up WE GIV YOU _}| BROADEST SENSE. each week or month, Store Open Until 10 o’Cleck Saturday Evening 1332-34 Second Ave. to es- | ting circles, the odds on a demo- rethedtndlygnd ie | ting trace the thruout rance Whichever way you at it, the price of p insurance is mod- Often it costs actu- ally less in money than old method of inging the abstract to date and get- a legal ofinion on title. And then, however ompetent and careful lawyer, his report ns an opinion— 9 doubt a good opin- but ONLY an 4 title insurance also get a legal pinion — the opinion lawyers who spe- cialize in land law— And a $500,000 cor- poration guarantee that | the opinion is correct; that it will pay all costs of defending your title | if attacked—and reim- burse you if you lose. In Show ] | {alternating between spasms of | Skunk or Seal. The | CREDIT IN ITS Payments can be made as you prefer. ng CHICAGO, Oct. 24.—In local bet- cratic victory in November have been backed down from 2 to 1 to {7 to 5. Hughes is still a t-to2 fa- | vorite. Jim O'Leary, Chicago's chief bet- commiscioner, explained: ‘There's a big democratic wave on) the country, so I cut my | An overheated stove, in the home of S. Morelli, 4330 Fifth ave. N. E ‘started a fire in the one-story jframe building and did $150 dam- | age before it could be put out at | 4 a.m. Tuesday. ‘RECIPE TO DARKEN | GRAY HAIR | This Home-Made Mixture Darkene i Gray Hair and Relieves Dendruft To a half pint of ¢ of water add: . «1 of. “a small box 07. all simple ingredients , buy from any druggist jat very little cost, and mix them | ‘yourself. Apply to the scalp once} a day for two weeks, then once ev- ery other week until all the mix-/ ture is used. | A half pint should be enough to | idarken the gray hair, and relieve dandruff. It does not stain the) | scalp, is not sticky or greasy, and | |does not rub off. It promotes the | | growth of the hair and makes harsh lhair soft and glossy.—Advertise-| ment. ‘ACHING TEETH RELIEVED AT HOME | Sloan's Liniment Robs Tooth-| ache of Its Terrors. Pain Vanishes a Few Minutes | | No need to pace the floor all) {night with the agony of a throb- |bing tooth. Sloan's Liniment will |quickly relleve the pain and give! you rest. | A single application and the pain usually disappears. Sloan's Lini ‘ment gets right to the root of the tronble. Like a warming balm, it relieves congestion, and in a few {minutes toothache is reduced To soothe the throb of a pom |that pains with neuralgia, appl Sloan's TAniment externally Aeh-| } ing muscles, rheumatism, gout bruises, sprains, Jumbago, chil-) blains, sprains and stiff neck can| also be most effectively treated with Sloan's Liniment. Cleaner than mussy plasters or poultices Sloan's Liniment at all drug) jstores in 25, Boe and $1.00 hottles 'HATE 1S BACK | ill will borne by the republican |leaders against the president, , | and dem HE handsome mode! shown on the leit is | one of the many new Coats we are dis- | ying. Ths garment is beautifully trimmed | | Wilson | progressive in OF T. R.-TAFT- WILSON FIGHT “They (Roosevelt, Taft, Hughes) hate Wilson because they envy him, They have the vervading envy of the mediocre man for the man of genius. | They hate him as a man of dull vision can hate a man of | expansive thought.” Bainbridge Colby, of New | York, the man who nominated |Roosevelt for president, thus summed up the cause of the in a speech at the Metropoli- tan theatre Monday night. He spoke to an audience which occupied every available jinch of space in the theatr Hundreds were turned away | at the doors, For two hours| and a half he kept the crowd laughter at Wilson’ ‘and fervent appreciation of the |president and his accomplish- ments. Colby, maintaining his good humor thruout, flayed) Theodore Roosevelt especially, critics, [the man he knew so well and effect it may have un fcountry or any foreign interest loved, and “still liked.” Albers H. MeLean, progressive ratic candidate for attor. ey general, was cheered enthusl jeally when, preceding Colby, he spoke of the Wilson accomplish. | ments for peace, expecially in the jselfishly and STAR—TUESDAY, OCT. 24, ‘DEMS CONTINUE HYPHEN DRIVE AGAINST 6, EVASION HUGHES NEW YORK, Oct Candidate ) Charlies BE. Hughes, speaking In Queensborough tonight, may have something to say about the hyphen charge, The candidate himaelf was silent early today, but those close to him suggested he may 1916, PAGE 6 the American Inde- conference linked the name of Supreme Court Justice Cohalen, of thia city, with the hy phen organtestion It named him as a speaker for the "Conferees” and claimed he hed! reply to the democratic claime. urged getting in touch with repub- The democratic national commit. He leaders more closely tee continued its hyphen drive 1 rocratle ce nition Is that againest him today, Thetr at in atte an antiafly attvek) stallment in the series concerning went to his meetiog with the the admitted conference betw ndent_Kroup. SUPREME COURT JUDGE OF NY, A LIFE REPUBLICAN, FOR WILSON “4 pendence NEW YORK, Oct, “.—Jobn {unwise to change Ford, a justices of the suprem minist in the midst of this! court in New York, @ lifedong re | unpr nted world erisin publican, announced today that he Moreover | would be false to my | will vote for President Wilson lifelong allegiance to the cause of In @ letter to President Wilson, the plain people if | failed to sup Justice Ford says: “Since my firet| port you, to whom is mainly due the nation ad Gen vote for Blaine in 1854, | have con-|the long list of progressive and sistently vored for the republican | beneficial laws enacted during your candidates, but this is an vlection | administration,” which demands of every citizen the | ‘WOMEN DEBATE OFF casting off of partisan ties and a moreiless search of conscience to determine how his vote may un NEW YORK, Oct Py] honestly be cast 0 | mrances A. Keller, chairman of the tx of the nd regard tothe any other serve best the inte Unites States: with alliance, today lenge of the democratic an open 4 the chal bureau of the declined women 1 have endeavored to bring my mind to view the issues from such 4 standpoint and, have concluded that it is my patriotic duty to vote for you “Ta my optaion, it would be e ‘most of the | presidential campaign Mexican situation. W. K. Sheldon, progressive, Was chairman. | Arguments for Wilson Colby's arguments in behalf of | summarized, are Wilson enacted Into Yaw 31 ot| progressive’ plat: | is the foremost America today: he [kept us out of war when Roose-| |velt would surely have plunged us}, jinto it; his federal bank reserve! act kept us out of a financial panic | when the Stock Exchange closed in| New York at the outset of the war.) while Roosevelt was unable to pre Vent an artificial panic in 1907; that Roosevelt declared, soon after the war began in 1914, there wan/ nothing the United States could do about the invasion of Belgium, but |!? pro lt now declares we should have tested agaist the invasion, and at! the same time advocates invasion by ourselves of Mexico Wilson Right on Mexico Colby declared we have no more) / right to Intervene in Mexico than England and France had to Inter. vene in our country during the civil war; that the Mexicans have « right to shape their own destiny. The progressives who went back to the republican party, he said, are the “most pathetic lot of dupes” he ever saw. “You revolted because of the Old Guard, the crooks, the burglae and the second-story men, as Roos velt called them,” he sald. Old Guard i still doing b at the old stand. There | single absentee. No one has re- [signed because he has weathered the danger of reform. They haven't changed their spote—they have simply touched them up. “I like Roosevelt despite the fact that I am a member of the party he betrayed, I followed him when he went forward, but refuse to fol- low him backward.” Colby described Hughes as “a bankrupt candidate of an Intellectu- ally impoverished party.” World’s Series to Be Shown in Film at the Rex Theatre Five reels of the ‘fastest baseball ever taken by a motion picture) company, showing almost every im- portant play in the recent world’s series between the Boston Amerl- For Pile —— Sulferers' ‘San Felice Standard toBe (Maintained, Say Makers All Dealers Now Sell Cigars at Se Straight. Effect Today Famous In increased tact | "Beha | weiitn the greatly quality tobaccos. he pertaining to nhath of the Man Wemmer the a of Pyramid Pte Treatment tves quick, Fe- opr itch - Ing. heeding oF protrudin piles, hemorrhoids and all recta y of yout own fdruggists, A te box often cures Pree eampte rial, with book moetied free in "| plain wrapper, If you send us coupon below. ralght r. ox prev The SAN Fi Mins away ‘oUrON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY, 629 Pyramid Bidg, Marshall Mich: Kindly send me a Free | HAVE ROSY CHEEKS | AND FEEL FRESH AS | A DAISY—TRY THIS! || . in plain wrapper. NOMO «.seccsoseerers Street | To see the tinge of healthy bloom in your face, to see your skin get clearer and clearer, to wake up without a headache. backache, coat: ed tongue or a nasty breath, in fact to fee. your best, day in and day out, just try inside-bathing every morning for one week | Before breakfast each day, drink a glass of real hot water with a} teaspoonful of limestone phosphate. in it as a harmless means of w: ing from the stomach, liver, k neys and bowels the previous day's, indigestible waste, sour bile and toxins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot « water and Iimestone phosphate on 7 an empty stomach is wonderfully * invigorating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations and acid ity and gives one a splendid appe- tite for breakfast, A quarter pound of limestone phosphate will cost very little at!‘ the drug store but fs sufficient to Says giase of hot water with phoephate before breakfast washes out poleone. WOoNDrArt utter fro debility unm you tack t* force that will put new nto Your nerves and pulld up your ty will cure you Electricity does when properly applied. Wear Blectra-Vita wotle you sleep. It rvex and vitala with new Ife. jited on the ‘REFUGEE GIRLS OF CHIHUAHUA REACH JUAREZ EL PASO, Oct. 24,—Hundreds of refugees, fleeing from Chi- huahua City, streamed into Juarez during the night and early today, bringing confirma. tion of the reports of Villa presence outside Chihuahua City. These refugees declare that the Villietas are on the western side of the city, and an attack on the Northern Mexico capital is expected at any moment. About midnight 300 residents of [Chihuahua City arrived in Juarez,| the family of com Another train brought Trevino, Carranziata In one car were of the most prominent the capital Trevino will evac mander daughters families tn Some belley uate the city While hunting caches of ammunt tion recently near Namiquipa, Villa |stopped on the Santa Ana ranch, @ according to ar! | Hearst property, ‘rivals in Juarez scouting party from the American! }Fifth cavalry was only 25 miles Bix hundred beeves were At one time a killed on the ranch by Villa's men, women's committee of the Hughes |i, js declared “cs QLE ROUSES ‘EM | IN THE DAKOTAS FARGO, N ay ty Oct. 24-—-Ole Hanson, of Seattle, progrensive can didate for the U. 8 senate in 1914 addressed the largest crowd of the campaign thie city last night He ww an eloquent plea for President Wilson The audience jammed the gest hall in town and overflowed A band and fireworks added to the excitement. Hanson's speech was on the subject ‘Old Testament heodore and Charles Echo Hughes.” LIMITED HITS FREIGHT; 2 DIE OMAHA, Oct. 24 killed the Los Angeles lim Union Pacific side. swiped a freight train which had been wrecked pear Bushnell, Neb., early this morning. The dead are Don Crawford, fireman on the limited, M. T. Moore, brakeman on thy freight According to reports here, these are the only casualties. BOY-ED —— Two men were PROVIDENC ~ BR 1, Oct. 24— That Capt. Boy-Ed, debarred Ger- man naval attache of the Washing ton embassy, dispatched the U-5% and two other submarines here to force a United States ruling on their activities was claimed by the Providence Journal today. Further, that paper stated that the 1-53. U-48 and the U-61 still are in Amer- fean waters. INDIANAPOLIS, Oct. 24,—Har.! land Hamiin and his wife entered into an agr ent that if either! the one who did not use lprofanity could hit the one who did. They both had black eyes ‘lwhen they appeared in court. IndoorLife MakesFat| oF KOREIN TO KEEP HIGHT DOWN, OR TO RE- 10 girls, | jeans and the Brooklyn Nationals, | |demonstrate that just as soap and hot water cleanses, sweetena and freshens the skin, so hot water and limestone phosphate act on the blood and internal organs. Those who are subject to constipation, at the; Wednes- will be shown for four day jRex theatre, beginning day Manager John Hamrick has ob- ht Hoeneg rae a hate, to show! bilious attacks, acid stomach, rheu be the only opportunity the fane| Matic twinges, also those will have to see the movies of this|*K!" Is sallow and complexion pal year's series, as the Selig people were the only ones to film mee: the inside-bathing will have them both looking and feeling better in every pes ‘GIFFORD PINCHOT IS _ TALKING FOR HUGHES PORTLAND, Oct, 24.—Carrying| an appeal to all progressives to vote for Chas. E. Hughes, whom he) styles a “true progressive,” Gifford Pinchot, former chief of the United | [States forestry department, will |leave for California at 3:50 p, m., making his first stop in San Fran cisco. ADMIT BIG LOSS PETROGRAD, Oct. 24.-—Macken 's forces have occupied the rail junction of Medjidia, 20 miles} west of Constanza, on the Con-| stanza-Cernavoda railway, the war office announced today, in @ state- | ment admitting the loss of Con stanza NO NEW DOCK STRIK' ‘That the ramors of « continua tion of the longshoremen’s strike {were founded on untruths was the statement made Monday night by T. V. O'Connor, president of the In ternational Longshoremen's asso- ciation The men ar daily and appa with eonditions ST. PAUL MINNEAPOLIS ST. LOUIS DIRECT u iIME MONEY SAVE By using G.N, P. 8. 8. Co, Fast Boats from Portland TO CALIFORNIA Bert! and Meals on Boat— But 26 Hours at Sea Thru Sleeper to Ship's Side Tickets, Information reporting for work | ntly are satisfied | | NEW YORK, Oct, 24,—Just to bust the wedding ‘rust, the five- buck marriage fee has been cut! down in this old town to nothing more than three, At city hall for, for one and that’s what the rice will be. tree from Electra: battery, which pumpe whose | |1ld, are assured that one week of ° Sis eppiied and explaine teny things | you should know ultation free. Office hours: 9 a polntment (The iets Vi ta Figg HOTEL 621 JACKSON 8T, 250 —ROOMS— 250 —Running ice water In every room. —Absolutely fireproof. autifully furnished; - im. oved telephones in every room. —Very convenient for shop. pers. The Finest Popular- Priced Hotel in the United States Prices 50c, 75c, $1.00 With Private Bath, $1.25 Transient—Weekly $3 to $8— Monthly $12 to $20, Private Bath, $22.50. We cordially invite you to inspect our fine hotel, BUSCH HOTEL 621 Jackson St. UCK SUPERFLUOUS FAT. Invigorating alr and exercise must oor lite is to the vital organs.of thet of exerciae In the fresh weaken of the bi produc and the formation of unsight unhealthy fat ts the result If you are 15 pounds above normal welght you are daily draw- ing on your reserve strength and are and carrying this excess burden, persons who are satisfied in their own minds that they are too stout are advined to go to Bartell Drug Co, or a good druggist and get « box of ol! of korein capsules, and take one ter euch meal and one just before fetiring at tight ven a few da reported to " treatment hae able diges. potsteps kin less fla superfiuous fat Aisa ON af korein is Inexp not injure, and Any person who wants to ¥ "'§ H uce 15 treatment a trial eth Need Attention en Are Reasonable pAINLESS S028 mS Milings Plates 1 gud AUSTIN ig. ‘ilo PAINLESS AUSTIN ‘Third and Pike Eatrance 1504 ‘Third «! Ave. Is Any Girl Safe? For the /.nswer “ee Wanted— | A Home All This Week COLONIAL THEATR tr People who are confined within | «| doors and who are deprived of fresh. jor 20 pounds is advised to give this! (PAID ADVERTIGEMENT) HOW IS THIS FOR TEMPERANCE? Office of Prosecuting Attomey, King County, Washington | SEATTLE, WASH. June 21st, 1916. | | Hon. Byron Phelps, County Auditor, Seattle, Wash. Dear Sir: Initiative Measure No. 3 provides that ; when a druggist or pharmacist desires to ship intoxi- cating liquors into the State he must recite in his ap- plication that such liquor is not to be sold in. violation of the laws of the State, but is obtained for purposes permitted by such laws. The law provided that it shall be the duty of the County Auditor to file said applica- tion and thereafter said applicant shall, from time to time, as he or it desires to make shipments of intoxi- cating liquors FOR LAWFUL PURPOSES, file with the County Auditor a written request for permits, and upon receipt of such request the County Auditor shall issue a permit. On June 10th, 1916, in the case of State ex rel Ireland v, John B. Gordon, as Justice of the Peace, .| Judge Albertson said in delivering his opinion that this limitation was obviously designed to restrict the quan- tity of liquor that may be ordered to a shipment that will suffice for the demands of lawful business, It is clearly the intent of the law to authorize ship- ments of liquor which is to be used for lawful purposes only. Several of the druggists and pharmacists doing ihe largest prescription business in the City of Seattle have informed this office as to the amount of intoxi- cating liquor required for lawful purposes covering a period of six months. According-to these statements, with the exceptions hereafter mentioned, not more than the following amounts of intoxicating liquor is neces- .|sary to be used for lawful purposes covering a period of six. months: Alcohol, 4 barrels or 208 gallons; whis- key, 2 barrels, or 104 gallons; and not more than_one barrel or 52 gallons of any other liquor. You are there- tore advised not to issue permits for more than the above amounts to any one drug store in a period of six months, with the exception that the above limitation as jto alcohol should not apply to Stewart & Holmes or to G. O. Guy, Inc., who, | am informed, require a greate amount for manufacturing and other lawful purposes. | Yours truly, | (Signed) ALFRED H, LUNDIN. 1 The above order falls far short of an order intended to promote temperance in the city of Seattle. Under this gen- tleman’s agreement, conferred by Mr. Lundin, one firm has shipped in a enough to manu- facture $1,052,960 worth of whiskey, 480 quarts, since June 1 This is a most peculiar brand of temperance. or special privilege. hol It’s tem- perance for all druggists except those who enjoy the monop- joly and special privilege, because it is not the quantity that 1s | restricted, but the use it is put to constantly lowering your vitality by | Any | Law } | Every person who believes in equal rights and equal must admit that to restrain one and give the other un- limited favor is lacking in every essential of justice, accord ing to law. Equal law enforcement does not contemplate condemning in one what sanctioned if done by another | (except in Seattle). i Lawlessness The above order issued Haw | by Mr. Lundin is lawlessness, | because the order issued by Mr. Lundin transcends the law. He makes a law by his ruling to the effect that one drug firm may bring in all the alcohol it pleases while a restric- {tion is placed on all others. No such power or authority is delegated or conferred by law upon Lundin, and if he ercises it, he arbitrary and lawless, he has stituted his arbitrary will for the law exX- is because sub- When stoolpigeons are sent out from the prosecuting at- torney’s office with instructions to get this one or that one, but not to bother others who are equally guilty, the prose- cuting attorney's office needs investigating before ¢ other investigations are conducted, and with the evidence hand, | 1 am justified in saying that one of my first acts after election | will be to investigate Mr, Lundin’s office. Edwin J. Brown For Prosecuting Attorney T speak on “Lundin’s Record” at Oluman’s hall, at 24th ave. south and Lane st., at 8 o’elock and at Democratic hall i418 Third ave., at 9 tonight. | will uncover facts that will shock this city. EDWIN J. BROWN.

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