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TO * SERVICE TO THE HOMEFURNISHER ; | Rry-Tae: YEARS' Your NO CASH DOWN “make your own terms!” make your selections of homefurnishings up to $100 without ‘a cash payment at time of purchase, We invite you, the Seat tle homefurnisher, to “make your own terms” —our well-known liberal credit service will fit your individual needs! add aheaterto your account! —no additional payment! —if you have an account here we will place a heater in your home without any additional pay- ment! “Your credit is surely good here!” specials for Friday only— a splendid air-tight heater: special for day— 95c regular price $1.75 —the Bell EMPRESS air-tight heater; $1.75 size; special 5 riday.... 9 Cc size; special for Frdy $1.39 | | Imported cups and sa Diue decorated designs: ular price for set of # cups special set of 6 cups and saucers for Friday Credit) Is (Paid Advertisement) “Tell it to Sweeney.” 'KNOW-DO C LISTER POUNDS “WET” SUPPORT nd tnterna!| SOUTH BEND, Oct. 26.—Contin of aimost|Uing his onslaught upon Gov. Mc It relieves ail kinds of aches| Bride, whom he charged with being | Se aamatabewah ta Gees Te candidate, Gov, Ernest diseases, and by stimul peaking here last night, demanded that McBride state oft| bis position with reference to the 2 r mr ‘ various referendum measures. ae Re eane ser sete.op “Why is it,” the governor de> Fete sod ren fn wonders in thoes dane |manded, “that altho Mr. McBride ills, Three sizes, 35e, S@c and|says he is against the booze bills, Hise as aroneinte Kaow-doo Co., Pass-| ali the booze interests are support- ing bim?” REAL PAINLESS RICH FROM COTTON DENTISTS NEW YORK, Oct. 26.—Big prof pore action affected parts, gradually relieves rhe tiem. Blood impurities are carried through the pores, not through its have been made by heavy oper. ators in the cotton market, and many small speculators have had their accounts wiped out in the! spectacular market of the last 24) hours, according to reports from the cotton exchange today. (Paid Advertisement) “Tell it to Sweeney. Crowds Demoralize | Traffic; Overflow Sidewalk ooee 3.00 $15 cet of tooth (whalebone) $8.00 | G10 set of teeth .......... $5.00 || | Bridge work, per tooth, e014 $3.09); The United Wreckage Syndi-! , cate Sale, at 1509 Fourth ave, has aroused the people of Seattle) with the bargains that are to be| had. This evidenced by the| crowds of eager buyers who have | Gilver THE .... cccee esos. 808 Platina filings .....00........780 All work for 15 years,|| een in attendance ever since ression on in the morn-| the doors were opened to the} agp ~ 2 Ay Beam || pubic They have had to be re-| po Sel ||peatedly closed in order that the Osi Pilate jlarge staff of sales people upon Mee Test cf Tims =! || the inside may be in a position| |to cope with the buyers gocemmneridnd Pour alt | The vast stock of merchandise work ts still B00. —part being damaged—in this tee yew re w! large store room, consisting of) ‘be | well-known brands of Clothing, com: ' you are in the OHIOt.: . fer UNIVERSITY oF. 4, Furnishings, Gro Hardware, etc, is being offered at truly remarkably low prices. The hour of opening the wale daily is 9 o'clock, and will continue @ short time. |drug stores }feal purposes and excepted 'LUNDIN MAKES HOT ANSWER TO DEM OPPONENT In addressing a republican meet tng Wednesday night, Alfred H Lundin, candidate for prosecuting attorney, said “My democratic published @ pald advertisement, in which he has deliberately garbled & certain letter of mine to the county auditor, advising the auditor to refuse to issue a permit to any drug store for more than four bar rels of alcohol or two bar of opponent has whiskey during any six months’ period Dr. Brown has accepted the language quoted as proof that an exception tn favor of certain firms named was made from some Tupt motive of mine, “T shall not attempt to answer every unfounded charge which Dr Brown may choose to make in the course of his campaign, but his charge tn this particular touches my personal honor, and I propose that the voters of King county shall know the facts "Il @iscovered that certain fake of this city had b obtaining un al amounts of al- cohol and whiskey thru permits from the county auditor, Some of them had obtained as high as 200 barrels of whiskey fn one day, | was advised by the heads of four of the leading reputable retall drug stores of the city that no legitimate retall drug could make lawful use of m than four barrels of alcohol and two barrels of whiskey in any one six mont pertod. “Under authority of a decision by Judge Albertson, I authorized the auditor to refuse to issue per mits to any retail druggist in ex) cons of the quantities named. The ruling obviously could not be made to apply to any druggist who, prior) to January 1, 1916, or at the present time, requires for manufacturing or chemical purposes large quantt of alcohol. I ascertained that in King county there were but two firms of that character and, to safe guard the auditor against being Im posed upon by the misrepresenta tion of any bootlegger or fake drug gist that he was using unusual amounts of alcohol for manufactur ing or chemical purposes, I par ticularly tdentifled by name those firms which were making a bona fide use of alcohol {n large quant!- ties for manufacturing and chem!- them from the order. “I make no apology to Dr. Brown or to any other man for the letter written. By that letter I put a« stop to the practice of certain fake drug stores in conducting a saloon business thru the county auditor's office.” TO RESUME WORK ON PIPE LINE SOON Seventy-five laborers will be put to w during November to con tinue ‘work of rebuilding the It was 60 per cent completed last winter, but operations were sus pended during the summer so the ne could be used to carry the extra load. The wooden staves of the line are being replaced by new ones, Henry Lund and John Hill were in the city jail Tharsday while de tectives investigated how Kintoff's hand grip room fn the Milwaukee hotel. three lived there, Another point in the Investiga. tion was bow the satchel happened to be cut open and a $15 diamond ring and & $10 gold ring extracted. All (Paid Advertisement) “Tell it to Sweeney.” Someone” TOLD ME— 1 COULD city water works pipe line No. 1.) Tom | fot in thelr STAR—THURSDAY, ISAYS RAMSAY "VIOLATED LAW ON PUBLICITY Paul Hutchinson, democratic can. — didate for county commissioner, asked Thursday that Connty Auditor Phelps be enjoined from plactng the wame of Claude © Ramsay, republican candidate for commissioner, on the November ballot tnson alleged tn hin applt t Ramsay was nominated flee at the September prt martes because of {legal publicity! The state law aceording to Phillip Tworoger, hin attorney, does not permit a candidate in a4 primary election to include in cam- palgn publicity anything about his qualifications or biography Hutehinson claims that only the te of election, the candidate's plo and name are all that can le gaily be ron, but that Ramsay ran long articles about himself con trary to the law These articles, he asserts, were bought from officers the Post Intelligencer, and because of them Ramsay is unfit to run for office in November WIDOW OF PASTOR FILLING HIS PULPIT A. WILLIAMS. Members of the Baptist church at/ Denison, Iowa, are satisfied with | |the work of Mrs. Anna Ager Wi)l- jama, who in filling the pulpit her late husband occupied. Mra, Wil ltame ts a graduate of Simpson col |lege, at Indianola, and of the Ilinols Training School for Nurses. HUNTERS SET FIRE TO OLYMPIC FOREST Thirty-five forest fires, burning more than 6,000 acres of timber, | have been traced to the careless | ness of hunters, according to an announcement made Wednesday by | Supervisor Fromme of the Olym- |ple forest. | Up until the opentng of the sea- | son, om September 10, only 10 acres had been burned, he reports. Since on, the logses have been tremen-| dous | ALTURAS, Cal, Oct 26.—Wil- ton Burnett, 17, and Alex Drum- mond, 35, are dead today as the re- sult of an explosion of dynamite which had been etored fn an oven in Everson canyon, five miles from Eagleville. The men borrowed the stove from a cabin in @ wood camp, the owner being temporartly absent WRONG DISTURBANCE | An item that appeared in Tues \day's Star, stating that Car! Jacob- son, a longshoreman, was to be tried for singing in the county jail jand disturbing hospital patients, | was erroneous. | Jacobson was tried Tuesday fore-| |noon in Judge Gordon's court on a charge of disorderly conduct on the water front, He was found not | guilty. | | IT CAN’T BE DONE! WIS NN PAGE 2 OCT. 26, 1916. 3 girl who seum 1 most fa actor— DAYS Starting Today Anita J —the Paramount picture opened the Coli- heatre, is CO- starred with the screen's mous character THEODORE —in a 5-part the Saturd ' } | Oct, 26.—-Two 6,000 CHEER BRYAN IN WILSON SPEECH OSHKOSH, Wis, banda and 6,000 peo areeted Wm. Jennings Bryan here last night, when he came to urge the reelec tion of President Wilson, Only 1,600 people could be packed into the opera house for the main ad-) dress, but Bryan spoke to 1,000 out- side the bullding and several thou sand others met him at the train and lined the streets on the way to the opera house. Bryan speaks today at Appleton and Fond Du Lac, and Milwaukee tonight prohibited |? TO CURB N Newsboys will be from crying their papers between | any the hours of 11 p. m. and 7:30 a} Rs, m. on five days of the week, and between midnight and 8:30 a m./ Sundays, if an ordinance recom: |?) mended by the public safety com: | o¢ whe mittes Wednesday afternoon is passed by the council. The hotel men requested the passage of the bill Jand jit jall_no We thin, state donta the wall tn j into per wurprined to. ably we will do this for you Diagonally © OBERTS picturization of Evening Post story of the same name— ANTON : TERRIBLE —first time shown in Seattle. DR, L, RB. CLARK |We Shall Expect a Call From Yo r duty ta | genuine Most r can they get it t nd tell you just instead. Read this dispatch in the Victoria, B. C., Colo- put_your teeth nist: find. Just, how. re PRINCE RUPERT, B. C., Sept, 19.—It is esti- ia certain, it will be ore to you tha Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. R. Clark, Manager me Pes Aeattle’s Lending sr of American boats continues to steadily in- - Tentucs crease. 1405 Third A N $y. Corner ‘Teire Fishermen who have been accustomed to Re eure t toe. . right place. u Tomorrow (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) LECTION of Charles E. Hughes is a BK vital necessity if Americans are to save for Americans the rich commerce of Alaska. The flag of the United States might as well be lowered everywhere to the North unless protection, such as Hughes represents, is sub- stituted for the present policy of making Uncle Sam an international Santa Claus. Why give away our most valuable pos- sessions? The first thing we know Alaska will be classed by the Democrats with the Philippines, and we'll be hauling down the Stars and Stripes, that’have meant so much to every red-blooded American who ever entered the Northern land of enchantment and of gold. The fish industry of Southeastern Alaska, now threatening to pass into alien hands, is a decidedly interesting case in point. Yet it is but an incident in the larger plan of Canada to dominate everything north of the inter- national line. The state of Washington has more to fear from Canada than from all the other competi- tors for the Alaska trade combined. At a cost of hundreds of millions and sub- sidized by the Imperial British government, Canada built her northern transcontinental railway, terminating at Prince Rupert, the back door of Alaska. That road was not built for glory, but to make Prince Rupert the Canadian gateway for Alaska to American mar kets. A royal trade commission long ago studied the North Pacific trade situation and laid plans to take Alas- ka’s trade away from American ports. The Ketchikan fishing trade, running into millions ev- ery year, has been reaching the Eastern market through the ports of Puget sound. Washington has been the home of the fishing fleet At one blow the Canadians sought to center all this fishing industry in Prince Rupert, forcing American boats to haul down the American flag and hoist the British flag by ye mated by independent fishermen here that by the new year at least seven-eighths of the Puget sound fleet will be doing business out of this port, in- stead of sailing, as heretofore, out of American ports, This is not a careless prediction, but is based on a practical knowledge of conditions. The num- t One worth a mit will come here since the orderin-council went into ef- fect say it will not be long before they are joined by their families. Many of the men are home- Le AS THEY Say 1 ALY CLAssics? y Kmocic , an’ IN— Romeo and Juliet IS AT THE STRAND THEATRE owners, and {t is only because they can not sell out immediately to advantage that they still re- side in the South. THE REMEDY—HUGHES AND PROTECTION! A moderate duty on fish will prevent Canadians with cheap Oriental labor from making all Alaska fish Cana- dian fish. A democratic substitute for PROTECTION of this kind was so {llogical, so poorly conceived and framed, that even a democratic congress would not pass it, And today the consumer is paying a higher price for halibut than ever before. Hughes and the republican party will save the fish- eries for America~and will save all the other Alaska com merce from falling into foreign hands, Is it any wonder that British Columbia papers are urging America to re- elect Wilson? In one week thirty-six carload Canadian road $25,000 freight American railroads. There's too much at stake to let Mr, Wilson give away overything—witness the shingle industry presented to Brit- ish Columbia; witness coal, Wo want Alaska, and Alaska wants us! GIVE US HUGHES! PACIFIC of halibut paid to a that should have come to | At the Palace theatre, Berlin, a |play entitled “The Most Precious Jewel” has proved a great success, | The “most prectous Jewel” is half ® pound of real butter, which two ws rs find when searching for COR.THIRD & UNIVERSITY | | ad DRESSES MEN~WOMEN Trabalho: eo? SP ‘ (Paid “Tell it to § (BULL BROS. Just Printers 1013 “THIRD MAIN 1043 | FOR) WeEK Te || YOUR CREDITISO.K |