The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 24, 1917, Page 8

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A Story of the Lure of Woman and the Folly of Man. py inni TODAY | AS NA\SN Jf EY GORDON IN RICHARD HARDING DAVI8’ GREAT NOVE “V7era the edium” the greatest of ali vampire pictures, In which Miss Gordon wears a bewildering succession of astounding gowns. The subject, however, is a most happy one. M. Guterson’s Fa ‘amous Russian Orchestra MUSICAL PROGRAM “Hungarian Rhapsody No. 14"......--+e0++ Orchestra Number + By Liszt “Romance” ... ..By Popper Celio Solo by Fred Namt Admission 15 Cents CLEMMER Seattle’s Best Photoplay House Ihambra THEATER - CPIM \/AUDEVLLE Alice Eis & Bert French With JOSEPH NEIMEYER and Corps de Ballet “HALLOWE'EN” WEEK OF Medlin, Watts & Townes “The Wife Question” Hirschel Hendler Pianology Palfrey, Hall & Brown Follies of Vaudeville Walter Weems Merry Blackface Humorist Orpheum Travelogue The Norvelles “An Artist's Studio” Orpheum Orchestra CHARLEY GRAPEWIN Supported by ANNA CHANCE, in “Poughkeepsie” The Split-Second Comedy of Vaudeville Omar, the Persian Poet grew weary of reasoning out the why and decided to take in a show and hailing a jitney he dashed off the fol creditors : “You know, my friends, with what a brave carouse I made a second marriage in my house; Divorced old barren Reason from my bed, And took the Daughter of the Vine to spouse. of the which, forget it. Before wing note to his EVERY ANY SEAT MAY BF NIGHT AT 8:20, RESEMVED IN ADVANCE 10, 26, 60, 75 THE SEATTLE STAR 39 KILLED AND 150 HURT IN TORNADO INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March 24.—Thirty-nine persons ° | known to be dead, nearly 150 injured and property loss of $2,000,000 was today the toll of the tornado which swept across Southern yeater Indiana late day. The storm spent its fury at New Albany, where 34 are known dead, 100 injured and $1,500,000 damage done to prop- erty. Before striking New Albany, as it came down on the city from the northwest, the following damag was | Holman—One dead, two injured; property lows of $10,000 ffersonville—One dead, three} Hinjured | Sullivan county—Two dead, 16 hurt, 20 homes in ruins; $500,000] lona, | Hendricks county—-One injured homes destroyed and $50,000 District north of Decatur—Five injured, $26,000 damage Delaware county--One injured Howard county—Two tnjured Corydon Twenty injured 20 os damaged and loss of $10,000. | Flat Rock, Il.—-One killed, three injured and loss of $6,000 | he CALL TROOPS TO GUARD S WASHINGTON, March 24 | Two regiments of Massa chusetts militia will be called out at once to guard the Fore River Ship Buliding works at Quincy and other plants in the Bay state under arrangements made today between Secretary Baker and Gov. McCall, While the two men were conferring reports came from Gen, Leon ard Wood, commanding the Eastern department, covering the Massachusetts situation and approving the guard Id On the strength of this, Bak» | er agreed upon the call The militiamen will guard government arsenals, muni tions plants and especially the GERMANY IGNORES HEALDTON OUTRAGE BERLIN, March 24.—Ger many cannot see why America | should regard the sinking of | the tanker Healdton by a Ger | man submarine as an “overt” act. Public opinion agrees with this expression in view of the newspaper Bz Mittag, altho ad. mitting the po ity that American sentiment against | Germany would be increased by destruction of the H: The sinking of possibly will aggravat pressure on F the edit the entente p | press | sert this is an ‘overt act.” tut, construing this sinking as a rea son for war i pr th America {# willfully seeking such an occasion It was ur essary that th el Healdton trav the blockad larea The vessel could ha lchosen the open way used by Hol-| | land-Amertcan | vivors of the Hea steam According to stories told by sur steam y path er was actually in announced by Germany in her barred zone when she was the vi tim of an unwarned attack by a German submarine United Press dispatches received trom London yest ¥ quoted sur ivora as saying they expected to make just such a de he Healdton was in the as the Bz Mittag makes in the above editorial. Hut all the crew were positive the ves jeet was btn the safety lane. ‘OREGON _— our. PORTLAND Railroad bridges bia and the Wi | Or ba farch ross the tte rivers a under military guard today. Adjt ree A. White of the Oregon Natio al Guard called out the| evidently fe on cro What the defer to be a point, was m fternoon tn uf exarnin the Tra trial for first degree count of the shoot at E ‘TIC’ FOR ACHING, SORE, TIRED FEET . Use “Tiz” for tender, puffed- up, burning, calloused | feet and corns. | murder on ac sraon when a | | | their who are forced to stand t all day know what sore, tender, sweaty, mean, Th use “Tiz cures their feet right up. feet in perfect condition, ‘ is the only remedy in the world that draws out all the poisonous exuda tions which puff up the feet and cause tender, sore, tired, aching feet. It instantly stops the pain in corns, callouses and bunions, It's simply glorious, Ah! how comfort able your feet feel after using | “Tiz.” You'll never limp or draw up your face in pain, Your shoes won't tighten and hurt your feet Get a 25-cent box of “Tiz” now from any druggist. Just think! a whole year's foot comfort for only} 26 cents, on {move last “SHERIFF HAD HAND ON GUN AS HE | | HAILED “VERONA’ SAY WITNESSES |tion as HIP YARDS shipyards, where much govern. ment work is under way In additon to the militia, Gov MeCall informed Baker that he will press f passage of the home guard bill in the Massachusetts leg lature This bill provides for a © of 5,000 men for state 1 r tion work While the department refased to say what, if any, plane it has made of a similar nature affecting militle of othe states, was plain in National Guard of be used advantage dication that the other common wealths when necessary to best in land defense plans McCall conferred with Prost Wilson regarding the militia! night Gov dent 'WILSON PREPARES WAR CORPORATION BY ROBERT J. BENDER United ons Staff ¢ ndent WASHINGTON, March 24.—With | American business | administration today up its “war corpora out a finished prod to match the best in he world The ¢ {1 of national defense t today ss practical han. | os of war dis in neg of measur cussed yesterday the cabinet meeting. Its experts § will constitute the/ government's advisory body § as war is announced are In the meantime, the ie sounding a warning to eople of the nation that prepara tions must be made for the posal | lity of a long and bitter war. It] is part of a prep ons program to a full ifices they rust be ready to make, to achieve sober realization of all citizens of magnitude of the task ahead of} ation; to @ lace a careless optimism with a studious knowl edge of what in ahead Part of this preparation ts in ad sp vance of the demands which will be made ortly by the government © men, money and labor on a scale unprecedented tn the nation’s | history elghth company of the Coast Ar tillery last night, and the men went on duty as soon as they mobilized at the Armory No other troops will be called out for the present, but the militia is! held ready for any emergency The military spirit ts growing In| tt thwest as the seriousness of | situation ts reali Portland army recruiting of. ed 100 per cent more " s week than any week since the first Th fice has accep of the vear, and 200 per| ent more than the average we recruiting last year tate’s witness, James Broadbent one of the citizen deputies who met the steamer Verona at the Ev-| erett dock, admitted that previous} treatment of I. W. W.'s by depu- | en in violation of law @ state, on the other hand, ob t 1 from tt first officer and steward of the Verona, corrobora on of evidence given by witnesses who saw the fight from the dock, t first shots in the fight] e fired from the boat ‘te dward Armstrong, first officer, vald it was at the gangplank as Ithe Verona neared the wharf. He Hees out the spring line and took cut the gate Where First Shot Came The first shot, he sald, was fired immediately after the sheriff had told the I. W. W.'s they could not That's a hard e cabin windows without hitting land, and they bad replied, “The parried Broadbent he deck of the boat, on hell we can't.” casy or hard, answer it.” crowd. When the shooting became gen-| “Not exactly He confirmed the statement of eral, Armstrong started to run be You had heard that’ men had| Armstrong that Sheriff McRae had | with low, carrying the gate with hic |Leen beaten up, and had heard it,|bis hand on his revolver before the but € MG i r the by “rh plank | not from { W. W.'s, but from your | *hooting commenced. The sheriff | ; me a litt wg on a Bye Begone | fellow-deputies ? had shifted his revolver ng his ne lay. y protected by the ra ; side to the front, Davis said One point in which Armstrong's} “Yes : | R Rainey, commercial man testimony differed materially from And you disapproved of the vio-| vver of the Puget Sound Telephone that of many of the state's wit-| nesses was that he said the sher-| iff, when speaking to the crowd on| the boat, had his right hand on the butt of his revolver, before any shooting began from the boat | Broadbent, who gave his occupa-| superintendent of a mill,” | was examined by A, L. Veitch for the state. He said the deputies were instructed before the boat ar. rived, not to show their weapons | and not to use them unless neces. pary Where did the shooting start, from the men on the dock or on} the boat?” Veitch asked | ‘Oh, from the men on the boat!" | Broadbent was wounded in the leg by one of the early shots It Was on cros#-examination Fred H, Moore that Broadbent ad mitted hts disapproval of some of | the methods which had been by the deputies against I, W members on other occasions. Did approve of the things by} used Ww.) you had heard were done by depu SCENE V CAFE S/NISTER ta LITTLE LOST SISTER Are Employers of Underpaid Girl Employes? Selig Presents BESSIE EYTON VIVIAN REED GEORGE FAWCETT And Star Cast, in This Big Problem Play SEE THE BIG SMASHING Responsible for the Morals EVERY GIRL Should STARTS TOMORROW One Week Only First Time Shown LITTLE LOST SISTER RE X 2nd. & UNIVERSITY NO ADVANCE IN PRICES COME EARLY Tomorrow --One Week Children .. Loge Seats Se -25¢ 15c asked Moore. sible for any one to shoot out of question to af ation of law by them?” | comp any at Everett, | and a citizen Broadbent said information h had received and I. W. W. cireutars SO KILL perth MICE he had read, made him feel it ne AND COCKROACHE ALWAYS USE STEARNS’ ELECTRIC PASTE essary to go to the dock | L. 8. Davis, steward of the Ve rona, had tntended to go ashore at Everett, but when the bullets be fled to the hurricane ja small pliot house. gan to fly he U. S. Government Buys It deck and got behind the pilot SOLD EVERYWHERE~—a5o and $1.00 house, then behind the smoke. | head oe stack, and finally behind a lifeboat | ~ ws . on the side of the vessel away! from the dock Confirms Armstrong Davis was cross-examined Vanderveer, and testified that h thought it would have been impo METROPOLITAN THEATRE hree Nights, Commencing Monday, March MATINGE BULL BROS. Just Printers 1013 THIRD MAIN 1043 | | deputy, afternoon Verona hind ward kil He said wan, he he There is ORPHEU OTHER MATIN Li wis the last witness in the He marched out of the warehouse onto the dock when the approached, itenant Jefferson when no traffic congestion on Saturday, ——|the straight and narrow path, One size smal He said, JOR | sects tant the wen Curtis, Who, |the foot-barn Beard, was after-|teht or th shooting be |the greatest comfort a report like that of Bold ev aliber rifle from near the token Roy, | March ment THEATRE Third and Madison St. Telephone Main 5106 Matinee Tomorrow—All Week ES THURSDAY, Nights, 10c to 50c; bibihivsoneae 150 and 25c. Wilkes Players Present a Beautiful Production of a Wonderful Play “Q| “A Poor Little Rich Girl” Introducing the Greatest Child LADIES GAN WEAR SHOES r after using Atien's Foq owder for the f # and sprinkled a8 and sore spot teco Address Allen Y Luna Park swimming pool ope 24.—Advert SATURDAY, Actress on the Stage LITTLE MISS RUTH ORMSBY

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