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\ Heal it with Resino That itching which keeps you awake at night, and forces you to scratch at the Ing times, is almost sure to yield to Resinol Oint ment. Usually the discomfort stops and healing Heginswith the first application, andthe distre etuption quickly disappears. Resino! Oint is even more effective if nost embarrass- OE Tay gO iat enti t a A ee a NA an . National Bank Those Teuton Names int Cart bush and t NEW YORK, May 29.—Comment the university Members of the conference America with ( . Fesulted in an unofficial inves: @ ition revealing that Uncle Sam's . bristles with Kaisers, Kaiser Th 7 Yilles, Berlins, Germanyvilles, Leip nival op Krupps and such like places) rade, my Teutonic monickers and Am dispositions. " ‘The United States is the only na th a gene bas not weeded out German titles, street and boulevard have been and the like of $2,500 a — the Ladies’ Musical club o! LIVINGSTON FUNERAL — ‘ewer! CURES M Errors services for D. Livingston, graduat tity of Washington, who die of typhoid fever at Madi Wis., was to be held Tuesda it 4 p. m., from the Bonney Watson Money runs the war. Give money. Buy a bond. n fone | eartt ALL WORK Sigiminatty: | | | = Fuuncs $1‘: | ah 1052 Pike St., S. E. Corner First and Pike sided by Resinol Soap, park, shampooandbaby’ Holy Smoke! America | HOLD CONFERENCE ) Is One Long List of | vice President 1. 4 tension and ment will go to Bellingham Wednes n day, to take part in a merchants’ Rall lay field spring car night ic and dances. two days, ending Wedn ral Mardi Gra tow at war vith coma LADIES BUY BONDS in the amount ABSOLUTELY FREE EXAMINATION NO CHARGE FOR EXTRACTION WHERE OTHER WORK IS TO BE Electro Painless Dentists Glacier National Park $1.00 to $5.00 per day. Low Round Trip Summer Tourist Fares In effect d $28.30 from North Pacific Coast points; For further information and de local Great Northern representa ptive | ¢ or write T. J. MOORE, CPRa@eTia SEATTLE, WASH. MARY ROBERTS RINEHART Read “Tenting Tonight”, the inimi- table narrative of her adventures in America’s greatest National Playground; now ap- pearing in Cosmopolitan Magazine, commencing a with the May issue. A tense compelling article describing vividly her adventurous journey over the forested trails, across glistening glaciers and up onto the high places of the backbone of the continent. Then plan to spend your vacation this summer in Glacier National Park. Vacations June st to Sept. soth. $1.35 from Spokane: Portland; $26. pa teoce Tacoma od Beattler $30 4 from Vancouver, B.C. Correspondingly low fares from other return limit October 30th. erature, etc, callon Columbia and Second Ave. C. W. MELDRUM, A. G. P. A, Os Your Trip Bast Go Great Nertherwm—Stop off a1 Glacier National Park , BUT DIDN'T FIND | \ 4 SN Dont endure that itching | | Comer and A. W. Se plore Swalwell of! seeing what he yught was land depart:| EXPLORERS SAFE ‘CROCKERLAND' NEW YORK, May 29.—All the members of the MacMillan Crockeriand expedition are safe, accoraing to a cablegram received in Brooklyn from the Shetland islands The expedition, headed by Donald MeMillan, led from New York on the steam ship Diana, July 3, 1913, After the greatest hardships, during which some members perished and others were sent out in arch of relief, several at tempts were made to rescue those remaining | The cablegram received today at he Museum of Natural History stated that Harrison J, Hunt was returning to Copenhagen, Capt at Btaw with MacMillan, and Ekblaw is at Disco Can't Find Crockerland The relief steamer Danmar wintered at North Star bay. E ence of Crockerland, which F sald he saw in the distan on one of his dashes to the North in 1906, will probably be decided by plete report of the rescued ex rs | On bis return, Peary described | from a point in the icy fastnesses | of the North In July, 1910, the American Mu seum of Natural History organised an expedition under MacMillan to| search for and explor this mn known land Two ye later MacMillan reported to a civilized port that no trace of the supposed land could be found MacMillan thought « saw the vanished continent for two days but he attributed Peary’s report| snd his firat impressions as being due to a mirage oo! ; o In the original party were Mac Youngest Aviator SIFT GERMAN PLOT Millan, Prof. Maurice Tanqueray of the Kansas State Agricultural col ; Ensign Fitehugh Green, Har rison Hunt, W. Elmer Ekblaw, J. C. Small and Jerome Le Hovey joined the exp tion later, | Diana was wrecked on the coast of Labrador, on July 17 ‘col Transferring to the Erick, the trip was continued until that vessel be- came frozen in, The Cluett waa| nt from New York as a relief 1 December and picked | p the party, The Cluett later be Tanqueray left the party 4d, and after a trip via a reached New York | 1916. Ensign Green also the party and got to civiliza-| tion The fate of nder of the expedition has been in doubt since that time. tie fee. } LINDEBERG RECOVERED | Jafet Lindeberg, millionaire min-/the training of recrutts at San/ Nome, returned from | Diexo is becoming man ¢ The Great ‘American Home » Allen. Prof.|@ |the San |He is the youngest ranking non BTAR—TUESDAY, MAY 29, 1917, PAGE 6 In observance of Memorial Day our store will be closed all day Wednesday “THE STORE THAT SAVES VOU MONEY SECOND AVENUE AT JAMES 5S TREE WILLIAM LORIMER BLAST ACCIDENTAL plant of the Atlas Powder Company 1, and killed two work. tal, CHICAGO, May 29.--Willlam Lor jant, ¢ late yesterday, was accide ficials of the company say. imer, formerly in the U, 8. senate was at his home here today, reo cuperating from injuries received - - 60 in a sawmill at Jonesville, La. Lor CROPS LOOK 0D imer's arm was broken in three places when a heavy chain attached F. W. Graham, Western industrial P of the Gre Northern rall- to a log snapped and one of the akent hes oton a anion th 4 pleces flew at bis head. He threw " 6), rere ee ee state are better My iy yj Wy y ‘ up his arm to ward off the blow ag Sole he ser Y] / , Hed The former senator went to Jones.| ‘42 they have been in many years h/ ville following bis acquittal on parieuaiuhenebananneanitapeabaiatitill » of wrecking the La Salle [READ STAR WANT ADS rust and Savings bank RRR CANADIAN PACIFIC The World’s Greatest Highway BACK EAST EXCURSIONS Daily June 20th to June 30th Ask Us About Dates for July, August and September THere’s A CIRCUS IN Town! In U. S. Army Is : : Winnipeg $67.50 | St. Louis........0.- $ 78.70 Bellingham Boy Safe Blowers Used by Secret Service|} 3) 7°" ea ee \Srcento . 3 - = Minneapolis 67.50 | Montreal . Richard K. Mackie, 17 former Ff AS FRANK GETTY [robbed the safe, and even laid Chicago i Boston . Bellingham high school boy, who ONDON, May 25.—A tale |hande on @ certain set precious Detroit Now York . ) 41830 of German intrigue reaching | papers the Italian government was into the inner circ of the heenly Interested in. Hut that. is Vatican, involving the hasty as far as they would have flight of Cardinal Gi For attached to the bundle Italy, the cracking of (ments so bighly desired by three the secret headquarters of the [governments was an intricate German embassy at Vienna, | series of wires. With almost dev and the }Lish ingenuity, the Germans , from prison of Italy's two most ' ed that if the safe were notorious criminals, was told [opened and the papers moved, a for the first time today to the of poison gas, deadly in ef United Pr by a reliable au would envelop the disturber thority the entire room In On the 6th of April, Vien» [which the safe was located unin na dispatches announced the {jabitable At the same time a burglary of a house, adjoining, [cleverly devised burglar alarm “but having no connection | would cal sufficient military po enlisted in the United States army aviation corps March 19 1916, i# the) youngest aviator in th United States army He's so young they, won't let him fly as a war! aviator, but he's not too young to hold the rank of sergeant-major In Diego school of aviation. Correspondingly low rates to otner points. Limit 2 months, but final limit not to exceed Oct. 31st. Liberal stopovers. SPECIAL SALE DATES Boston, May 28-29 -Final limit June 26 St. Paul, June 1.2. Final limit June 30 Des Moines, June 78 .Final limit July 6 Chicago, June 12-13 -Final limit July 19 For Further Information Apply to E. E. PENN, General Agent Passenger Department, 713 Second Avenue, Seattie. commissioned officer in the army.| With.” the German emb lice to the scene to deal with any Mackie, writing to The Star, cays] [age sum of money wai number of intruders, —— a arco . to have been obtained by the They “Break Prison” re strenuous| robbers, who escaped. When every detail of the hiding daily, and that there now are more; The * night a sensation was?place of the papers had been learn California in week, recover from a serious {lineas contracted in| than the North last fail u in Rome by the flight of|ed, the secret service agents re Cardinal Gerlach, across the Swiss |ported in detail to Rome. On a border. Italian secret vice |favorable dark night the “escape 60-minute fighta made daily * said a clever women yee terday, “that to serve a lot of | is a confession of stupidity.” | When she said this | remem- had at her home, long befor war was declared. It was the first time | ever met her. | ways came home at noon Without any fuss or feathers she laid a plece of yellow Jap toweling thru the center of her narrow oak table. On this she placed a basket | of Concord grapes which were then in their prime, it being the first of} Octobe A loaf of bread was| seep ialantinnaiimnconawniaaieal —| — , —9| Widow of Famous | | Coach to Marry | icin sidsincte Aneiiacieiaearmie 4) MRS THOS. SHEVLIN i} 7 low of the famous Yale football | nounced As legatee Engagement of Mrs. Shevlin, wid coach, to Marshall Russell, broker of her for mer husband, Mra. Shevlin has an lof Winchester, Va., has been =| ‘income of $60,000, and is holding the Jestate of $2,000,000 in trust for her! |two children. i | | \WHOSE BUSINESS IS __ IT WHAT THEY SAY? LONG BRANCH, |. L, May 29 Is it any of the people's business what their diplomats tell other countries about them? | This waa the first of a series of international questions up for dis cussion by ambassadors, statesmen. | lawyers and publicists, at America’s first “national conference on inter-| national relations,” which opened) here today, | * : Tht Wloman’s Armp Against Waste A Perfect Luncheon . h im of it . lo’ hn r p led | I BY AN EXPERT jbiaced before her husband's chair lheriekons yor: Wish Mae © ha oe | How Te ask Will ater Rane: eet FRYE’S QUALITY MARKETS will be has always seemed to A large head of lettuce was cut In| pearing on the suce quarters and a gl marmalade and a small plate of|reported “escape,” early in Janu Jed with gasmasks and ¢ food when one is entertaining | ferent corners of the table. | Fre bered the first luncheon | ever | 1), presented a letter from a mu- [fond of tea, drank two cupfuls, {t he prefect of all the Italian po- |, posse! h t cto , at oon in the possession of the ; tual friend and mare os ong | was so delightfully brewed. lice arth asa that ehantot tad ey sat First Avenue, south of Pike St. making my call that she invit- During the meal host left the | ¢, ),000 r i ne he t lcriminale was later given $10,000 F obvious reasons they could ed me to lunch, adding a8 an | tabi once to get a book of poems|i, the Italian government. The |rot instantly communicate their AMERICAN MARKET inducement that husband al- | to vorify a quotation and the talk] service they rendered the govern: |} now agents burst in the doors of his|or the famous safecrackers from house two hours after his escape ithe prison outside of the Italien | discovered the machinations |capital was arranged and effected jof a score of proGerman plots.|Promised their freedom, and $10, eS | The next day more than 300 ar-/000 ap: if they succeeded, the |rewts resulted thruout Italy criminals bad agreed to undertake Another event which caused lit-lthe dangerous mission © one will ever know, but eile closed all day Decoration Day, Wednesday, » provid the 30th. Markets will be open until 9 p. m. ery tool American cheese were put at dif-|ary, of two of Italy's most notort-|for gafeopening known to the po: Tuesday. Don’t fail to visit the Bargain lous safecrackers, who had been!ijc. or criminal world. Cracking Counters in all the following Markets: The hostess made a delicious|incarcerated for life in prion atlthe safe and evading the certain h dressing while the host cut | Rome. | ¢vath of the alarm signals was a MARKE bread and passed the butter Worked for Government leamparatively simple matter for SEATTLE T There were no excuses. Every What has never been disclosed these Jimmy Valentines of Italy, Occidental and Yesler Way. thing served was of its kind per! unti) today is the fact that a war-|and the papers, which incriminated fect and I, who am not particularly |rant for their release was signed ninent personages thruout Italy OLYMPIC MARKET sful breaking | when ¢ nest, was the pe did undertake of the safe, they we of home-made | wp of the Teuton sp: dge to headquarters at Third Avenue and James St. Rome, and, in the meantime, while announcing the robbery of a “large WESTERN MEAT CO. ervice, extend sum of money,” the Austrians suc : 4 it ts i ‘ research over a far greater ground | ¢ Jed, by means of a secret wire 1102 Western Avenue, vere as one of the times In MY \than one realizes even today, had | joss, in communicating with Car life when I could quote the epi@ire| succeded in tracing certain | pro: |dinal Gerlach, who departed uncer BALLARD MEAT CO. who said “I have dined ) German plots and intrigue in Italy |«moniously from the papal court 5445 Ballard Avenue. This meal was perfect in com-|to Vienna. In the Austrian capital, | With the evidence in hand, how bination; there was fat in the but-|s jie, succeeded in narrowing the ever, the Italian police were able ter, the cheese and the peanut ofl tain house.ito round up several hundred of the used in the salad dressing; there sajoining, “but having no connec-| most dangerous German plotters was prote! in the cheese and tion with the German embass and to strike into the heart of a starch in the bread, sugar in (he| sad they acted hastily, the spies | Teutonic element in the highest grapes and marmalade, flavor, min-\ wight have burgled the house, |chureh circles of Rome eral matter, vegetable acid and - a body-regulating substance in the lettuce, grapes and orange marma inte POLES ARE DEPORTED That woman put brains as welll] ~~ > ‘ as food on her table | Woman Describes Ruthlessness of Germans BY MILTON BRONNER found she had been taken to a _— ——— | TODAY'S WASTOGRAM | NEW YORK, May 29.— |house in the town. My butler anit Be sure you dish up thought | «when 1 read ‘that the Prus. |! Went there, pushed our way up veered from the classics to the af faire of the day We an hour over that fruga repast and | have always remem well worth the p than two years | ment search down to a Special Excursions East VIA THE “MILWAUKEE” Round Trip Fares to Boston . $119.20: ®: Chicago . 80.00) i822 tune 12 ana in Return limit July 11 as well as food for every meal. ane ha made a desert of |*tairs, and found the terrible rel Northern France, pillaged the |!cs of what had been Manya, ‘Th houses of even the humbiest poor creature was half crazy. Her x citizens, deported men and |Story was beyond belief, women to work for the kaiser, “And deportations! They | violated women and crippled started in Poland long before | children, | always say to my any auch thing was dreamed self, ‘The brutes are acting up of in ium and France. | to their usual form Men d@ women, boys and Greeters of America. dates May 28-29 turn Ifmit June 26. This was said to me by Madame| Qirle big enough to be put at Laura de Turcaynowies, American task—all were carried wife of a Polish nobleman, now in h homes | ! America were burned down over the e| “My own experience with Ger heads of their little ones and man officers and soldiers has| the helpi children left with. "% guardians, ahelter and S P l 67 50 Ace't. Lutheran Synods. Sale dates June 1 and 2 t. Paul . ° ( Return limit June 30, @cc't. Brotherhood Amertcan Des Moines 74.35 J ashore. June 7 and & Return limit July 6. wa rege hy eior * ier apnined 4 taught me they care nothing for 1 specialize in the Disorders of |any one but themselves,” she said: Men and offer a high order of |uwnhen gy vaded, 1 aoe otter eaten toe pas [When Suwalki was invaded, my Low Summer Tourist Fares on Sale tients. among those men who |twin boys were sick with typhus June 20 to 80 inclusive, July 3, 4, 6, 7, 13, 14, 20, 21, 27, 28 want the best and are willing to |We had little or no medicine and THE LODGE August 3, 4, 10, 11, 17, 18, 24, 25, 21 and September 1, 7, 8 14, 15. ay a fair price who know Tfood was scarce Fourth Ave. at Westlake ee o % & 14, 15, lished physician of standing and Demanded Gold |] For Ladies’ and Gentlemen's * reputation” rather than | “exporl: Ona ot see Ite Hehe Haas ike High-class Entertainment Good returning for 3 months—Not to exceed Oct. 31, Inent with fad treatments, drag Rid eR. and Dancin typhus so badly it became nece 5 : ron My invest- [wary to lance his finger, 1 suc 8 PM. to 1 A.M From Points in the Northwest to ment and equipment a some lceeded in getting a» German mili REFRESHMENTS Brot oe ratul Inveatioation’ Fess [tary doctor. Before he would look |; Velmable Prices Gtvee Away. in can always be a et the child he demande 30 marks ang Consultation and exam- |in gold ination free “after he got the money he flourished a pair of surgical fecting the instrument or using . 625 FIRST AVENUE an anesthetic, snipped the | Them Again SEATTLE WASH,| child's finger as if it had been | Bre for cotton instead of flesh and blood. Wladek gave one wid |One Year cry and fell unconscious. The | , . | German brute coolly told me alee onse | my experience as a Red Cross | nurse would tell me how to bandage my little fellow. Proportionately reduced fares to many other points in the East. Return thru California at slightly higher fares. The “Olympian”—The “Columbian” Two Fast Through All-Steel Trains Every Day Liberal stopover privileges and choice of different routes are offered, For additional information call on or address Of OPucKs waa |and guaranteed GLASSES to the ple at prices they can afford to pay. (Upstairs expenses.) More than 25 years’ experience—nine Took Girl, 17 years in Seattle City Ticket Office, Second an ae Can be imine ted. by, wearing the his feo aie ia Se a sue in, DR. C. T. KNOWLTON id : 4 any el a2 ndberg Rupture Suppor: fe|his face dripping bioo hie doe: | Optometrist and Manufact H fire ted eral brows WP Suberor [tor tind ‘eaten hin and. taken [ome optician “| Chicago, Milwaukee & St. PaulR: i & LUNDBERG co, away his pretty daughter, Many 409 Northern Bank Buliding ? if y: 1107 Third Ave not yet 17, Four days later | Fourth and Pike |