The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 24, 1917, Page 7

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Telephone Main 7100 | fraser Paterson Co| ‘Scheduled for Wednesday An Important Sale of | Women's Cloth Coats at — $23.50 A SALE that offers ex- ceptional values in the season's best models. ond Ave Phone —Coats that have been priced $35.00, $38.75 and $39.50 each. —There are belted, semi- belted and flared styles, the best effects of the sea- son. —Materials are those most favored — velours, gunni- burls, poiret twills and gabardines. —The colors include mus- tard, rookie, Copenhagen, navy, chartreuse, cherry and rose. —All in a special sale lot for Wednesday at. .$23.50 ~Fraser-Paterson Co, Third Floor. Cool, Dainty White Frocks —=—=———— = ST SS New Styles—For Women OR warm summertime days these new White Frocks are just the thing. They’re charm- ing in their dainty simplicity, and they intro- duce dozens of new ideas in tunic effects, in tings, in lace, embroidery and crochet but- trimmings. —Materials are soft, sheer lawns, fine voiles and cotton crepes. —The range of styles is complete, as is also the list of sizes. —Prices, $7.50, $10.50, $12.50, $15.00, $18.00. —Fraser-Paterson Co. Third Floor. | Hats at T9¢ Each Formerly $1.95 to $3.95 é SALE that includes hundreds of new shapes in white, black and all colors. In splendid Quality Milan hemps, tagals, lisere, etc. There are Scores and scores of styles, large, small and me- dium sizes. —A great clearance of practically every Un- trimmed Hat in the store. Formerly priced $1.95 E $3.95, and some were more than that. All in sone big sale on Wednesday, each . —Fraser-Paterson Co, Untrimmed ES COMMANDER Walled Press Leased Wire INHAGEN, July Kerensky has appointed Lieut. Kostinin military commander |“ Petrograd district, according | © ty hes received today. ~ and was arre J. MUSEMENTS potnce OPOLITA ING SUNDAY NIGHT to $2.00. Mia Be to Orde: ao 24.—Pre- | derson, day for failing to register. seldy, M. De Bit, ern Academy of Beaux sult is to compel him to leave. is charged with being a “nuisance. PERSONNEL AND PERSONALITY Our directors stand high in this community betause of their integrity, experience and success. Our officers and staff were chosen because of their fitness to render prompt, courteous and accurate service to cus tomers. The men back of the First National and those who perform its work give it a distinct per. sonality which appeals to our depositors and inspires their confidence. First National THEATRE PLAYERS Tel, Elliott 408 WILKES Pith ond Pine. Tonight—Ail Week—Mats. iat’ “" “Nearly Married” A Breezy, Snappy Laughing Fare Mights, 200, 306, She. Mata., 150, 250 ek Phoebe Hunt in MATS. 2:20; NIGHTS, 7 AND 9 VAUDEVILLE’S BIGGEST ACT “THE MIMIC WORLD” 301 c oT! PALACE HIP Afternoons 1:20 to 6; Kven 6:20 to 18 ‘The Mystery of (ree aiicons tor Children, Saturday find Wednesday Matinees) ide; Bvea. and Bun, 1 THREE SLACKERS” Frank Cassidy, 28; W. B. Hen- and Donald Gollier, 21, all laborers, were arrested yester- Frank of English birth, left Can- | ada to avoid the war, {t is claimed, by Patrolman W. Landon in the city employment =, ) DEFER DE BIT CASE Week | The proceedings against Ralph former head of the Christian Yoga cult, by the West- Arts, on the eastern shore of Lake Wash- ington, was continued when brought before Judge A. W. Frater yesterday, until August 2. The He MAJOR GENERA L SEIBERT ARRIVES IN FRANCE WITH HIS SAMMIES m STAR—TUESDAY, JULY 24, 1917. PAGE 7 “UNION JITNEYS HAVE RECULAR "RUN SCHEDULE “To the end of the line before you turn back.” This Is what the union jitney starter reminds jitney drivers on the Cowen Park line, at the | corner of Third and Union, as | the cars leave the city, out | bound, They go to 65th and the | Bothell road, whether their load travels that far or not, so that customers may have a regular service, and every driver a square deal, And the same rule holds on other lines where the union men are operating. You'll find tt the case on the Bal lard, Woodland Park to 85th, Cow on Park, and the Gatewood Hnes where If-cent fare ure paid, and on the Queen Anne, Broadway, ( {tol Hill, 19th Ave., Hast Union and tivt and Jackson St. Hnes, where a Bent fare obtains One union man is running on the Georgetown line only lines where no union men are operating are the Kinn Green Lake ar, ¥ Madison and atrons are learning to walt for the union cars, say the drivers, be cause they know they are driving ona schedule. The private jitneys not members of the union, frequent ly turn back whenever they see a load waiting on the street corner RXAP: but more of them all the time are seeing the wisdom of the order, “To Maj. Gen. Sibert, Pershing’s right nanu man, on job in France, shown the end of the line before you turn conferring with staff officers jback,” the drivers declare, RUSSIANS TO SHOOT | DOWN ALL TRAITORS BY WM. G. SHEPHERD United Press Staff Correspondent PETROGRAD, down as traitors the mutineers July German spies in her cities. Clothed with “unlimited powers,” the new people’s i cabinet was prepared today to 24.—Russia_ will shoot in her armies and the nvoke measures of N.W. LAWYERS TO MEET HERE | Lawyers from Washington, Oregon, Idaho and British Co- lumbla are headed toward Seat- tle for the joint meeting of thelr respective bar associa- tions, which opens at 10 a. m. Thureday, at the Elks’ club The session will last two days } Mayor Gill, Wilmon Tuck res ident of the Washington State asso- tation; B. Stratton, of the Be atte wociation, and President White, of Oregon, will speak in the | morning. | Afternoon speakers are Dalton bloodshed to stop the rout of the southeast army and piggs of Portinnd, and Gordon Hem thruout the nation. clean out the nests of German provocators scattered without mercy, to e people’s own plan. congresses formally approve it. provis A proclamation declaring all who disobey the ional government's battle orders “will be re- garded as traitors and cowafds,” and “show no mercy” was issued today. The vote of unlimited power was! by the executive committee of the two great all-Russtan congresses the peasants’ the workmen's and soldiers’ It showed 252 favor of such a grant of power none voting no and 47 refraining from registering their opinion support may make, report ves justice, and M minister of public ald the coalition cabinet. winter. in the fuel market The action was the second vote in approval of the plan to grant the provisional cabinet—with Premier Kerensky at its head—unqualified in every move which it The executive committee, bhow- ever, added to its approval the de- mand that the eight soctalist min- isters in the cabinet must hereafter twice weekly to the work men's and soldiers’ and the peas, today named M. Effremoff as minister of Barochnikoff as They will be representatives of that party on' tary Made Especially to Give Satisfaction in Furnace, Range, Grate, Stove Clean to handle, clean to burn mond Briqueta are longing for a chance to get into your base- ment and make you feel safe now and comfortable all next At $6.50 a ton (at the bunkers) they are the best buy PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY 663 Rallroad Avenue South and in Petrograd ‘# hoping that Keren- sky will again perform a miracle at the front. With Tarnopol gone and the Teutons pushing forward on a front of close to 40 miles, the whole of the great Russian line, as far north as Piosk, fs menaced. Turn- {ng of the Russian flank may be attempted. To avert a disaster, the Russian troops must be reformed, the malcontents weeded out or shot, and a firm stand made. Root Out Capital Traitors Not alone on the front is the new policy of extermination of «m- dostrables, of traitors and pro-Ger- mans to be carried out Today, in Petrograd, strong forces of special agenta began a systematic uprooting of the Ger- man apy system, as well as a sort-| ing out of all suspected troops. The first machine gun regiment was disarmed. Four hundred ma- chine guns and truck loads of mill supplies were seized. The regiment itself marched to Winter Here's Mr. A. Briquet. He'll keep you warm next winter, but you bet- ter engage him NOW. high in heating value, Dia- t dealer will be glad to for Briqueta or any coalk—-Black Dia- Neweastle—or famous uth Prairie, iter, chief Justice of British Colum- | dia. le na’ Sh | Headquarters will be at the Pry Premier Kerensky, arriving at the front today, was | hotel . expected to order loyal troops, shoot down such of their fellow soldiers as yielded to} German propaganda, and started the mutiny. The rigorous policy of repression of traitors and of German sympathizers is th The all-Russia workmen's and soldiers’ and peasants’ | The meeting will close Fri jday night \EXPRESS DRIVERS GET ANCIENT FRUIT Jeering crowds of alleged strik- ing express drivers surrounded Wagons driven by non-union men at Second ave. and Yesler and See. jond ave. and Cherry st. Monday jafternoon, and threw stones and over-tipe fruit at the vehicles. B. M. Pipes, 17 Charlies D. Davis, 21, laborer, were larrested and booked on charges of disorderly conduct by Detective |Tom Hayden and Patrolman G. H. | Bowers. PERSHING DRAFTED AND $O IS JOFFRE United Press Leased Wire SACRAMENTO, July 24.—Joffre and Pershing are in the list of Sac- ramentans drafted for the first new American army. Antoine Jof. |fre and Lawrence Pershing are right near the top of the list CONSTRUCT BARGES TO CARRY CREOSOTE A wooden barge with four special- ly constructed tanks for carrying creosote is being constructed on Salmon bay by T. H. Trahey, a vet- eran shipwright and marine con- structionist. The creosote will be pumped fn and out of the tanks while hot. Palace square and formally sur. rendered. It was transferred to new barracks and will shortly be sent to the front. Parts of this regi ment were among those who par tietpated in last week's rioting in Petrograd. Wholesale Arrests Made The existence of a huge German plot to overthrow the new democ- racy by a counter revolution, was proved today in wholesale arrests {n the capital. It was German money that incited anarchists last week to treason; it was German agents and provocators at the front who led the mutiny in the army The German plot for a counter revolution must have been forming for months. Millions have been spent in hatching the scheme. Among several hundred anarchists and revolutionaries of scant means and no income, who were seized to- day, the authorities found large ‘gums of money. None had less than 200 roubles ($150) and many car- ried several thousand But from out of the shock of this German perfidy, Premier Kerensky emerged today, stronger than ever. He is now clothed with all the powers of an absolute ruler—a mark universal public confi dence. “We are glad the storm broke so ot soon,” declared Mrs, Emmeline Pankhurst, England's suffraget leader, today, “We had known it was gathering for weeks, We knew the Germans were at work, but how or where their machinations would break out, no one knew. “As an American you can seo from this situation what we had to fight against in England. God only knows how many English lives were lost because England permit- ted the Germans to remain working in our midst. You in America will find, sooner or later—per' ata terrible st—that you must look up every German sympathizer.” With the afmy sowed with Ger man agents, working to achieve mutiny, Petrograd was greatly re- Heved today by report of M. Lebe- dieff, Kerensky's assistant in charge of the navy, declaring that Russia’s sallors of the fleet were completely loyal ® Inborer, and) FREDERICK&NELSON Little Tots’ Coats Reduced $3.95, $5.00, $7.50 UST thirty of these little Coats, from Sum mer displays, in zen 2 to & yearn t are in the ractive high wainted, belted, pocketed and button - trimmed tyles, in shep herd'’s checks blue nerge ar gray mixtures. An they are full lined, they ma right through to late Reduced to $3.95, 85 D. Infants’ Wear § Second Floor be Autu and $7. wort Billie Burke Porch Dresses Special $1.95 HE the attractive style of these sketch shows Dresses, and their value is apparent in the good qual- ity of gingham and trim- mings They are patterned with combination stripes of pink and and gray or pink and blue on white grounds and have col- green, lavender lar, cuffs and belt of plain- color chambray gingham. Special $1.95. —Becond Floor. Basement Salesroom| Advance Styles in New Silk and Serge Dresses at $16.75 OVEL pocket designs, skirt draperies and other details, as suggested in the models sketched, proclaim the newness of these Dresses. They are of Taffeta, Satin and Serge, in Green Black Navy Copenhagen Brown Wine some with Georgette Crepe sleeves. Embroidery is used véry effectively in their trimming, and many are topped with Georgette crepe over-collar. Price Plum-color Novelty Stripes ~-Basement Salesroom The Kenney Needle Shower Fits Any Tub— Requires No Curtain 66 HE best part of exercise is the shower at the end.” In summer especially is this true The “Kenney” sprays with fine needle - like streams (the most exhil- arating of showers) and makes either cold or hot water twice as re- freshing. No water splashes out of the tub—due to a patented feature, so no curtain is required. The Kenney Needle Shower fits any modern bath- tub and may be attached in a few minutes. Price $6.00. any Housewares Section, Basement Women’s Shoes With Extra-Wide Tops $4.95 Pair OMEN who find the ordinary shoe top small may be properly fitted in these Vici Kid Shoes, which have extra-wide tops of cravenette cloth. In Button and Lace styles, sizes 3 to 9; widths E to EEE. Price $4.95. Basement Salesroom too g Crepe de Chine Waists, $2.95 RECENT shipment, offering styles and materials unusually good for this price. The Waists are of Crepe de Chine in flesh-color, white and maize, with eyelet em- broidery, hemstitching and buttons jor trim- ming. Sizes $2.95. ~Basement Salesroom 36 to 44. Price Khaki Outing Waists $1.95 HESE practical Waists of khaki cloth are designed espe- cially for camping, moun- taineering and other out- ing purposes. They have two-in-one collar, open buttoned cuffs and patch pockets, and are cut amply full. Sizes 36 to 44. Price $1.95. —Rasement Salesroom | | | rie? | 8 Window seat and began to read. THE PENALTY OF LOVE IS It happened to be “The Second ip! UNDERSTANDING flooming,” which I had read with- hg SG ———————=@ | out much interest while I was so There, you see, little book, I/long tied to my bed. have gotten from Eliene and Jim a The book lay open, and more to good view of the working schedule /soothe myself to sleep than for {Gn which men and women live, and |anything else, I started to read in I am almost ready to believe the|the middle of the page. I came to man's is the best after all, Cer-|the sentence, “One has to love tainly he gets thru with less fric-|very deeply to stand marriage.” |tfon to his own feelings I Iaid the book down and won- After Jim went away, I slipped |dered if any one ever loved deoply thru the connecting door from my|enough to stand marriage—to |room into Dick’s and I found him|stand intimacy of any kind. We |sleeping Mike a child. I am quite|are such changeable creatures, lit- sure, if I had been talking business | tle book, the thing that made us las he had been doing with Jim,| very happy yesterday fails to touch |T would have stayed awake half|us today. the night thinking over the discus- Before Dick and I were married {sion and making plans |we only knew each other's tem- Dick considered the incident} peraments. We did not realize we closed when he finished his con-|were different people, parted by versation. And I, even tho what || barriers of habit and ways of liv- had talked over with Jim and|ing, by views and absence of views Elene that day was not half so|on everything wil): which we came materially important, was lying /in contact We know each other now, for we have both paid in annoyance, In heartache, in despair, in ennui, the awake ‘hours thru the night Little book, sometimes on & wakeful night I would give all I possess to be able to clear my|penalty of love. We have learned mind of every shade of thought|even in closest contact two people and let it just become a blank. /are still two people—they never can be one, whatever marriage may decree, Little book, I never can belong, and last night I realized really I We live so short a time, and we/do not want to. What I had want- rest so long afterward, that some-|ed all these years was not to be- times I almost feel we should know |long to Dick, but that Dick should no weariness until almost the end. | belong to me. {It would make rest and quiet and} Dick and I have made the com- |peace seem an inestimable boon,|mon mistake of mankind—we have Then perhaps sleep would close my smarting, weary eyelids, Some- times I wonder why nature makes it necessary for humanity to sleep. little book |tried to separate intellect from Last night, after I softly closed |emotion, We have tried to love the door between Dick's room and|with something else besides the mine, I felt I could not sieep, altho); mind, Dick has tied his mind to it was very late. I picked up ajhis novel which some one had left on|sort of feeling that he thought too business and given to me a j ephermeral for his mind to enter, I have tried to shut out my mind from what I gave to Dick, and con- sequently gave him so little he has gone to others for the nepenthe |that would quell the universal longing. Little book, intellect is not intel- lect alone, but it is an incompre- hensible something composed of intellect and emotion. Everything |—art, politics, religion, patriotism, social reform, love—all these are only intellect driven one path or another. Little book, I am not going to try to separate my mind from my soul any more—I am going to feel with my brain and think with oy heart. (To be continued) FICKERT WANTS TO JOIN OFFICER CORPS By United Press Leased Wire SAN FRANCISCO, July 24— District Attorney Fickert announe- ed today that he had filed applica. tion for admission to the Second Officers’ Reserve corps training camp to be held at the Presidio. He is undecided whether to obtain a leave during the camp or resign as district attorney, T00 YOUNG TO MARRY | Chief Deputy Sheriff Frank U, | Brewer, following the receipt of @ wire from the Pierce county juve- jnile authorities, shattered a |romance of Frances Woolsey and John Regan, of Tacoma, who came to Seattle to secure & marriage license, The bride-to-be was under age, bs :

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