The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 6, 1917, Page 5

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STAR—MONDAY, AUG. 6, 1917. PAGE 5 a 416-424 Pike Street | WE’LL TRUST YOU TR credit system has been established for your conventence | to assist you tn furnishing your home along your own indi & vidual ideas Our terms are easier and our prices are lower than Will be found anywhere, Ne extra charges; mo interest. } JUST YOUR WORD THAT You Pay i # 50.00 Worth of Homefurnl own, $1.00 100,00 Worth | 130,00 Werth 200.00 Worth 10.00 Dowa, ii 200.00 Worth of Hometu 15.00 Down, be fg : { ) OUR. PIEC ly as pictured. Bed, dresser, chiffonier matched in the Adam Regular price $1495; special at | dressing table perfectly | design PAINLESS DENTISTRY Teeth extracted absolutely without one cent of cost to you—no matter how many—without the slightest feel- ing or unpleasant after-effect. The marvelous anesthetic, used exclusive- ly by the Boston Dental Company, makes a visit to the dentist a joy and a pleasure instead of an event filled with dread and fear. * * * * Let us relieve you of those unsightly, useless teeth—the source of constant suffering and mental agony! * * + * Worn-out, decaying teeth are responsible for stom ach troubles and general ill-health; the cause of that in Seattle and the Pacific Northwest; its reputation for high-grade, painless dentistry so firm] tablish ed that our published statements may safely be taken literally. * &£ & & Dr. M. O. Sipes established the Boston Dental cation more than fifteen years cting head, its active offices in the present ago apd is still its d manager s & & & Nothing but the very finest work is permitted; only the very best materials obtainable are used in gold crown and bridgework, inlays, fillings, plates, etc., and yet the charges here are about half what you would willingly pay if it were asked + + + + Come any time, any day, for FREE painless ex tracting, 1 remember, it won't cost you a penny not even for the wonderful anesthetic. Just a sim ple application of the precious fluid directly to the gums and in a jiffy the offending tooth, or even a live nerve, is out and you feel nothing but joyous relief e+ t gh : If you live Mutside Sc&ttle write for special ap- pointment so that there will be no delay or waiting when you get here bd * + + We can make you a set of teeth, by the way, that cannot guished from your original natural teeth—fully guaranteed in every particular BOSTON DENTAL CO. 1420 Second Avenue, Seattle. (Opposite Bon Marche) be distir nd triple-mirror $99.50 foul-smelling breath, offensive to self and friends alike. * * 8 & Our skilled experts make a thorough, scientific examination of ALL your teeth without charge tell you what OUGHT to be done to put them in perfect condition, and exactly how much it would cost you, and how to care for teeth to keep them from c and disease germs + + + + While we give you this valuable service free, not even charging you for the priceless anesthetic that makes extracting all othe len work positively painless, you will not be required to order any other work + * + *% d The Boston Dental Company is so well known Woodhouse-Grunbaum Furniture Co., Inc 2 Redroom Suite in the shaded ivory finish, exact ling of Russian ROOT MISSION ON WAY EAST T0 MAKE NO STOPS The Root commission to Rus: sia, which stirred Seattie’s pa- triotiam to Its depthe Saturday afternoon In eloquent, | speeches at the Arena, Is today | speeding to Washington, D. C., | there to personally deliver a re port on the Russian situation to President Wilson and the cab | inet. | No stops are here and the ringing to be made between national capital, The commission was tructed, upon leaving for Russia, te xtend Amert ca's greetin and x0d wishes to the new republic, and, secondly, to ascertain in what ways the United States can be of service | Will Talk With Cabinet ding to John KR, Mott, the Y A, member of the commis ston, written reports will be supple mented with hearings before the cabinet, at which a sort of round |table discussion of Russian affatrs jwill take place. The commission Jers will submit to questions and tn terviews, so that Lan sing and the cabinet men may be as fu apprised as possible. oral Secretary The remarkable patriotic fervor aroused by Senator Root Saturday att Arena, who, at the conclt jston of his epeech, brought the en tire audience to its feet, was repeat edly exhibited durtng the afternoon. Speah after aker, placing be fore the audience tn deadly earnest the actual menace of German domi nat rally took the audience out of its reat 4 Seattle fairly shouted its reading fn the International | Russel! Stirs Crowd “Life? What {« life when the democracy of the world ts hanging by a hair asked Charl Edward Russell, the noted adc muthor and special writer for e Star and sister papers. Speaking from the shoulder, Russell, the lover of 1 ®, held his audience thrilled he told wh t It ts democr y the nation has got to America to save the tussia and the democ racy of the world,” he sald. Not only {s America’s own self-preser. vation at stake Russell pointed ou but civilization ts in the bal ance “Be of good cheer with regard to Russia,” he declared democracy in Russia is safe. Do not belleve the stories that Russia slide back to autocracy. I have ection in Russia and I a ballot box in the dis d palace of a discarded duke democracy 1s firmly It is not a half democracy en it was established there was not a single thought in the minds of the leaders that only the men in Russia should have a part in its government. | “Their democracy could not con ceive a disfranchised womanhood,” he explained German Propaganda “I come “back to America, and I hear strange stories of disaffec tion and internal turmoil Do you know, as I know, that the wonde ful and efficient German propagan dist Is telling the German people jeans are ununit “But I say to you that it fs false At this moment of crisis, America is unite When a man says ‘My wag before my country,” he is not an American. “When a man says, ‘My profit sheets before my country,’ he is not an American “When a man says, “My organi-|~ zation before an American! ‘Americans are united and Amer icans are for America and den racy first The One Big issue “Every star and every stripe the flag is in. peril hangs in a balance today When I told you a few moments ago that Russia's democracy was failed to mention the on of its failing—with America “It is for America to save the democracy of Russia and the dem ocracy of the world ‘None of the big social prob. lems of the day are to be con sidered before this question of democracy. This is the one big issue, for without democ racy no other things we all pray for are possible “First we must settle tion { whether we a democracy, then We may the other demand. “Until then not that want my nation,’ is not in the to ques ° have of the people a single thing we obtain “Hanging by Hair” | is life when the democracy of the world is hanging by a hair? What is life without liberty? What is life if we know that the flag has been desecrated by us and that we have slipped back to autocracy. “Life is worth while only when we know that democracy in our hands has progressed.” | He cited the sacrifices made by France in the fight for democracy and he shouted “If France has done this for the world demerocy what is there for| me to do but to give my life? | “The Republic, the republic al ways. The republic that was built on blood and tears—that 1s the in terest and the sole intreest of! icans today i “And that interest looks forward | to a United States of the world, led by the United States of America.” | Gen, Scott Speaks. At the insistance of the shouting| audience, General Hugh L. Scott spoke. briefly. | “It in the business of a soldier | to act, not talk,” he sald, “I can not improve on the speakers who have preceded me but I do want to| tell you that the young men you) we can “Life? are sending to France are better equipped and have better officers | and are in every way better pre pared for the work of defending democracy than any army of the nation before this day.” ies Duncan, vice president of the American Federation of Labor, referred to Mrs. Pankhurst, the noted suffragette, who was in Rus sia, “We heard her tell a gather women that the young democracy of Russia needs women voters. Democracy || Slayer Uses | Cabaret Girl } Hy United Press foosad Wire NEW YORK, Aug. 6 of the streets.” du champlon and golf etar, “Let thie be a warning to all women The murder trial of Kenelon Chase Winslow, Elizabeth, N. model” young man, tennis will revolve about this cryptic ut ' asaWarning AMERICA DOES MUCH TO HELP By United Press Leased Wire WASHINGTON, Aug. 6—En tering today upon ite fifth month of war, America found Itnelf far advanced as a potent factor in overcoming Germany. About $400,000 National | terance Guardamen are in arma, ready It is a note left in the hotel] to move into Southern camps, room where Miss Frances King,| opening August 15, for inten cabaret kitten, was found bound,| sive training, The regular eagged and dead from blows on| army, gradually filled with vol the head. Did the nonchalant young sports If so, Just what did] Of what tragic dispute, | does man write it? he mean? what tragic catastrophe speak volumes in a sentence? Elizabeth soc |plain tts “model it ety ie trying to ex youth, a Sunday | Ameri unteers, is only 3,000 or 4,000 n destroyers prowl the | DEFEAT KAISER | Jwelve | | Silk Sweaters Upper Main Floor. f these have | [ THREE | tive istics H new shawl col \| lars with fringe trimming || Others have novelty collars and are shown in two-tone colers. Sizes 40 to 44, Choice for ‘Tuesday 24.75 SIX SILK SWEATERS short of its complete quota, These are ¢ dite nev while the American flag actu: | 4 ally files over European land || ¢lty weaves in Nile 1 and d purple and trimmed with Pershing’s division {# rapidly man stripes. Sizes 40 to shaping for actual trench service W Gust: Atistee fore T deadlier school teacher, Winslow, held in| boat zone, while scores of new .. $19.50 the Tombs here on a charge of|deatroyers’ are. building. Other murder, to which police claim helthings that America has done tn : ‘ confessed, 1s the son of & pros:| Quast tens mere Pink Satin Envelope perous dry goods merchant, and Registered 10,000,000 youths : {s family 1s one of the mont prom-| wpekiatered 10,000.00 oct ter| Chemise, Reduced i Elizabeth the first national army of 687,000 h still faith in his virtue. the note M has a gleam King was identified by the police asx a cabaret freau Fannie Kunzinsky, from Russia She ts said to have been married to Exchar but Richard Stock onthe ago, Lang clerk, three of was) | Seized 91 German actually put some into service ships, started It 1s based ON | pa@pair work on all of them, and for Tuesday to $1.79 Upper Main Floor. Authorized, without a dissenting | beautiful plain pink vote, $7,000,000,000 A Ahab Appropriated $750,000,000 for | satin Envelope Che- for airship construction rchant shipping and $640,000,000 * mise with yoke effect in hemstitching and trimmed Chiffon Motor Veils Agreed to loan our allies $3,000, top and bottom with at not living with Lang at the time! go 900 and advanced over half of P ae of her death ' lace edging There are 36 Winslow explained, th | “Sent a commission to Russia and|| garments in the variety that ay, when Miss King al! Prance ncludes sizes from 36 to 44, his watch tn the roc had hired Regan construction of 32 camp hurled an inkwell at her and] for soldiers bei r over head | Authorized embargo to keep food | |from Germany. she said. ‘As soon as the clash of! Launched great food conserva-|/ arma is over, men will turn to com: | tion measures R | d merce and trade. They will forget| ‘Gave $100,000,000 to the Amert-|| educea jor the war. But you women—moth-|can Red Cross and $2,000,000 to || ors, sisters, sweethearts, wives—-|the Y. M. C. A | you will remember. with clothes ‘Made tn Gerr clothes and everyth furniture Duncan told of the magnificent spirit that the working people of tus hown in the war by the revolution,” are ready to fight Never hence straight forth allow your bodies to be polut bearing the label, See that your! and | ng bears the label ‘Made tn | By Tacoma Engineers Survey Power Site United Press Leased Wire varus TACOMA, Aug. 6 Wasinoers| | THE Wall aulected’ tree carted ae 4 et ae og Hache . for Tuesday will pre site on Lake Cushman. If the 1 veil suitable for all purposes, plans of the clty council matert are 19x52 inches in size and ize, the city will spend $3,000,00 in r of navy, lavender sand, gray and pink every mother’s son of them, for the|for a plant which will deliver 90, }young democracy | “On the atreets of Petrograd. saw @ young woman 1 dressed in the 8 going to height of fashion of the capital city, 000 horse power In electric energ The city has secured an option buy the Lake Cushman site for $440,000. hand-in-hand with # peasant wom Do you suppose o sald, “that and czarism re¢ shed? Not} on your life. They know that the| MILWAUKEE, Aug 6.—Thr world’s democracy in at stake and/were killed and three Injured autocra: must be put down.” j when two p nger trains on the waukee re vated yards col ITALY GETS CREDIT | A fur} 000,000 was given the WASHINGTON, ther credit of $10. to the Italian government by treasury department today. Aug. 6 for Ler oly 4. Bookiet lietary, ete., free on request PHARMACY ; } BIGAMY | Should the war keep y ea lot more lives, t te Solomo: ral wives. The There’ wh vem plan: up « lot t catch a man. And while we cannot stop the war, We know you will save mo: On each fall SUIT, COAT, DR | and WA | At the Ft on OND AND UNION. Guaranteed to Remove Superfluous Hair Roots (Wonderful New ™ hod) slorlous news for wome The KOSINE Treatment SY 7 several of n troubled with curing hairy wthe! Ry means of an entirely new and very simple method you can now remove not only the surface halr, but the roots as well! J get a atick of phelactine from your druggist, fo low the easy instr ons—see the hair-roots come out before your very ¢ Yes, you can hardly be lie eyes, the " quick completely Phelactine is non-odorous, non poisonous ildn't hurt a child to eat it ective that satisfaction guarant money back If you want it rtisement ist RENCE UPSTAIRS) Mil lide ght ed near mi | of Bricks Have you a load bricks on the back your neck holding your nose to’ the grindstone? Think of each of the following as a brick hold- ing you down “Exper Tastes,” “Waste, Ss you don't need ‘T'll save next week ‘A dime spent here and there,’ “Oh well, it was only a dollar.” Stop and think! Now unload The best is the time to these bricks help is a bank account at The National City Bank, the Thrift Educator and a creator of the saving it its among custom The National City Bank of Seattle Member Federal Reserve Bank OFFICERS J “ President CER, Vice-Pres J. H. BLOEDEL, Vice-Pres. N. H. SEIL, Cashier. FE. B. ANSLEY, Asst. Cashier W. L. SUITER, Asst, Cashier ™ GO a pounp (1602) r N OW SQ rapa) ) WAR ties caused an advance of from 300 to600%in one item alone--Freight. This is why all tea prices are higher. TREE TEA-~ STILL the best for the Least money. Ceylons Japan 60% a pouND 30% HALF POUND much older than I pictured the ilfriend of my childhood, and his ‘imouth, which for a moment had | {| | Upper Main ‘SIZES | white middy cloth rose with white trimming. Ch fo 33c Main Floor. motoring season is now at its height a | Middies Reduced for Juesday to 95c¢ %) to 44 Slip-over and Cc trimming; also coat styles in plain blue and She Rhodes Co. | All the Year Round 7: T Patrons of The Rhodes Co. will find in the | | THE | advertisements for Tuesday, merchandise th ’ appropriate for the time of the year. And jjon Tuesday the prices are reduced to such an extent ||that an extra effort to buy on this day at this store s justifi Forty Summer Style Suits | Reduced for $ Jo Tuesday to Upper Main Floor. assortment has, for the ‘ choose from these Sum- \\\ Pr mer styles, a saving that will mean nany dollars in the purse for other urpose \ , i a , a | of several styles, made of fine wool | gabardine, serge and a few taffeta silks. The color range consists of Chartreuse, China blue, gold and gray, in models that are belted and have large collar and pockets. ae - i for Misses and The assemblage consists ¥ Women, 14 to 40, with the sizes « nating. Fifty Jrimmed feats Reduced for Tuesday to $1.25 Upper Main Floor effect of new Fall | styles, now arrive Tuesday the assortment chosen wide the purchaser with at a reduced price. Th fimo , on space in the are hemstitched. Shown Millinery Section, demands rose, Copenhagen blue, the disposal of these _ fifty Summer style trimmed Hats: The unusual reduction made for Tuesday makes early shopping an advantage, a8 the assortment comprises Turbans, Tricorns, Mush- rooms and Sailors in effec tively trimmed models wit Floor. onable f wy seasonable flowers, narrow at styles, made of ribbons and fancy novelty with colored collar and feathers. The colors include black, white, rose, sand, nat- noice for Tuesday, 95¢. ural and blue. o - @ J t00 | POVERTY HAS NO FRIENDS : », have changed.’ I have changed, Mr. Arthur,’ I o - said, using the childish name I| “Silence again. Then he if | “Margie.” said Paula, “I think /had always ¢ 1 him. ‘I am no/his hat formally and said, ‘Ge lthe most beautiful memories I|longer a poor little rich girl, I am/bye, Miss Newton, ip have stored up in my brain cluster}only a poor little poor girl, bereft, “I felt the tears smart my eye jaround the sea. As a child, when of 1 went abroad with my mother and/and fortune that were mine when ca you saw | sitting for great waves father, I remember hours watching the pounce upon and gobble up the| then the dear father, mother, friends lids. He, too, had cast me off e 1 was a poor little poor me lest.’ Honestly, Margie, I never felt so “He looked at me a moment and forlorn in my life.” j asked, ‘Are you traveling (To be continued) frothy white bubbles of ‘the wake’ jleft by the great steamship. IG | “It seemed to my childish fancy | \s Ithat the wondrous ocean god was | avidly drinking an ice cream soda. | I remember saying this to a young | |man who had become quite friendly with us during one of our voyages, as he stood beside m one lovely afternoon. 1 always remember the| | wa thrill I had n he said, ‘Why, Paula, do you know you are a|Sa soet? It is too bad you will be al $1, poor little rich girl when you grow | lup, for if you did not have a great | deal of money you might stand a/ no The United States government py United Press Leased Wire service rules |land and § Nearly pointments overnment Wants 'Butte Folks Using Many New Clerks Jits and Autos Now nts forest and field clerks right ay. Examinations under civil will be held in Port ttle ultaneously on Butte people today as turday, August Salaries are a car strike called : 100 and Employes of the Butte” ot sate i Slectrie Railway Co. predict a ‘long strike. No cars are running. BUTTE, private Aug. 6.—Jitneys automobiles are il $1,200 a year to start street days ago. will get ap al secretary an- unced chance of being a rich little poor |girl.” “When I grow up,’ I answered primly, ‘l am going to marry a rich poor man who will write poetry for |me to read, and we will go satting about all the world’s sunshiny seas | in the boat I am going to ask my] |father to give us | “What are you going to do when |the storms come? I remember, Margi | angry with him for suggesting such a thing. “Why, don't you know, when you think out things for your- | self, you would be a goosey to| think of storms when you might think of sunshine” ‘He stood looking at me a mo ment, and then bent down to my steamer chair and placed his hand | softly on my head. 'God grant your dreams come true,’ he said “By one of those strange coinct- dences in real life, when I came up on deck after the boat had left the dock on my trip abroad for Eme line, I looked into the tired eyes of an old young man, who seemed vaguely familiar | “I had been shedding a few tears in my cabin—no one had been at} the dock to bid me od-bye. “] quickly looked away from the | man, who smiled at me, and was about to pass on when he said ‘Alas, poor little rich girl, have they broken your doll or your heart? Look out behind you and you will see the ocean god ts still quaffing his ice cream soda with his accustomed gusto.’ “IT looked again. Rubin!’ 1 exclaimed, and then 1 stopped, for suddenly I felt 1 had! made a mistake. This man was 80 T was quite ‘Mr. Arthur held the sweet remembered smile, | settled into a hard little line. The Jeyes lost their sparkle and became | ‘almost opaque in their effort to tell | no tales, The raised hat disclosed | patches of white at the temples. | “Are you Mr. Arthur's father?’ I asked. “Instantly a shade passed over the still handsome face and he an swered, ‘No, poor little rich girl, 1 am afraid 1 am no relation to that Arthur you knew go many years | ago. Yet I still inhabit his body | and answer to his name.’ | “T held out my hand. ‘ou still | have understanding,’ he said as he} * grasped it, ‘but in some ways you, Hot Weather Menu The following simple supper or lunch will coax any appetite—even one that the warm weather has made capricious: Sardines, deviled eggs, rye bread and Bevo, right off the ice. Just the touch of a slightly bitter tang imparted to Bevo by the choicest hops gives it an especially thirst-quench- ing quality as well as making it a delightful addition to any meal. Pure—nutritious. Bevo—the all-year-'round soft drink Sold in botties only and bottied exclusively by ANHEUSER-BuSCH—ST. Louis Jos. Leudan Company Importers of Diamonds and Manufacturing Jewelers are pleased to inform the publie that their New Store at 1222 Second Avenue will be open for business TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, AT 10 A. M. with a complete, up-to-date, well selected high-grade stock of Diamonds, Watches, Jewelry, Silver- ware, Clocks, Etc. You are cordially invited to visit this new establishment and accept a beautiful souvenir on opening day N. B.—Our Mr. Jos, Leudan has been engaged in the wholesale jewelry and diamond busine; since 1890. His thorough knowledge of these lines will assure pur chasers of full value at all time Jos. Leudan Company 1222 Second Avenue Formerly 87 Nassau Street, New York City.

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