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| store closes tomorrow, Saturday at 6 P. M. “INO CASH DOWN!” “MAKE YOUR OWN TERMS!” cash payment at time of purchase addtional purchases added to accounts — be added without first payment WARE cured > of 95 fine set © CLUB you pay Sie a thin $12.60 per WHEN HE CAME ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS Southeast Corner First and Pike J. R. VAN AUKEN, Mgr. —make your selections of homefurnishings up to $100 without a we Invite you, the Seattle -—#f you have an account bere your additional purchases will “join the STANDARD silverware club!” —95e will bring you a fine Rogers 26.piece silverware set and have pala $9.9 “NEW ORDERS TO + LIGHTEN BURDEN OF WEDDED MEN New orders which may ex empt many Seattle men who now expect to be called to the colora with the first draft were expected by division officials Friday, as a result of the publ! cation of President Wilson's re- ply to the plea of Senator Weeks that married men who not attempting select serv ice evasion be discharged The ruling of many local boards el homefurnisher, to “make your own terms’--our well-known has been that where the wife is Vberal credit service will fit your individual needs! capable of supporting herself, or has other means of support op to her, that the husband should be taken, This ruling wan based on orders from the provost marshal general, calling for a strict Inter i etation of the law as applied to ' the exemption claims May Pick Own Service orders now anticipated will allow men who were The probably married long before the date of reg istration, or whose engagement ex tended over a period long enough to Ny / \ f a!) \ ~~ 4 cabinet AT A fg Preclude the possibility of marriage ~\ to escape ® will be exempted, SE he GP = SPECIAL PRICE Bh without reference to “additional ctr > a ont OFFER! jcumatances o, y A “SS $19.50 set for 0.95 | Some preference as to the branch ——, \ aa ” iti tee of service they are to serve tn wil! ca ag ANbanh witven. [gi de given the men who are called for the select service army ord ing to word receive by Executive Offic Welford Beaton, from the ing officer of Camp Lewis, rican lake, where the select. will be mobilized between 1 and 6. Division boards, according to Rea. ton, can assist officers by recom. mending men who have had spectal | comman An train in various line ‘or service for which their training haa fitted them To Get Away “Light” j lake without fuss or furore jing to orders | They will go in civilian which, however, must ed or t out o mat! or ex fitted his form | The recruits wit! | hand baggage, but no trunks. new wear and socks, tooth brush and shaving apparatus Ask Aid for Pollee The order provides that than 24 hours or lers than 13 hours }in advance of the time of mobiliza |tion at the railway station. The subsistence until they are entrained for the lake. J. J, Sullivan | Division §, is sending a communica. tion to the city counet!, asking that policemen and firemen who are mar. the draft, or who have enlisted, be {to exceed $50 a month Velvet Returns to . + Predominate Style By United Press Leased Wire NEW YORK, Aug. 17.-—-In apite of committees and boards and com- and patriotism and all . fashions for fall don’t seem ‘to show much let up in their orgy of ornateness. Velvet, that fabric lof the rich and rare and royal, {* jthe favored material for suits |@eparate coats and wraps, evening |gowns, afternoon toilettes and, above everything, h capping a velvety climax In 1847, the Austrians, attacking |Venice, sent up paper fire bal loons, which were to drop bombs into the tawn. But they forgot to iow for contrary air currents he balloons got into such a cur rent and, drifting back over the Austrian line, bombed them, in stead of Venice. NORWEGIANS PICNIC All Seattle Norwegians, no mat church or society will Join in a big pie. Saturday ter what their affiliations. mie at Woodland park afternoon Disordered stomach and ved and strengihened by las use n} The kit bag must include under! the woods on tooth soap, halr brush and comb and to the government #iil provide them with procured, and send money executive officer of and a keen tanaton tn felt | given a separation allowance of not, proposals | LUMBER ST CAN BEAT (EDITOR'S NOTE ing review of the lumber strike In made by an expertenced lumber worker, Hamtiton Kendall, who has been in close touch with the situa tion.) The follow-| BY HAMILTON KENDALL The fourth week of the timber workers’ strike glowed with a fruit lesa conference between lumber op erators and labor leaders, followed by an appeal to the operators to grant an elghthour day from Sec retary of War Newton D. Baker, and altho the secretary's telegram arrived too late to be of any assist ance to the state council of defense | in strike mediation durtng the con ferenc it demonstrated beyond question that the admini#tration favors the standardization of mill and timber labor on an eight-hour basis The fifth we with t k of the strike open different labor xt ng pat and preparing | for a general walkout in the camps and mills of Northwestern Oregon. | Altho the Lumbermen’s association made extravagant claims about the! resumption of the m it is w fact that not a air logging camp that was cle by the strike b resun ed operations, and should all the} mills open up, they would be com-| pellad to close down again 60 soon as the logs on hand are manufac-| tured. | Loggers Hold Key Any man who can stand up can | ‘The men will leave for American) do the common labor around a #aw accord.| mill, but it takes experter received Thursday, | fisted, red-blooded men to fill out a clothing, | rigging crew ther be dis-|ing crew, of a he camp by| Fully 90 per cent of th s after Uncle Sim has! ployed soldiers with unt- logging camps declare they will ef! 1, two: or falling and buck logging operation. | men em rations of | in the vital ¢ ther go to British Columbia or take! be permitted up some other remunerative line of work before they will go back to! old schedule. | And the logging camp ts the key trike situation. Logs must be logged before they can be sawed and so long as the «trikers can keep those|the camps closed they are masters }ealled shall appear before their re-| of the situation, and « | ape tive division boards not mote| camp operatives are for the most th logging part single men, they cannot starved out, ae they can easily to any be fo district where labor can be to the men left on the picket Ines. The outlook ts extremely grave, in fn dustrial and business circles, owing to the portentous poss{bilities, of a protracted paralysis of the lumber ried, and who have been called In| industry The lumber barons rejected all to reeognize unionized Inbor as being too democratic to conform to their present autocratic) Ideas. Labor tried patiently and patriot-| feally to reach a ment with the oper: posed to mediate on a asin of the first of April this offer was flatly refused nine-hour 1918, but They then agreed to go back to work for four months basis of elght hours’ work and elght hours’ pay, to prove their contention that a man can do as much work in eight hours as on the present schedule This offer was also promplly re- jected. The pleadings of Dr. Suz. tallo for a manifestation of patri otic obligations to the boys in the trenches were wasted on the atony sensibilities of the barons, who Place profits above lives, liberty and democracy, who place the per ils of the nation as a secondary te sue when compared with a diminu: on a The woolen (Not OUR It n w Ju 133 RIDAY, AUG, 17, 1917. LOGGERS HOLD KEY T0 factions of, Now Displayed Bradbury Suits for Men and Fellows arrived this week. suit now. the balance can be paid in small | STORE CLOSES AT 7 P. M SATURDAY | PAGE 2 RIKE; THEY MILL MEN ods of welling labor power bas been, sounded From the ruins of the present confilet will arise the centraltzed organtaation of the Umber workers of this state. | Which organization does capital prefer to deal withthe LW, W who represent rebellion and contin who in sd wtrife, or the A. F. of Lk present stability and security industrial circles? What are you going to do, M Lamberman? A patriotic president and « loyal public are awaiting your answer. Bruce McRae Hates to Eat Chicken, for It Is Part of Play Bruce McRae By Echo June Zahl One man in Seattle ha to He uce Mo playing with Ruth Chatterton, at the Metropoll- tan this week, in “Come Out of the Kitch , Every night for a year, when the third act comes around, Mr, McRae unloosens his belt because he knows he will have to eat chicken, soup, potatoe ice crean, and cake. There na fake about it. A real meal is served on the stage “And it certainly gets tiresome,” sald Mr. McRae Sometimes a whiff of the chicken steals over the footlights, apd I guess the yudience gets a pang of hunger, but if they had to eat a huge dio ner every night and twice on mat tnee days—oh, my. Once I re belied against chicken, and they served us veal for a spell. And sometimes we get a little variety in the ice cream.” Youthful and vigorous fs Bruce McRae, and he'd rather dance than est any day “It's so restful,” h esaid, with one of bis giant smiles, “After! the show you think you afe so tired there's only one thing for you to do and that's to go to bed. But some one suRR a little dance, and after you have stepped around | the hall a few feel so invigorated you never want to go to bed.” The first show that brought Mr McRae to Seattle was “Aristoc- | racy.” WILSON PICKS NEW AIDS FOR HOUSTON times you tion of dividends, who place the| EB or Bg fon Beate pda |B. PRs 6: blood of our soldier heroes on a low-| WASHINGTON, Aug. 17.--Prost concealed, are constructed to look pe te ee Cte er plane than financial greed |dent Wilson today nominated Clar Jand feel like tobacco cans [ef five vessels ta:the trasaeuaaam The timber worker fully realizes|no Ouseley, of College Station They are called “Tuxedos” in| been exploded and destroyed thele that he must affiliate with some or-| Tex. and Raymond A. Pearson, of underworld circles. vessels, according to belief in shine) | fanization to protect himself from) Ames, la. to be assistant secre NT Federal officials declare the ar-|ping circles today. The list of@i the greedy grasp of capital. He has) taries of agriculture. He also nom rests and disclosures contained in overdue vessels is the longest in conceived the idea, and nothing can| inated Surgeon George M 0 Liege may eigen pony bg ced Megane bake his pein mg to piace der to be senior surgeon of the pub Operations of a chain of |the most elaborate opium smug-|men can account for it in no other poaltion to demand | lic service, and Hugh 8. Gib on ee. ees is uk : ™ fair treatment from his employer. Play 0 secretary of embassy or, Oplum smugglers, who carry on roy Ping uncovered on the F bey y the allen enemy @x- 79 In a net@dell, the death knell of} legation, Class 2, to be secretary of) their traffic from British Co- | Coast, pl tae unorganize harumscarum meth-' embassy or legation, Class | lum to San Francieco, and | em ”” ead, =| from there to Honolulu, con- cealing their wares in tobacco Where OREDIT ° cane and using secret bite \s really an Ad A ] were revealed by federa accommodation vance rrivals agents here Friday. | —In— Smugglers already arrested in) connection with the plot are | Morria O'Brien, 68, Seattle, for-| mer federal prisoner at MeNell B inland James Fenton, 1422 Church st, | Suits For Fall and of New Fall Young The new s and patterns made up tn the first shipment approved fall models are ready for by way of Bellingham your tnapection in the Men's Clothing "aa uaa taken into custody. to} vating is our low price Depersons Special Agents A. B. Hamer and | If we couldn't undersell—neither could ice the Pxample in the North Display Window.) fepartment, who had trailed him nine) Americar ities That's exactly d from Seattle to the international prema » xac j P. +4 d F m 25 an line, and then waited to trap hiw what we're in business for—to sell for rice ro Up on he return trip less and save YOU money On Credit PLAN of Credit Giving makes possible to select your new A small initial pay ers, vent opens your account, and then eekly or monthly payments ist as it suits you 21334 Second Ave, OPIUMRINGIS | San Franct Letters were found concealed un- | der a stove in O'Brien's t ters {np an Olice st jhouse, showing how the smugglers | carried using the terms “potatoes,” “coco” grades of opium, when ordering. O'Brien was arrested at 3 a Tuesday as he attempted to smug gle $2,000 worth of opium and co- caine over the Canadian boundary Paul Watson O'Brien ces here, stock of contraband between false | floors His stock the Orient aboard trans-Pacific Un- | spirited From here supplies “potatoes,” Koski and ciseo, who supplied the | Until confronted with his prison records, O'Brien contended that it FACTS! | LOGIC APPLIED TO YOUR TEETH, FACTS Says Webster Are Anything That Is Done— Realities LOGIC Says Webster Is the Science of Correct Events Reasoning Truths OR. L, KR. CLARK ALL WE ASK OF YOU is that you apply a little logic to the facts that we are about to enumerate for your benefit. The facts are as follows: We have, in the face of keen competition, succeeded in acquiring the lar. gest dental practice in the state. This we could never have accomplished had we been incompetent or unable to satisfy the most exacting patients. We have upbuilded and for years maintained the cleanest, brightest and most thorougrly and scientifically equipped dental offices in the Northwest. This fact we offer as an indication of our desire to give to our patients the best — that modern ideas of comfort and sanitation can provide. We, under no circumstances, employ the services of any but graduate dental surgeons who have been licensed to practice by the State Board of Dental Examiners. A rule of our office is that each operator must display his license in plain view of the patients. We have adopted as our motto the fact that to us our reputation is worth j more than individual dollars, and we believe that it is good business to expend 4. ten times the value of any work, if necessary, to rectify a possible error. . We are pioneers in the practice of modern PAINLESS DENTISTRY. We unreservedly guarantee to perform extractions and other operations with the absolute minimum of pain. All examinations and estimates are made and given in person by Dr. L. — R. Clark, who assumes personal responsibility for all operations performed and © business transacted. f Regal Dental Offices# DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager. q Lady attendants on duty at all times. : 1405 Third Avenue N. W. Corner Third and Union. Diagonally across from the Postoffice. Be sure to get to the right place, 7 In every respect Seattle’s leading dentists. 3 NOT OPEN EVENINGS OR SUNDAYS : Our reputation is worth more than your dollars. ‘inv we worm BLOCK BOMBS WRECK The new style tins, in which a! gaN FRANCISCO, Aug. first o. Aquar | rooming house on their {illicit commerce, | Here we il lustrate the pretty “Par is’ Pump captivated “milk” to denote different Arrest Brings Expose | m that has the | but much feminine hearts 4 more capti of the U. 8, treasury | ve maintain sixty-four shdps in forty maintained regular offt- | kept one million satisfied cus 1916 is the great en of the “Boston” Over mers and his valuable | in Reshipped as “Coco” was smuggled from) into Vancouver, and brought to Seattle. were sent as ‘eoco” to Fran: | market {n “milk” enton and in San Honolulu. They were arrested by federal officials in San Francisco Friday, e on information furnished by the - Seattle agente Second Take In O'Brien's pockets they found Elcor Elevato: $1,000 cash, but he made a prac jo Open tice, they learned, of sleeping tn Fitel SAMPLE SHOE SHOP C2: Saturday 26-cent rooming houses Bld . 5 ” Eveninge | New Tins Deceiving $ he Store of Style and Service Until 7 && SECOND AVE. AT PIKE