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CLEMMER THE HOVSE OF MVSIC GUTERSONS AUGMENTED§ | RUSSIAN ORCHESTRA § SEATTLE'S BEST PHOTOPLAY MOUSE “First Movement D Minor Concerto” Violin Solo by Kathoris Wineland “Der Freischutz” = Orchestra Number Valse, ‘L’estudiantina” Orchestra Number Overture, | “A Tale of | Two Cities” Matine Evenings Children DAILY CONCERTS 3:30, 7 and 9 Vieuxtemps ~Weber Waldteufel 7 ACTS 1,000 PEOPLE FARNUM IN A WONDERFUL PRESENTATION OF THE IMMORTAL STORY FROM THE FAMOUS NOVEL BY CHARLES DICKENS » William Farnum, tn the dual role of Charles Darnay and Carton, holds one tense with his superb portrayal of the OUR CAP Besides securing the new GOLDWYN TURE PRODUCTIONS, which their repertoire such noted stars as we have secured THE WORLD-FAMOUS VIOLINIST AND HIS SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA COMPOSED OF TWELVE ARTISTS To Open the Greater Strand Theatre With the First Goldwin Production Starring Miae Marsh The Star of “The Birth of a Nation’ include a ANOTHER FEATHER IN PIC- in MAE MARSH, MAXINE ELLIOTT, MARY GAR- DEN, JANE COWL, MADGE KENNEDY, MABEL NORMAND & MARIE DRESSLER, HERNIAVSKY SATURDAY,SEPT. 22d | “Polly of the Circus” 2Np NEAR SENECA MUST DIE FOR LEADING REVOLT * Continued From Page 1 1 t yet formally surrendered, The abinet was tn the throes of a re organization, due as much to dif ferences on what punishment should be given the rebel leader as to internal conflict. Sulcide or Surrender Put Petrograd is demanding one lot only two courses for Korniloft |sulctde or surrender, The one means death just as certainly as the other in the view of the popu lace. Korniloft himself deatred puntsh- ment for revolters, It was the matn issue which he projected Into the Moscow convent He put tt into effect at once. Probably number of Russian private soldiers have already patd the penalty for Infractions of discipline. It was at the Moscow conference that Korniloff planned his coup. believe the {dea sprang full grown into his brain at the dramatic mo. ment when the great army com: mander stood on the platform in the city hall of Moscow, acclaimed a hero in a five-minute demonstra tion. Ovation Spoiled Him A aplendid audience of bankers, bants, manufacturers and tn, etuals in confidence from the boxes and galleries They ously, For five minutes nolse rnilo’ "s stolciam melted under arone cheered the militant figure | continued unabated, Even | THE SEATTLE STAR GEN, KORNILOFF CARMEN’S CASE IS CLOSED BY C. A. REYNOLDS C. A. Reynolds, POSSE HUNTING ASSASSINS WHO SHOT AT TROOPS Ny United Press 1 representing STEUNENVILLE on Sept. 15.—] the employes of the traction Police Chief Carte, of Steuben-| company, Friday rested his ville, with a posse of eftizens and case before the board of arbi. detectives, 1s searching for uniden tified persons who fired @ fustilade of shots at a troop train ag it was passing thru Mingo Junction, three miles west of here, Four soldiers were wounded } The shooting occurred tn the darknoss of last night, and authort tles are unable even to guess at} The board adjourned Friday af- the force of the attacking party. | ternoon until Tuesday, when the |The names of the wounded #ol-| traction company will open its case, diers were withheld, and tt was!and will endeavor to show that the not even stated to what unit they | wage now pald by the company ts |were attached, The victims were! a living wage, and that to pay cared for by a detachment of med- | more would force the company into teal officers on the train, — |bankruptey. The company expects to consume two days tratore which Ia to determine what amount te a falr living wage for 2,200 workers In Se- attie and Tacoma, By agreement Reynolds will Introduce testimony when the board site in Tacoma next week. men receiving the “te that he spent his entire time en deavoring to Khow that t eannot fee a Pa. standard of liv.) ing on the gen received. During the concluding devoted to the presentation of | GRIP ON FRONT. Ny United Press Leased Wire | LONDON, Sept, 15. Britian sessions |troops forged a tighter grip on po-|atlle evidence, Reynolds called sitions east of Westhook (in the|@&2y of the company’s Mnemen, Ypres. sector) last night, Field |For thone ho asked specific wage 4 |increnses because of the extra haz Marshal Haig reported today. | "We slightly improved our post |*Fdous nature of their calling. At “ present they receive $4.62 a day tion,” he sald. Haig alo related| Yiich is 12 cents more than they failure of @ strong enemy attack | received five years ago. He asked erday evening northeast of St. that they be pald a minimum wage Julien against the ground gained | of $6.00, and that foremen r during the day by the British. The | 46.50. ‘These men are unabl assaulting Wave Was caught under | obtain life insurance la heavy artillery barrage, as it was! Reynolds also introduced works the warmth. He visibly expanded,|advancing, and completely dis |on political economy by Pope Leo That was the moment as I see it} persed North of Langemarck,| XIl, John Mitchell and John F. today, that the idea of power was | Hatg reported activity in enemy ar | Ryan ertablished in his mind. He be lleved the cheers were those of all) Russta, comer of the rast only a tenth of the at assemblage—sat grim and #t lent thruout the cheer! The) frenzied ones jeered at them. Yells in one 1, 300 men demanded they arise and join, But| they sat silent He Misjudged Majority Korn! the the milf tary man par did not know thom. He rant of what was away from the batt Constantly sur rounded by military affairs, con. stantly studying military strategy, ever thinking In terma of army life, the generalissimo thought all the voice of Russia spoke to him tn this| great demonstration. If Korniloff thought at all about the silent 300, he thought they were a minority, He was wrong They represented the armed citt zens of Rustia-—the majority. Ev ery man of the 300 had been elect ed by the vote of thousa diers at the front and by workers thruout the To them, represented everything in Russia that they had overthrown by the revolution—the cold power of military force. His Soldiers Loyal to Nation | Yet Korniloff disdained to look at them. In his ears there re sounded the sweet sound of 2,700 wildly acclaiming delegates, and he forgot the chorus was not join ed by the grim 300. It must have heen at this dramatic moment that the {dea of revolt came to Korniloft Thus it happened when Kornil offs troops met those of the pro visional government miles from Petrograd, there w no fighting On the contrary, the men on the two sides fraternized. Not a shot was ff Men In the ranks of both sides understood each other. They con ferred at length and then r to their com aden. I fore off's own eyes gg the tion. Korntloft were power Peoplé Unexcited Meanwhile, on Russia’s front, headquarters stood back, looking for civil war as much as for war and his from the Germans. Petrograd never lost its nerve thruout the great mistake. There were crowds on the str panic. They mer Jam corners and spaces on the Prospeckt, and eagerly meager newspaper reports On Tuesday and Wednesday, when Korniloff's mistake appeared for a moment not to be a mistake the populace was unmoved. They awaited is of sol-| tillery fire. “it will ibe up to the board of ar- bitrators,” said Reynolds, Friday, set the wage scale, We have shown that the men cannot live { ency, raise a family, enjoy dinary pleasures, and at the same time save for old age the pit- tance they are now receiving. TEACH SAMMIES TO USE LIQUID FIRE: BY J. W. PEGLER or on United Press Htaft Correspondent “We shall ask that the board HEADQUARTERS OF THE fix the proper amount that each AMERICAN ARMY IN FRANCE, should spend for every item which Sept. 15.—Next in the catalogue of | enters into the r war horrors which American troops | home life, and th will see demonstrated is the use of jan us the wage that r ng of a decent n add the items Its quid fir & question of whether Arrang ta were completed| the « » pay it or not; it today for a view by the Sammica ther these 2,200 very soon of how the allies have! to maintain an turned the German weapon against| American standard of Mving.” the Germans, after perfecting the| The witnesses Friday afternoon unquenchable flames. were: Lou Smith, Herman Hard ajors Alexander Rasmussen of | wick, A. H. Butts, Dave Fink, G. O. Portland, Or., and Jock Manning of | McLaughlin and A. K. Spencer Florida, both of the Canadian ari ny tuhallat Amocieat incioe, arceea SHIP YARD STRIKE STOPS BUILDING today to instruct the Sammies tn general fighting tactics. o—____________e Continued F From Page 1 | e tain what Eis whsk hs 30 national government jbas declared to be just and fatr ts ridiculous,” sald Brown. “Tl think Judge Jurey’s ruling an abortion of Justice.” Jurey sald Saturday refused he Characterizes our every transaction, tomere are accord tesy consistent with sound \-ual- nese Judgment 4% Accounte Subject to Cheek Are Cordinily Invited methods and that he had Agent T. J reassured etriking car aturday, who feared that = by stitking they had fo claims of exemption’ grante Peoples Savings Bank SECOND AVE. AND PIKE #T. by the district board on occ al grounds. “While law,” ald Kennedy, ‘says that the cla shall be void when a man changes his occ it 1# clearly not to casos of emergency » re-cert these men, w mn the governa even now trying to adjust the diffi cultte at they have h ir employ would be clearly a usur. pation of power. ‘Only as a last resort would I ap- ipatior We Render an Exceptional Service in COLLECTIONS TRUSTS GENERAL BANKING peal such cases to the and then only tn the bop GUARDIAN i a rl gon which ait onsen say TRUST AND SAVINGS BEB heed gp ime ate the BANK ff iusen bart t Ave. at Colum (Or. Evans Graduated, Licensed, Registered made a new record for patience PHYSICIAN apanee = ant abirhy about tee and fortitude. The two aays were “out ees = formally observed, as usual, as|f tp ORE HALI the creaiee dey natruction & Drydock Ce church holidays, All business was || tes. I une medicine, electricity cae: pe pe) vibration. ete. I give special at tention tothe “treatment Kerensky Organized Nation Women. My weval office fee te At the winter palnce, howover, |] €1,00 Cash. medician included . Fn ~ f | ES BANK BUILDING sia ting civil a There and Pike. Kerensky received ministers, tall ed over the telephone and by tele y ’ graph to distant parts of Russia,| way—Piant in i 7 and collected the vast forces of the| Wilaon " “ faaer to crush the rebellion eo In the room of Breshko Bresh : * n 4 kovsky I sought the “grandmother of the revolution” on one of these \e puta days of unexcited preparation. She oo was gone, but a gentle white haired ding dy who sat there working de- a At po rwathding “The grandmother of the revolu ir pern tion says we mustn’t make terms ; with Korniloff. We will not.” 3 OPERATIONS MAY RESTORE BOY’S SIGHT | By United Press Lenned Wi VANCOUVER, Wash., | With two operations formed, doctors here planning a third one Strebe, blind, deaf and dumb. it |the third operation 1s successful, |the boy will have perfect sight tn eye, Hels a atu nt at the ashington State Sc hee for the Deaf ready today are on Otto Barnes Leads Field in Chicago James M, Barnes, coma professional, continues to| lead the fleld in the Western open golf championship tourney, now on in Chicago, Walter Hagen, present champion, and Tom McNamara, title-holder in 1914, are his closest opponents, the former ‘Tourney | Ta-| | Moughton STRIKE TIES UP \ ! YARDS IN PORTLAND By United Preae Lensed Wire DENTIST PORTLAND, Sept. 15.—Work Why Experiment? on 100 wooden ships in 11 Wil Years of experience have made| lamette and Columbia river mo master of my profession, and| yards stopped at 10 o'clock this you want the best morning when 2,750 men walk- T have hundreds of patients who| ed out. irs ated hag “a The shipbuilding companies an a nounced today they had applica t@ns for work from hundreds of I have|men and would put them to work hecking |ag soan as possible. Most of the | £0™% | ships on which construction 4s stop. no dow | pod we veing built under goverr ek and I/ ment contract The shipping board and tell you ' may take a hand in the situation The strike {s said to have been called over the protests of the in ternational unions, The men re. fused to postpone the strike when they heard that two Astoria ship yards had declared a lockout yes- torday against union men, ALL WORK Th dan Not Open Sunday Visone Mala b16% It was significant fn the pre | sentation of the testimony of the} men that Reynolds called only wage, and) STARTING TODAY Until Wed. Night Only! CHARLIE CHAPLIN —that famous chaser of the Blues AS—- “The In w His the r This is considered by critics to be lin’s comedies. ADDED ATTRACTION ANN MURDOCK Champion” Chaplin as a comedian is great—but Chaplin as a Prize Fighter is a Scream, a Riot, a Knockout. You'll roll off the seat laughing at his funny antics in ng, as there is action in every foot of the production, In Charles Frohman’s Stage Success “The Outcast” Brand New Print ‘of Funniest De Luxe Comedy the funmest of Chap- 2np NEAR SENECA jing some ‘big smokes,’ and as about HEY, SMOKERS! 16 of our members are with the JOIN 60-50 CLUB | tose in vtait, we want them ait and the other boye with them to be ‘big The Star's smoke fund has now |gone over the $1,700 mark. That means that more than 6,800 Sam- mies will be provided with a whole 60-50 rules. A dollar or a quarter from you that gives a little comfort to one of the F own flesh and od ne. tact | Week's smokes by The Star readers ct dha eae? wae on ie betriend.|_. The “Our Boys in France Tobacco say late 40 atte ub hin Hits Fund" {s indorsed by the war sec as tary and the secretary of the nav Salesmanship The Star has been appointed col- coh ral of = Me™ lector for this district khak » club sent 9 ‘ages Ble : Every cent contributed will be Star's smoke fund, with spent for tobacco—nothing else, “As coming sales a The expense of mailing, stationery, office rent, etc. 1s paid by promt |nent citizens. By special arrange- STAR'S SMOKE FUND Previc knowledged ..#1,108.00 | | ments, the leading tobacco compa- Mra. I 4 |nies have agreed to put up spectal Margaret ‘Thayer, Hivestin’” | | Packages for the Sammies, contain- i 1.00 | | ing smokes that would cost 45 cents w etter W. Peterson, 730 F der ° at ordinary retall prices, For these Cr eu ae aie Loo | | Packages, the “Our Boys in France Who “smoke oO. Tobacco Fund,” a national organiza Hellingham ee| | ton, pays only 88 conte eanh. © Ballina tion, pays only 26 cents each, Thus 100 | [every 25 cents contributed will buy 1.00 45 cents’ worth of tobacco for a S10 28rd ave. 8. Sanimy 0 5.00 bal The Sammies need your help. Don't fail them. Glip out the cou pon which appears herewith, fill it out, and send it along with your | contribution: ® Washin Dickgteser, » Aberdeen |.. To THY Eprron The Seattle Start . packages of tobacce, “for Am = fighting jekhagen, each with of my packages will My we pride ourselves upon be-| Sh Eee RET RCI — smokes’ and have ‘big smokes.’ So,; Continued From Page ene ine eee ae take this ten —— | ane buy the smokes. sick skins Resinolis what you want for yourskin- -fouble—Resinol to séop the itching and burning—Resinol to Aea/ the ‘eruption. | This gentle ointment is so effective that | it has been a standard skin treatment, among physicians, for many years. It contains nothing vpich could irritate Ne tenderest skin even of a tiny baby. {N druggists sell Resinol. GOOD BLOOD: “Blood will tell.” Blotches and blemishes, like murder, out, unless the blood is kept pure. teh | ored aj protected by the faithful use | OMY Can wenn r men nnceecccens coc ce cces core certececrencces BEECHAMS PILLS Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the Werth Seld everywhere. In bones, 10. 250