Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Better Values Than Ever Every season finds this big 64-store or- ganization better equipped than the sea- son before. It means greater financial re- sources—greater buy- ing power — greater production — and bet- ter values. These ben- efits go to you—the consumer, in dollars and cents. Men's Tan and Black Calf English Walking Shoes —Welted Solid Leather ”” $4.45 PER PAIR BOSTO SAMPLE SHOE SHOP ond Floor Eitel Building’, Second 6 Pike St- Order Your Spring Suit NOW Sarely you will find in our Immense Stock a pattern that will please you. MADE TO ORDER At prices that spell Econ- omy. Seventh year of con- tinuous service to the men of Seattle. Always with the UNION LABEL 304 PIKE ST. 7, 106 = BIA ST. Cor. First Ave. DR. EDWIN J. BROWN D. D. 8. Now at 106 Columbia I have left the imita- tors of my name and signs on First moved my Dental t Yt) it. My new en- from my old location. be- will trance is 106 Columbia, midwa tween First and Second av: it raise my prices beca' I do expect to ii ‘al practice siness will offset it of doing business because of war. ant to be known as the only in Seattle who did net raise his brices becaus Epw * STAR WANT BEST FOR RESULTS os FOUND GUILTY Harwood Morris, former cashier the Fremont State bank, was| by mu court of misappropriating $558.85 of the bank's funda. Morris, took money be- longing to the account of Dan Lan On. utor of t tate of O nm, and applied it to debts P. Dixon Co, ank had warned not oan more money to the company and it was heavily in debt to the bank, It was contended by Deputy Prosecutor Helsell that Morris was part of the company Back, case tor jury Thursday an oxee been ot Clarke Superior | county Judge beard th \Choruses for Big Community Singing Are Being Planned Seattle will hark back to the and artixtio days before the movies, if plans being formulated re |sult in the combining of choruses for [the purpese of community singing j1t is thought that too much talent ts blushing unseen, and ways and |means are being taken to bring it }to light. The amber of Commerce | | These pictures show William J Club are backing the organization of is am yet Incomplete, and if goes well, community will become a pleasing and ive factor in city entertainment. i\TWO SEATTLE WOMEN WIN WEALTH IN COURT Two Seattle women were made wealthy this week by a the Colorado courts. Mra. A. Martin, 1147 21st ave. N. F. A. Black, wife of Capt. Black, of Vancouver barracks, will share with their two brothers in the million dol lar estate of thetr mother, Mra. J Sidney Brown. for two years and Commercial the movement. which jalt |NO OPPOSITION FOR HARRY AT ELECTION City Comptroller H. W. Carroll Will have no opposition at Tuesday's election. His 11 one-vote opponents |all withdrew before the ballots were |ment to the printers. Treasurer Ed Terry will have five opponents. ‘There were 17 one-vote nominees for treasurer, and 11 withdrew | COMMISSIONER WHITE TO | HANDLE FARM PROBLEMS) | OLYMPIA, March 1—Farm labor problems in Washington will be han- |dled solely by Commisaioner Henry | M. White, of the immigration depart. ment in Seattle. The State Council of Defense has decided to place the control of the matter In White's hands and to all other agencies to work with him PLENTY OF SINGLE ROOMS; NO COTTAGES There are plenty of single rooms vacant in Seattle, but a shortage of light housekeeping rooms and cot tages, where a family with one or two children can live, according to the Chamber of Com-nerce housing committes. Two Thousand Damages for Accident Victim The supreme court held Thuraday that Mrs. Russell Hibbard, 2217 42nd st, Is entitled to $2,054 damages from the O-W. R. & N. for injuries recely- ed in @ collision between an O-W. train and a street car. Superior Judge Mackintosh gave her the award FIRE DAMAGE |S $600 Six hundred dotlars’ damage was done by fire to the home and furnish: ings of Mra. G. H. Genung, 63rd ave. W. and W. Hanford st, night. Overheated stov Oh! the Charm — of Beauty ae Stuart's Calciam Wafers Restore | the Color to Your Cheeks and Remove the Cause of Pimples, Blackheads, Ete. Every one envies a beautiful just as every one envies a healthy kin, Unsightly faces filled with binckheads, unhealthy impurities. the facial person pimples, discolorations ete, are nothing but faces, due to blood Cleanse the blood and | blemishes disappear. Lite to Me Now Thing, for 1 Have Made Al Troubles a Thing of the You must not believe that drugs and salves will atop facial blemishes. | The cause is impure blood filled with all manner of refuse matter. Stuart's Calcium Wafers cleanse and clear the blood, driving out all poisons and impurities. And you'll never have a good complexion until the blood is clean. No matter how bad your complex fon in, Stuart's Calcium Wafers will work wonders with it. You can get | these little wonder-workers at your druggtst’s for 60 cents a package. i] F. A. Stuart Co. 607 Stuart Bldg., Marshall, Mich. Send me at once, by return mail, o free trial package of Stuart's Calcium Waters. BUreet veseeceees cree eoereeenes ' chy. +» State... There was litigation | Thursday | the 9 |officials that the ship cannot b would stay afloat, The picture abov which a ated under each deck mat because there would be enoug Unele fam has offered the men of) the army and navy 4 great opportu:) jnity thru “war risk insurance. Prompt action on the part of men in the service to avail themselves of government is now bein urged by those in charge of the in surance at Washington and in camps and naval bases in the country For the time within which such Ir |wurance can be taken out by service | men ia limited, And for those who have been in the service since October 6 the limit is approaching. February 12 is the date set as the final day for the ff ing of applications by men called to du the draft or voluntarily ting before October & one who have entered the serv-, that date have 120 days from the date of their enlistment jeall to duty in which to make appli ation Net Compulsory In a pamphiet issued by the treas- ury department, under which the in suramce for service mon is offered. the ain 4 objects and the regula |tions « « © are set forth The the inwui neurance is offered by the Unit States government Tt ts of fered in addition to regular compen sation and pension allowances for in jury, disease or death of nen while in the service. | It is not compulsory, but every | man In the service is strongly advise | od by the authorities to avail himself | of the opportunity of having the United States government insure him at a rate far below any offered by private insurance companies Nurse May Take It urance im rolely for thowe i in active service under the war department or navy department male or female. Army and navy nurses have the privilege of taking out such insurance Only relatives of the insured or of | the wife of the insured can be named }as beneficiaries, under the provisions controlling the policies. The benef can be changed at any time by; red. | naurance gives to the insured of having the United ent pay to the benef: nth for each $1,000 of 240 months. Or to have that sum paid to the insured for should he be permanently | disabled Continnes After Service ‘The onga, | ju be months by the payment of premiums and the fulfilling of terms and cond) tions provided. The insurance man leaven tt t |for a per being paid a end, or before th the ir | war | form of | wh phys ed, and this all policies within five end of the war Application shall be made for tn surance thru t au of war risk insurance, W ington, D. C. thru the comp r or the com in which to the not lost whe ims At the urance must be insurance to ment atipuld u) examination be requir new years of the not named insurance will go legal heirs The insurance can be for from $1,000 to $10,000, in multiples of $500 The amount of insurance cannot be increased after 120 days in the nerv fee right at the start be unt Depends on Age from centa a at 15 years, to at 40 years in more rapid, 1.35 a thousand, Prem thousand, per #1 cents a thousand Above 40, the increa the highest being at 65 In this wa cure 20 years nee for nay, a $10,000 insur CREAM FOR CATARRH OPENS UP NOSTRILS Tells How To Get Quick Reliof from Hoad-Colds. It's Splendid! In one minute your clogged nos. ltrils will open, the air passages of your head will clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffling, blowing, headache, dry ness. No struggling for breath at ‘night; your cold or eatarth will be gone Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Ap ply a little ‘of this fragrant, anti- septic, healing cream in your nos trils, It penetrates through every alr passage of the head, soothes the | inflamed or swollen mucous mem- brane and relief comes instantly It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed up with a cold or nasty catarrh— Relief comes so quickly, 00-ton ship which 1 aabout to sail for the war zone unc The wb t in ata nuk have STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 1, 1918. PAGE 11 r of the “unsinkable ship” ved to defy the U-boats, Bo don a plan to flood her In dock to wee if she of the watertight A great hole torn ir ft to keep her from #inkin: Donn ot York k that t wan decided to ab ws some of the thousands h of buoyancy boxed HERE'S A DETAILED EXPLANATIO UNITED STATES ERVICE INSURANCE PLAN Hin beneficiary will |name now, it is advised that he take month for 240] out Insurance in this form, anyhow | At some later date he may marry, or hable | may be unable to pans exacnination Al. | for life insurance with @ regular com y to| pany. $6.40 a month. receive $57.00 a months. This insurance ts att for debts, nor can it be aamix tho b fie 'WHAT’S GOING ON IN. | GERMANY! H ‘ AS TOLD BY THE NEWSPAPERS WE GET FROM THE TEUTONIC EMPIRES AND NEUTRAL ATIONS } ) ' { showing a@; quotes from the Det against the enemy,| zeltung the following ¢ seems to be in| instances of official mu 7 keeping his children from| “The Obernhetim local authorities Bavaria and Prussia! received from the central egg depot the bad boys, cai at Mannheim a truckload of 2000 slinging mud at each/emes, accompanied by the state- newspapers. ment that two eggs were allowed the Munich Post,| to every family, and that the price its own) of the eggs w 12 cents ean slans,” In Obernheim, h there was ot omen the burgo- Master wrote to the central author ities, ‘We need no eggs.’ By return of post there came the command from above, ‘You must take the onan’ he Tages ruordinary Germany front” kalner may be but the trouble scrapping. expecially @ names and other, thru For with oxampl some on over, Why | Believe in Nuxated Iron As a Tonic, Strength and Bleod) Builder By KE. Sauer, M.D. Eggs Ret | “The Ge" were not accepted; they remained tn the truck, and are now polsoning the alr all has |Sfound—end in Berlin people are | “The village of Klingenbach re- cetved orders to deliver 200 pounds of butter in the village of Ger- Gauen, a distance of about five miles, ‘The butter was conveyed thither, but the village of Gerdauen refused to accept it, as there was no lack of butter. After a couple of hours’ delay the butter was dis patched to the town of Lynz, four miles farther away. The burgo- master there declined to receive the consignment, aa there was but- ter In plenty. “Finally the butter w the large camp in the | ¥ietnity, where Annamites, Senegal eeeeinge Negroes and English and other Hot <ting, . for: | femtote may now anoint themselves carte “Perniian leyue’ Hos-| with {t—and in Berlin people are t Dept.) New York. 494 | starving, and cursing the farmers Eat Like Locusts former mbere have been hi minended t: Monseigneur Nannini, « promi- nent clergyman, recommends it t a Former Health Com i ff by eve man ¥ physi late F D geon « mer WH Hospita ren has p aration taken to ne red nerves, el any D: for creat . the ¢ has ever used blood, but prisoners Bavar} plain North the a pl eat th home. nays ‘The greed with which North rmans holiday-making in Bavaria fling themselves on all the food they can precure to take back with them on their return home ts dis gusting. ‘These food-hogs have become an absolute pest. In 1916 the num | ber of strangers In Bavaria reached 400,000. It was as tho entire Ger man tribes from the north had jgrated to nettle for months at &@ time in the southwestern dis- trict of the empire. “These strangers started on sys- tematic foraging expeditions, and there was not a farm, not a soll tary miner's hut, but was at their mercy, The means employed were rue ¢ i |—money in heaps, fine words, and acy and ail good 4rUS-| where neither sufficed, a strong done of the Impudence proper to | North Germans.” Pan Bavarians On the other hand, the Taegliche Rundschau falls tooth and nail on |“those infamous Bavarians” for their “lack of hospitality “The ways of Bavarian hospital- ity are truly wonderful. Visitors are being singled out for special legislation which 1s nothing short of infamous. “According to the latest Bavarian regulations, these holiday guests are to pay 100 per cent more for thelr bread than the native resi dents, They will only be entitled |to half the daily milk allowance of other persons, they may fur- niahed only with and a half ounces of fats a week, and are not allowed to buy either eggs or starchy foods, Moreover, at the end of four weeks’ residence they must leave the district. ans geherally Bavarian hol at fue of hungry ante people out of house Poh 5 lh pay The Augsburg Abendacitung 4 are not atrong 0} to yourself to ne fol- | ¢ and whieh ts pre nied above by phy wet “| Dr Swift's Pharm Glasses on Earth Examination Free a don't need Glasses we li frankly tell you #o without rly fitted Glasses are @ ent to the eyes and to the Mystery How Prisoners Make Bombs in Prison SALT LAKE CITY, Utah, March It's getting to be a fad—this bomb making,” said Col. George L. Bryam, commandant of the intern ment camp at Ft, Douglas, Thurs. day, when the third bomb to be found in the camp was brought to him. ‘The third bomb was the most pow: erful of the three, Officers cannot understand how the prisoners con structed the deadly instrument—so carefully have they been watched. { ow in your time to improve and to strengthen with our bf xperience Vianeon fall to give palr of Ginsses The Marcum Optical Co. 917 First Avenue Near Madison Street. LISHED 10 ie prac. 1 PAID ADVERTIBEMENT STAND UP éé OLE Ly HANSON (Explanation: The Times, P.-1. and the Seattle Electric company insist that it must be “Mr.” Hanson.) You have permitted your chief spokesman and sponsor, the adve dentist-lawyer, to propound a series of misleading questions to Jim Bi ford, touching upon the latter’s political record. Ordinarily it would be be- neath the diginity of a decent citizen to reply to such base and malicious in- ferences, but so many innocent people have been deceived thereby that we make reply solely to silence the man discarded by the Socialist party, whom you have chosen as your official mouthpiece. WE CALL YOUR BLUFF You accuse Jim Bradford with having been in the employ of the Electric com- pany. Now the answer: About twelve years ago Jim Bradford handled three cases for the Electric company. This is the sum total of his connection with the company that is now secretly backing the Hanson campaign. Jim Bradford has since that time fought the Electric interests to a standstill—beating them at every turn, defeating their bold attempt to modify the terms of their street railway franchise, and to pass legislation that would have crippled Seattle’s cityowned lighting plant. This is our answer to your deliberite attempt to deceive the voters. You state that Jim Bradford was against the eight-hour law. As a conclusive answer to what you know to be a deliberate lie, we submit the following unsolic- ited letter: Seattle, Washington, Bradford Campaign Committee, February 23, 1918. Postal Telegraph Seattle Bidg., Gentlemen have noticed in the papers a statement made by FE. J. Brown, at a the effect that Mr. Bradford opposed the eight-hour for city teamsters in 1 Mr. Brown deliberately misstated the sit- uation, It wan my case against the city, and it was a friendly test case. Bradford was opponed to taking the case because he was in favor of thour day. The then Superintendent of Streets, A. L. Walters, City Corporation Counsel, Scott Calhoun, insisted that Mr. Brad ford take the case to court, which he did, as any other public servant, under the circumstances, would have been obliged to do. As I was a party to the case, I ns of this city should know the full truth, and that the statements made by Mr. Brown were without any founds 1 trust you will give this may be given as a matter of b F. DAVIES, 3708 Burke Ave., City. _ You charge Jim Bradford, while Corporation Counsel of the city of Seattle, with sending men accused of vagrancy to jail. Your chief spokesman, “lawyer. doctor” Brown, ought to know that Mr. Bradford, as the legal representative of the city, had no discretion in the matter of jailing law violators, this being confined exclusively to the police judge. Brown, himself, has had a Tot of experience in defending personal charges of violating the dental law and should know something of court practice. Organized labor went down, the line for Bradford in 1912 and 1914, as the overwhelming defeat of Brown for corporation counsel conclusively proved. You say that Jim Bradford was nota friend of organized labor until recently. Twenty-five years ago Jim Bradford introduced the Workmen’s Com tion. resolution in the Minneapolis Republican convention, thus establishing his um swerving loyalty to labor. And because of his unquestionable service in behalf of the man and woman who toils, Jim Bradford bears the proud distinction of havy- ing the unanimous indorsement of the Seattle Central Labor Council for Mayor. You can’t fool the laboring man, Mr. Hanson. You try to make it appear that expert witnesses drew excessive fees from the city, but you are too cowardly to state that one witness alone, on the opposite side, was paid more than al] the city’s witnesses combined, and the two principal expert witnesses are now supporting Ole. How’s that? And finally, you insinuate that the Telephone company is friendly to Jim Bradford, when you well know that that company, the Gas company and the Puget Sound Traction interests are spending thousands of dollars, using every underhanded means in their power, to defeat him. We are content to let the public guess in whose interest this money is being spent. OLE HANSON, yesterday you wrote an article for The Star, women of this City, calling them traitors, anarchists, I. W. W could lay your tongue to, and under the guise of fake patriotiam, you made this attack. The people on the streets say you lost thousands of votes. We believe the people of this City want the man for Mayor that the Post-Intelligencer, the Employers’ Association and the Traction Company are fighting hard to t, and you can't slip in under the guise of patriotism, your last refuge. Jim Bradford conducted a apaign that every citizen of this City is proud of. A corporation owned mayor of ‘ew York City tried to ride into office under the cloak of patriotism. He accused his opponent, a loyal American citizen, of the same charges you have hurled at Jim Bradford, and the people elected Mayor Hylan by a vote of 2 to 1, and kicked the corporation mayor out. That is what is going to happen ~ AND NOW, “OLE” JUST A FEW PURELY PERSONAL QUESTIONS FOR YOU TO ANSWER: What were you doing at the home of President Leonard, of the Seattle Elee- tric company, on the evening of February 14 (St. Valentine's Day)? What do you want the public to infer from this visit (made after you had filed for Mayor) to the head of the Traction interes Why, Ole, when you have had twenty times as much publicity from the Big Press Combination as Jim Bradford, do you give the PI. so much business? Why do you personally write your articles in the office of the P.-L? Answer, “Ole,” the public is waiting. attacking the working men and pro-Germans, and every name you The Bradford Campaign Committee (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) BRADFORD'S FIGHT Working men and women of Seattle, did you notice the vicious assault made by the Post-Intelligen- cer this morning on the people who toil for a living? Rebuke the Kept Press combination. They are against you and always have been. TO THE CITIEZNS OF SEATTLE: Will you tolerate domination by the P.-I. or any press combination? The Post-Intelligencer has always stood against the working men and women of this city, It stood for the notorious Referendum Measures that you defeated last year by a vote of three to one. ‘The P.-I. has stood, and is standing now, by the Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Compaay, in attempts to cripple Seattle's municipally-owned utilities. Jim Bradford has fought the Post-Intelligencer and the Electric Company at every opportunity. They know his ability and are trying to deceive the people or the eve of an election on the issue of patriotism. Don't be fooled. Vote against your enemy, the Post-Intelligencer, and vote for your friend, James E. Bradford. BRADFORD'S CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE