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COLISEUM TUESDAY ONLY % the audiences on the SEATTLE GIRLS’ VICTORY CARNIVAL Tuesday Afternoon and Evening! cary EARLY !!! Puck, half child, half woman—adopted orphan of the stage—thought the “Safety Curtain” would shut out her past, just as it shut out fire and smoke—but it didn’t— the rest you see on our screen. A big story in every way worthy of the star. Eugene O’Brien is co-starred. Greater Coliseum Symphonic Orchestra 30 Pieces SUZZALLO NAMED AS LABOR UMPIRE Dr. Henry Suzzallo, president of the University of Washington, and chairman of the state council of defense, has been appointed by President Wilson as one of ten men to act as umpires in controversies | THROWS ACID IN | SOLDIER’S FACE Throwing acid into the face of Pri vate Don Griggs, Company I, 14th in fantry, Fort man blinded and burned the soldier near the Great Northern dock Sun Lawton, an unknown me before accepting the appoint- ment, as my work with the univer- sity and as chairman of the state council of defense in already very heavy.” day night, running away afterward Physicians at the city hospital say Griggs may lose the sight of his left which cannot be settled by the war eye. He is now in the Fort Lawton labor board. BELIEVE U. Ss. WILL military hospital Dr. Suzzallo’s war ‘k, includ- ne n ed for te X ing direction of the pro cay wage PROBE S. F. WRECK PS etaieances anor g ia Mca 3 investigating committee in Seattle.) SAN FRANCISCO, July 15.—Fed \_of which he was chairman, brought |eraj investigation of Saturday's The ten umpires chosen will act Uves and injured many persons, is a Bn. DEAD IN BERKELEY as a final committee in cases upon probability, local authorities believed 1 which the war labor board is un- today. Charges by the United Rail | er , able to reach an agreement. Henry | o04 that omcsoncere » . Ford and Charles Caldwell M ee eee ee eeieces | oe ner of Chord, of the interstate commerce | Vth the alr brakes, it was stated ot commission, were also among the ee oe Abecibarring! federal | ( . ten. ce “[ know nothing about my ap potntment,” Dr. Suzzallo sald Mon day, “except a hint from a friend } fn direct connection with Washing. ton, that I was to be drafted for ton, that 1 was to be dratted tor Strike Back at Hun for Prison Brutality Gita vend be un appeinteeect Hundreds of women are signing the pledge not to buy “made it ae teak fespcetanes. rmany” articles after the war if a single instance of crue and mal i dell. investignte: the. demands ment of American soldiers in Hun prison camps ts p n to the which the work would place upon| Women's League for the Protection of American Prisoners WOMEN'S LEAGUE ror THE We, women of America, he: If, during this German we prisoner in eruetly treated whi maltreated contrary to the use ation after the close of this war, made in Germany comes from Germany nt of American prisoners w have andergone such cruelty or maltreatment or were witnesses thereof shall be sufficient evidence of its truth. PROTECTION OF AMERICAN PRISONERS y solemnly pledge ourselves soldier w 5 follows u HUSBAND } SNES WI rom Suffering by Getting : Her Lydia E. Pinkham’s f Vegetable Compound. o ah be Name Addreas Sign this ice and mail to the Women’s cut it out League for the Protection of American Prisoners, Seattle Pittsburgh, Pa—"“For many months I was not able to do my blanks are available aleo at Red Cross headquarters, the work owing toa ue for Women's Service, Soldiers’ and Sailors’ club, Seattle weakness which caused backache and headaches. A friend called my attention to nd Seattle Girls’ Honor Guard headquarters one of your newspaper ad- The following editorial from the! over the land for still greater sacri-| believe that the commonweal will be! ctions unwarranted in the, conduct upon business men indis-; to such installation, in addition to a| to make under normal conditions, vertisements | fuxiness Chronicle, a magazine pub-| fices, the people are in no mood to. better served by a revolution in in will not in the slightest de criminately reasonable profit on operation. ja nemies of their country, They and immediate- | jished by Edwin Selvin in Seattle,| put up with this unpatriotic and in-| dustry and business, who are m the effectiveness of their Who Are to Blame? Aiding the Kaiser | should be ed personally by ly my husband devoted to busine interests, dis-| defen: profiteering posed to all forms of corporate enter: | renewed gitation among the un “To the asting credit of the “Neither flour millers nor meat) @ll decent J and particularly bought three cusses the American profiteers with I an a whole ia in danger prise, who be e that the aalvation| thinking—and we must remember) Pacific Northwest it should be noted) packers have this excus Fe ai| by the triotic business men whom bottles of Lydia | unusual frank It hits the | of b by anlof the so-called common people liex| that the unthinking make up a large/ that our dominant industry—lum- | cost of milling and selling yur.| they are injuring by bringing this’ E. Pinkham’s | problern straight from the shoulder.| avalanch opin. | in the redistribution of inherited| part of the population ber-—was cifically absolved by! mill operation describes that busi-| Stigma upon busine ss, One profiteer- Vegetable Com- ‘There ix an angle to this war-|ion. 4 ¢ state-|and accumulated wealth, and that Let us consider for a moment the| federal trade commission from even| ness as a “simple process of milling| {ng flour miller 1s of more real ai pound for me. After taking two | time profiteering which business! ment. But Business Chronicle warns| the best form of society is that) sources of this profiteering, as suc hi the slightest suspicion of profiteer-, and comparatively small cost of mill. | to the kaiser than a score of militant bottles I felt fine and my troubles | men as a cla are A\ the business men, in whose inte at wherein state socialism controls all| allegations should not be loosely | ing ing equipment The cost of wheat] proGermans in our midst, caused by that weakness are @/ «jtuation full of dyr what/ it iy published, that unless they | processes of production and distribu:| made. Most business men and near ‘The onus of the whole thing falls, used constitutes most of the total - thing of the past. All women Who | the American business community is therein voluntarily: take (aieenk! tion hanes are the demagogues|ly all lines of industry are free| principally upon the flour millers cost of milling and selling flour TANGELO LATEST FRUIT suffer as I did should try Lydia B. | ¢acing. For four yearn now the peo-|to stop this profiteering it will be| and the agitators, the enemies of|from the taint. Never in the his:/and the meat packers, And they/* ¢ ° Even in the largest mills! WASHINGTON, July 15.—Selence Pinknam's Vegetable Compound.” | pie—the masses,” if you please—| stopped by hand at have always| law and order, the dreamers and| tory of the nation have business men) should be made to stand it the equipment is neither complicated | pag added another delectable fruit Mrs. Jas. Ronnerrs, 620 Knapp | have been groaning under the bur-| been mimical to business \dealiats, the experimenters, the pur-|as a whole been so loyal, so ready| “Ther © circumstances under | nor expensive compared with the] to man’s larder. It's to be knowl iam 6t,N Pittsburgh, Pa. den of continuously increasing costs Business in Danger eyors of the panacea of restrictive! to subordinate individual advantage! which 1 sary war work cannot! value of the product. The la re-| the ‘tange and ts a cross Benen Women who euffer from any of the necessaries of life; and there “Quickly on the heels of the reve-| laws for all ills of the body politic.| to the common cause, If we are to! be carried on except with conditions quired in flour milling is also much | the tangerine orange and the grapes ae: m of weakness, as indicated by | apparently i# no relief in wight. We} lations of profiteering made by fed Sources of Profiteering win this war our financial and busi-| that, were all the facts not known,| less than in most other industries.’| ¢uit, or pomelo AR be inflammation, ulcer-|have but to turn to the pages of|eral trade commission, officially laid| “All these, together with the advo | ness structure must be maintained) might be construed as profiteering| And yet the report recites that ‘as) Phe United States bureau of Bima ete irregularities, backache, | history to see what happens when| before congress and given the widest| cates of that dangerous socialistic|in a manner that will of} An instance in point is where a spe-| shown by their rds, operating | industry, which evolved the hybrlt headaches, nervousness or “the | the masses become thoroly used | publicity in the pr the rumblings doctrine that no man should have) proper functioning. The clally designed plant or speciaily | profits per bbl. increased nearly 175) geujt, says of it “Tt has little acid blues,” should accept Mrs. Robr-|and their cries for justice go un-| of discontent are heard, It may be) more than his neighbor and that the | of industry is as sential to istructed machinery must be in-| per cent and their rate of profit on| py d resembles rand goods berg’s suggestion and give Lydia| heeded. With the sacrifices that war| assumed that these rumblings will! thrifty and hard-working should di-| war program as is the raising and) sta it great expense in order .o| inves nt increased more than 100/ favored orange more than either a E. Pinkhas % Vegetable Compound | jy requiring, sacrifices that involve| grow into a deafening roar that can| vide the fruits of their labor equally | equiping of armies, manufacture something needed dy | per cent.’ grapefruit or a tan @ thoroug rial. giving of loved ones, breaking of| be quieted only by drastic action that| with the improvident and the tn} “Herein Hes th shame of it, that) the overnment, the demand for The flour mill men, who take ; For ov ‘orty years it has been | home ties, submitting with cheerful-| will fall ow heavily upon the inno-|dolent, will find In ral trade com-|a few conscienceless scoundrels which will come to an end with the) advantage of the nece 8 of the A French army doctor name@ correct) | ailments. If you| ness to unheard of taxation, and do-| cent as the guil It must not be| mission's report the greatest basis in| even tho in their local communities! war, and in cases of this kind ordi) people to extort an incr ased profit) Rendu, who has treated a large num have Hous complications | ing without many things that have) forgotten that t are men with | fact they ha ver had on which to| they may be numbered among ‘our nary bu «sense calls for a profit) of 1 5 per cent in time of the na-/ ber of gassed soldiers, ys the great write ci e to Pie ge E, Pink-| become a part of everyday existence,| full rights of citizenship, hundreds| predicate their arguments. That most cit s'—bring this dis-| sufficiently great to absorb the ex-| tion's peril, a rate of profit far nj majority over rapidly, fatal cases , Lynn, Mass, and the preparations being made all! of thousands of ther, who honestly! their reasoning will be fallacious and! credit, these charges of unpatriotic | traordinary expenditures necessary| excess of what they were ever able! being only six per thousand, # ‘ CLARA KIMBALL YOUNG will personally address THE TTLE He’s Only 2, But | He Backs Up Dad | This is Clyde Andrew Dunlap. He's 2 years old, and t greatest naval enthusiast you ever saw That's because hin dad is a sailor, of course, n electrician at the uni. | versity naval training eamp. With true fighting inatinet, he ear ries a package of “the makin's" in the pocket of his railor blouse Just to reguie himself oceasionally with a quiet puff or two between actions. | Clyde lives with his dad at 3967 }16th ave. coming from 8po- kane Together, th tare rooted loudly for the naval team at Satur day's baseball game with the soldiers. BASTILE’S FALL IS CELEBRATED The tr aince teolor of France, floating with the Stars and Stripes, and fol lowed soldiers of many nations, while Seatt ‘owds lined downtown streets to cheer, marked the celebra ion of the fall of the Bastile here nday liers from Camp Lewis, sailors, | fl] h *, Spanish war ans and Canadians back from the front parents of decorated soldiers of France, Belgians, Italians, Serbians Cacchs, JugoSilave and Slovaks, | fi] were in line Governor Lister, Judge ‘Thomas urke, Lieut. Bruno Roselli, of the I] “nh army, and Dr. Hinko Hinko- vich were speakers at the mans meet Ing held at the Masonic temple, fol lowing th to take into ac unconquerable spirit of France and the conscience of the hu man race,” Judge Burke aaid “These are forces older than ar mies and greater than empires. Ruth leas and ferocious armies may spread denolati land, ruin cities drive the defenders before them, out rage defenseless women and murder Uttle children, But when all that is n over the done, the strongest defense of all de mains, That is the invincible and intangible spirit of liberty which ts beyond the power and the grasp of armies. That in the spirit which has sustained France.” | Governor Linter ke on the hero | fi] iam of French women, and the stand American women have taken side by side with them are all making new history in all the petty quarrels of cen are forgotter we are sider to shoulder in the march for victory,” Lieut maid Dr. Hinko Hinkovich pledged the loyalty and rervice of hin people anew and «aid the southern Slay could not thank France enough for Entertain Boys From Seattle at _Camp Lewis Lewis, in al e ¢ he fer au M. C. A. at Camry the King ¢ y Coun tertainment Hon. Wm by Theo who ix now force committer ttle address by and a solo by the numbe people will be present tainment Tho: anked to r machine Eliott 19. m. council of defer July 15.—Aviat Hale, Quiney, Il, and Stu Homar B. Sharp, Washington D. C., fell 100 feet in and airplan Curtiss fiéld today. Hale was when picked up, and Sharp wa: moved the Eric hospital a fractured BUFFALO, N. Y or I re to county STAR—MONDAY, JULY 15, 1918. mit GROTE-RANKINC- Satisfactory Terms Always DON’T WASTE ANYTHING OF | VALUE 21 Minor Ave-| Send Jumble it to nue lized from the be re All money ot used for the articles ante such Red Crons, NEW CRETONNES At 45c the Yard FIFTEEN DIFVYERENT do signs of new Cretonnes are offered at special prices Uiin week. The patterns are desirable for summer homes and porches, both for cushions and hangings, You will find these very choice at the special price, the yard 45¢. BEACON INDIAN BLANKETS of striking appropriate In a wide variety color combinations auto, bed throws or The 66x80 inches; priced, each $7.50, for camp, beach, couch covers nize is LINEN PATTERN CLOTHS The discriminating housewife choowes Linen Pattern Table Cloths because their border de signs are effective on all nides of the table Among the recent arrivals are excellent values in rose, chrysan- themum and «pot designs. 20x70.Inch, epectal 87.00. T0x88ineh, special 68.75. 22inch Napkins to match, the domn, $8.75. Gtinch Mercerized Table Dam- ask in a number of desirable pat terns, a good weight for “every day” use; is priced, the yard, B5¢. ALUMINUM PERCOLATORS $1.69 Each Six dozen only, pure Aluminum Percol the popular s r nize, are offered at this very spe Al price co be accep —Basement Housewares Section. AEROLUX Porch Shades make secluded and your porch cool safe from althoug pleas the eyes of the passerb can see out to you about the Aerolux Porch Let us talk convenience of GROTE-! RANKIN» PIKE ST. ‘and OTTO F. KEGEL, President | The 45-inch Dresser is priced. . The Chiffonier has a priced . | TUNGSTEN LIGHT GLOBES | 25¢ Each First quality Light Globes, your choice of or 40 watts, Fach Globe te perfect. None de this price —Basement Housefurnishing Section. | ELECTRIC | IRONS | Special $3.48 Each | | A convenient six pound tric | tron, full nickel plated, complete | with cord and stand, guaranteed for one year, offered thix week at a very special price, each 63.48. —Basement Housefurnishing Section. * SPRINKLING CANS | ARE REDUCED convenient sizes “ rab are beautifully finished. tin Sprinklir uns with non } rustable les, strong Small Rugs are desirable because they can be easily Fe and : s9¢ handled and rearranged, changing the appearance of the ecuavtras 59¢ | room. | sc jombace aes Our complete stock includes many exclusive patterns id nat aise #1.10 | and colorings in the following grades: | —Basement Housefurnishing ‘ : | Section. Herati and Anglo-Persian Rugs VACUUM WASHERS - 39-inch and handles, New Bedroom Suites Arrive MONG THE NEW Bedroom Furniture just unpacked this week are a number of very fine Suites, unquestionably the last word in design, material and finish, yet so moderately priced as to stand comparison with less authentic styles. The American Walnut Suite | illustrated is one of unusual beauty; one of the many matched Suites that make | this store so interesting to home lovers. .$90.00 | The Dressing Table priced. Bed, $70; case, 00 | Chair, $ HAVILAND CHINA SETS— Decorations in conventional border with gold edge stock pattern. $61.00; 97-piece sets, $115.00. open HAVILAND CHINA SETS— p P ‘ Decorated in black and yellow thistle design, with gold edge and handles; open stock pattern; 50-piece sets, — $51.00. te | HAVILAND CHINA SETS— Plain shapes, decorated in coin gold; open stock pat- | ™m ; $65.00. 50-piece sets, HAVILAND CHINA SETS— Decorated in floral wreath and old ivory band de- | sign, with gold edge and handles; open stock pattern, 50 pieces $75.00, 97 pieces $135.50. =NGLISH SEMI-PORCELAIN SETS— in several very pretty decorations on plain and colonial shapes; open stock patterns; 50-piece sets, $24.00 and $25.00. in AMERICAN SEMI-PORCELAIN SETS— ? 50 pieces $13.00, 42-piece gold stencil decorations sets $9.85. We weaves in the small Rugs, x 21%x x54 inches Shah Abbas Wilton Rugs 4 inches Lakewood Wilton Rugs OPEN STOCK DINNERWARE The present assortments offer some of the best values in both imported and domestic Dinnerware. Monarch Malleable Ranges has 40-inch top, ...370.00 ‘Bench $18 —Fitth Fleer, $12. 50; Fifty-piece sets, ‘SCATTER RUGS” Superlative in Design, Texture and Workmanship » showing an elaborate collection of American for use in homes where floors $8.50 $12.50! 96 inches at 4-6x7-6 $7.50) $11.50 hes at at 4-6x7 36 inches at $5.75 | $9.00 4-6x FIFTH AVE. “GROTE-RANKIN 36x63 inches at.. x63 inches inches at 819.00 $41.00 feet at at -.. 815.00 at’ scare $34.50 feet - $13.50 829.50 —Secona Floer, feet at PROFITEERING SEVERELY SCORED BY SEATTLE BUSINESS CHRONICLE EDITORIAL