The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 5, 1918, Page 2

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SWISS REQUEST FREE RIGHT OF RHINE TRAFFIC BY RAYMOND CLAPPER (United Presse Correspondent) WASHINGT Nov Switeer land wants forced, at the peace confer open the Rhine} for international commerce. She ia} prepared to ask the good influences of the United States to this end Ww. W. C. U FOR OUR BOYS OVER THERE, years service tothe c Switzerland desires free acceas to homefurnisher the sea, and an end to Germany's ef-| forts to cut off traffic and strangle ESTABLISHED telephone fp the mountain republic, (tn learned. | If a league of nations ts 1864 Main mace international THE SEATTLE SPTAR—TI SHE TOOK MACKIE PRISONER | TESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, CAPTAIN r powers, Re t h i turn of A ace to France will create | a strong interest in the Ihine in gifts now--pay Credit man frontier for a considerable dis Is tance Germany has been working on a next year! Goo omer nl ipenl ghee Rog locks al r velop wa —muke your selections NOW te wer, River t wittor start paying a little each month land would have be ¢ thru so you ean comfortably keep freee Tey waking the trip wivel ioncer and more exp ive ae Ger paying © small amount each many intends to force Swixs com month into next year. Merce to bear the expense of the un dertaking be ¢ for a league of nations ts \ witeerland, where the ! ¥ ' te a direct In —several thousand Seattle © © fw view desires, be n P ‘ ate ause it now appears certain the peo ple will enjoy their ye dhs diate ae aad Thanksgiving dinner from either at Geneva or Lausanne, Swi EMPRESS MALLEABLE § criana RANGES, and we want you The Hague and Washington at to know what real kitchen . — * aued, oe event of | Mrs. Paul Dentley Mackie comfort is and what abso- neutrals in the final ad.| PORTLAND, Or Nov. 6.—If{into ; omen ation with lute satisfaction there vich cause, it in atated.| you were a matter of fact soldier, | Mise 7 ‘eral hours of really is from an Jf ¥!!! be considered by the conferees 4 to. dealing with men, ana|ctrort: They met again Just before EMPRESS MALLE Will be materially strengthened ment 94.6 — men, ane) train time ua X ‘a 7 S - meal - }should find yourself in a ball room He Demanded It ABLE RANGE, abso- |eurrounded with biase society girls The tain spent three months lutely the highest YEARS’ SAVINGS would Y . ) aly montha type _ of Range in ‘i ; ‘ . hart ehe 2 nae sahara ania TAKEN BY THIEF ! ie Sst | One of the largest robberies of t " ey oon . a¢ i aler “ - mig ray et individual possessions of @ single |i,4 1 and you } 1 Fast at once and marry hit nan that the police bh ve recorded | into the os of the aecompanyir Ten days later Miss Lawler en for years was reported to the depart . fall antly in| trained for New York to visit her w be pe on Lukyna i y wt s wer 2 « after her arrival weuk, of $07 Highth ave. Gotutoweu f © captalr fork » rried the captain —we invite you to take advantage of our liberal credit Sneaha ahll tide conne tae teen Gagte mao ob oe Hirened y York ahs enarties the sty dievien! ed Monday afterno e| ¢ iat what happened to Capt tall came —— breaking DOF 00 | a of Seattle Tht the r Lawler ated —more heat! _|—perfec lect baker! | § ier: to >| mance stared thet li coal! office negotiathle certificate, a blue t tapped - —less Cc clean as r- serge suit, a blue overcoat, tan she sauttes eau Sal’ S —lifetime service _ age ! po: to ur obirts and other personal arti:| ciety editor of the Orewon Ty ti _— _ celal cles taken. he money and secur!:| Journal, She asked him to dance " a: before nd she chose him merely |all the other girla were well match “ 2 |by char: od, she walked up to Capt. Mackiq's and your old stove, range or heater taken as part paym November Term c broad back—the nearest one—and on the purchase of a new one, COME FOR YOUR THA NG EMPRESS MALLEABLE RANGE THIS W of U. S. Court Opens The Nover © term of the t a istrict court opened Tuesday. The *SEATTLE- "TACOMA: hree bailiffs and one erier, now in| SECOND AT PINE £4. SCHOENFELD & SQM rns ° ps reappointed by U. &. judge Ne or. All cases were amigned by Judge | Neterersfor the coming term. The/ |case of William Bouck, well known | eranger, will come up for trial Jan- juary 21. | Arthur Cranwell and Isaac Kay, joharged with attempt to smuggie wold out of the country, will go | before the jury December 24, |RAIL ADMINISTRATION WILL TALK TO PUBLIC) The United States railroad admin istration is comme ng to advertian in the press matters of importance Stand "ESTABLISHED: Hesketh Tries to Grow Secret Beard Coun, Robert Hesketh dix played a keen eagerness concerning | the weartng of his flu mask Tueaday. “Let’s Go” Is Full of Snappy Stuff Miss Marion Walsh, of Butte, Mont., is the first woman to take up @rafting at the Seattle North Pacific man ) Shipbuilding Co., according to a news | Not for a moment did he allow it to|to the traveling public. The first Let! * }lapse from close adherence to his| notice to # n The Star will fae, tem in “Let's Go,” the semicnonthly | Hig nervousnexs about the fit| urge tra save their own i Magazine published by the employes. | of his mask finally aroused the other | time and n at James Woodside, formerly foreman | counciimen, who appealed to bim in the Ucket a t in! of the shipfitters, now is assistant | body to remove it. if only for a sec | tere hangeable acrip books that are 3 ond. wood for the bearer or any number superintendent of hull construction. “Well, if you must know,” declared | of persons on all passenger tral He hails from Scotland. Hesketh, and with that he peeled off | under federal control he govern An excerpt from the efiitorial, “The | his face covering and diapiayed a| ment advertising in Seattle will be Hard-Boiled Guy.” says: luxuriant growth of beard, “I haven't | handled thru the office of C. W. Me “Bulldin’ ships is a man's job, and | been shaved for five day drum, assistant passenger agent of | —— the Great Northern Rallway Co. not @ chorus girl's, an’ no matter if a fella is feelin’ a little sore over some thin’ that’s said, he oughta stick on the job fer the sake of his pals ‘over oy = bd ; ; SAYS IT'S A MISTAKE, 7 Ais Girl’s Ankles nat agers pana <a ome een Miss Ruth Noble, 1118 Madison st., Insured for $5,000 thru.” inn't married. Tuesday she came | memantine jInto The Star office and explaine | that it was all a mistake. Thru RUTH ISN’T MARRIED; “ | erroneous marriage certificate rec-| ce ord, her name was linked as the nl newly wedded wife of Harry Ajax another employe at the courthouse, where Miss Noble works. ‘ It's all wrong,” says Mise “I'm still oingle.” PICKPOCKET STEALS FROM SHIP WORKERS A pickpocket, operating on an Alki street car, relieved Richard Barrie, of the Our Home rooming house, Main st. and First ave, of & pocketbook containing 895 cash| and a $25 check Monday. Barrie 4s an employe of the Seattle North| Pacific shipyards. for the Present 10 a.m. to 3 p. Paderewski insures his hands, Anna Held insured her eyes, and Miss Louise Hamilton, a student in the University of California and | e dancer, has insured her ankles for } 4 $5,000. \ 4 Miss Hamilton supplements her e {te wee are Bre to 04 no telephone orders $| college work with daily labor at one | ¢ after 3 p. m., in order that all employes may go of the Oakland playgrounds, where 4 home immediately after store closing. she instructs the children in the = art of Terpsichore. While instruct 4 Shop early in the day. The present ing the youngsters in a Tussian| ° hours make the day short, and it is only a dance last summer, Mise Hamilton | 4 short time to Christmas. turned her ankle. This led her to 4 an insurance agency > She was former star member of | ° Miss Morgan'y Woupe of dancers, kilo at onoe accepted the he returned the re or the t. and they danced toget evening tains re bar was notified he On the cap turn to the racks that night he must entrain for Kast on the following day for abroad. Capt. Mackie on the next day got rvice made her pr Mra, Mackie young woman of unusual charm and cleverness, She is an Omega Nu and a gifted vora) The « n is a civil engineer, aduated from the University of achington with the class of 1909 nd is a Phi Delta Theta An army of women has been fighting In the front line posl- tions for nearly five weeks to combat Seattle's strange, relent leas foe—Spanish influenza, With these nurves, of course, have physicians, ordertion, at nen i attic has been in a measure from ruthiews suffering be woren, strong in thetr devo tion to public service, have cared for the siok that game in a heart break ing stream to the emergency influ za hospital in the old county courthouse Nurses. and nurses’ helpers, have tolled, sometimen breaking down under the nervous strain, and al attondin he unfortunates in their Hard to Find en the emerr vepital was led f victime, irnes were aime saible to obtain. Thoss w con were | secured were ble to make beds fast ugh for the afflicted who came atree ¢ in for proper care and treatme It was impone t obtain interns. 17 one final placed in charge ed unwort of the responsible position, and was distniss Misa C. O'Nof!, asntetant nurse to Dr, McBride, w awaiting a call for Red Croas service overseas, She waa placed in charge of the nursing at the rerowded hos pital. she contracted influ and 5 nonia herself, student nurses, professional nurses and help worked sometimes under her direc Miss O'Nell Is convalescing at the city hospital now, after hovering be- tween life and death for days,” says Dr. MeBride. Suddenly Vanish Finally, Miss BE. Olsen. the past four years has been visiting nurse for the city welfare division, was put in charge of the emergency nursing has remained at her post constantly and uncomplaining and night who for ly, altho seriously handicapped by the lack of wuffictent help. ‘Som: said McBride, “volun teered thelr services, and then dis appeared, finding the work acting. Tt was not time to go after these people, and others had re to be sought. When, as in thin case, nursing has no prospects of ro. some aspirants In the nurs mance, Wash Away Skin Sores D, D, D., the Hould wash, has become & household word. It has proved ituelf emarkable remedy, If you a.. « suf- ferer from rkin diseases, including ul cers, pimples, sales, erusts or Eczema in any form, this remedy will not disap- point you. It has stood the test and today is the master preparation for all tkin diseases. Try D. D. D. today, We Guarantee it, 5c. Ge and D.D.D BALTELL’S DRUG STORE ‘Army of Nurses Is. | Fighting Tatieriea | ing field suddenly find the work un Interesting.” While Seattle phywicians not in government service worked connect jusly over patients in the ey hospitals and in private homes, J was sent from the navy ie partment to help out at the emer ency hospital Navy Helps Went Later, Dr W. Wright wns also no navy department, and their services proved to be a tre Jous he t hompital. Both are wtlll at their powta. Dr. Walter on also tributed his serv to horrifying war conditions, It might even be 1 it was woree, since war hospi tals are myptematiaed for just suc he rrencies,” says. oattio have not realized the ex treme danger they have been ex poned to and are still exposed to.” 40 PIANOS ARE LEFT BY PANIC ‘man officers was inter Americans in the recent ar planos were found in eom- fortably fitted buildings hastily evacuated by the retreating Hun They tried to take them away and had a dozen boxed up, but the onrush of the Yanks was so swift Forty they had to leave them. Most of the pianos were at a spot along tho road between Non- sard and Heudicourt, the head- quarters of a big army, quartered as if for permanent stay There was a mile of wooden bar racks, amusement grounds, #, gardens, arbors, pa tio seats. ore were officers’ clubs containing pianos, phono graphs and reading and writing rooms. Officers’ quarters Nghted with electricity KILLS FIFTY-TWO FOE SOLDIERS IN FOUR DAYS | (Special to The Star by N. B. A) | LONDON, Nov, 5 Friends of Cor. | poral Filip Konowat of the Canadian and owner of a Victoria Cross, accla 8 the champion fighter on the W n front, In four days he accounted for 62 Huns with | |rifle and bayonet, rotting what is} |#uppored to be a record in enemy killing. were infantry | Thieves entered the room of H. a.| Hotchkiss, O. K. hotel, Monday night, | {and stole a brand new pair of black lace shoes Hotehkiss had purchased | during the afternoon, Hotchkiss is | anad, | tans up to the 17th century. dae ked nightly, 1918. FOR OUR BOYS OVER THERE. U. W. W. C. HONEST, PAINLESS DENTISTRY Peace Is Coming —Then the Readjustment— Where Will That Find You? you builded health? Have you taken advantage, in this heyday of prosperity which seems to have engulfed us because of the war, and put your human machine in a fit condition to go forward tomeet the new economic problems that will confront each one of us when the war ends? It will come upon us like a thunderbolt out of a clear sky. Are you physically ready? Has the very bulwark of health, the mouth and teeth, been put in the best possible order? If not, you have failed to seize the Golden Opportunity to put your house in order mow and be ready for whatever the future has for you to do. Don't pay the great penalty of neglect—you know only too well that the price pain—broken health and added expense—is too great. The man whose motto is “Do It Now” wins in every way. The best invest- ment anyone can make is in maintaining good, robust health—that’s priceless. Again | urge you placed in good condi work and earn money, and while to have the needed work d done. My Wonderful Co-ordinating Organization comprise DEPARTMENTS Free X-Ray Department Li ‘a the X-ray to locate hid troubles and as an aid to my This wervice ix free to my patients Have dental and general physical to me ou the fo come and have your mouth and teeth tion while $ are well, while you are able to good times give you the money the following Fyeae Treated t and check 9 igent and herot Jen mouth diagnosis. Gold Inlay Restoration 1 expert of 20 yearw’ experience. ystem of Bridgework without Crowns, Exodontia—Extracting My ad Gold Meinbrink GanOxygen, also ministered for Painless Extractions Oral Hygiene Department of Prophylaxis Teeth Cleaned — a preventive measure against tooth decay and gum dincase, Prosthetic Dentistry Gold, Cast Aluminum and Vulcanite Plates. Genuine Trubyte Teeth used, Plates made by an expert. I fit you where other dentists fall SCIENTIFIC RESTORATION OF LOST TEETH WITHOUT GOLD CROWNS Examination and Estimate Free. All Work Guaranteed. OFFICE OPEN AS USUAL. DR. H. T. HARVEY Ex-President Michigan State Board Dental Examiners. FIFTH FLOOR EITEL BUILDING N. W. Cor. Second and Pike. Swift’s Drug Store Corner. Open Evenings and Sundays—Phone Elliott 3026. ACE OF ACES HEADS CARPENTERS TO CANADA’SAIR FORCE AlD U.S, NEEDED More th 400 carpent (Special to The Star by N. EB. A.) han rpenters are LONDON, Oct. 24-—“Major Bish wanted to work for Uncle Sam quits active Oying, unofficially over at Bremerton, where the gove norrniqgabtivls — henge ernment is constructing houses for an official rec an machines of around 80. the shipyard workers, according to Lawrence Wood, federal employ he British ace of aces is no long ment director. er the —"- wey tI wg! Over 100 carpenters have been howe He. pow sae Ss sent to Bremerton for this work A. Bishop, V. C, - M.C., from Eastern Washington, but & Cc, of Canada larger number of men is necessary He up a notch since he revurned from Dayton (Ohioy fly: camp and other camps in the ‘tea, where he helped teach scores has gone the construction of the #. complete ¢ houses Carpenters who wish to work on this job can sign up th the U. & of" gli Spade gyoe employment bureau at 110 Cherry l sho} r ’ : st ing @ special Seas ree se Seven hundred and seventy men = ich cn a a tivion if i aouilt ao were placed in essential war work eo would etil y 4 he te Monday ncoording to Wo who as he Hked, his friends here take it cat the labor ¢ a nl sty baled for eae a that his = partys ba fulfilled with a large influx of a lar filer are over. . from Eastern Washington who consi ry 5. ten more rbot cove tert ~ have been harvesting the crops. fighting airman When Bishop returned from the tates it was considered he had ‘od the right to live,” but he in Andrew White Is Dead at Ithaca earn sisted of piling up a few more boche ITHACA, N, Y., Nov. 5.—Suffering airmen before taking over the Cana from paralysis, Dr. Andrew D. dian force White, Cornell university's first pree magever ident and former minister to Ger- died at his home Mo: many, GERMANS MAKE CLOTH FROM NETTLE LEAVES (Special to The Star by N. PARIS, Nov ‘That Guan is in a sorry plight for clothing is illus trated in handbills, printed in French and German, found when Roye was captured, The bills invite civilians to collect nettles, dry them, put them and well them to the For Over 50 Years Into sheaves, Germans for 28 marks per 200 KLINE'S. EPILEPTIC pounds, 7 rmans are making Remtoy. ait oa rational and rempe cloth of nettle fibers—as was done ably “successful treatment | for from the time of the ancient Egyp:| ena reins Se Sickness) ke 4 atany drug store. or our book Arrest Japanese in Whisky Smash-Up' y on Epilepsy. It is =~ demijohns of moonshine whis Or, RW. KLINE CO., Deeren' S. tipped out of a car when it} in an into wdith near Bothell and up-| AUSTRIAN AVIATORS HUSBAND MACHINES) (Special to The Star by N. LONDON, Nov, 5.--A recently cap | st Monday afternoon. Two Japa- ‘ |tured Austrian airman told the Ital-| nese who were driving the machine A HOBBY ian pxaminers that no Austrian avi-| were arrested by Deputy F. A bby ator is permitted to make any War | Rrown in lifes He flight without the specific consent of ‘ain different wi in army operations ranch fica ARMY PHOTOGRAPHER IS SHOT THRU HEART A man may love to fish or hunt, Or nee a baseball game; had flown over the lines only five | wes the new fall clothes times. Fear of losing machines is But wife And to see in print her name. WASHINGTON, Nov 5. First responsible for the order, | Lieut. Raymond C. Hill, of Lewiston Idaho, was shot thru the heart wh GAY PAREE PACKS ITS. |i2ehe, was shot thru the heart while THEATRES EACH NIGHT) Hincendure tine. ‘The deceased was || * awarded the distinguished service Star by N. B.A) | cross for extraordinary heroism er ix divided e children read the funny} reads our dally (Special to PARIS, Nov, 5.-Theatre attend: | while with the 99th aero squadron, | ance is an unfailing barometer, 'The- | < atre tax reports indicate the gradual| — SEIZE 3 BARRELS BOOZE return to normal conditions, In Au-| ‘Three large barrels of whisky gust, usually the dullest theatrical! were discovered and seized on the |month of the year, the tax produced | Hanford street dock by government inspectors late Monday, ‘The liquor will be held until disposed of by the | jmarshal's office. | $170,000 in Paris, great deal And in September more, Thoatres are

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