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Everyone Needs is 4 .. r . “ . es t. a r OU cannot afford to neglect your teeth one a single day. Even though they do not trouble 4 you should have them examined at frequent intervals by expert dentists using the latest scien- > q tifie methods. J EXAMINATIONS GOST NOTHING Dr. Sipes and his corps of dentists, each thoroughly ied in his special branch of dentistry, are at ir service, They will tell you exactly what teeth need to prévent further decay, and give perfect mouth-health, ~ 4 ; DS | sixteen years Dr. Sipes has been practicing “dentistry in Seattle. Every patient coming into this office is assured of his personal attention or supervision on all operations performed. | ALL DENTISTRY | GUARANTEED ac from Dr. Sipes means just what it YOU must be satisfied. modern apparatus and method for the scien- ge of teeth is used in this up-to-date office. INLESS DENTISTRY A FACT HERE in is eliminated by the methods used by Dr. and his assistants. | BOSTON DENTAL COMPANY HL 1420 Second Ave.—(Opposite Bon Marche.) _ BE LIBERAL FOR OUR BOYS. U. W. W. C. a ES : ar OPPORTUNITY Robert Burns called Opportunity a fickle jade. Robert was wrong. Had he been a Scientist, instead of a poet, he would have ‘called Opportunity a mercenary servant— easily controlled. Opportunity is always at the beck of a mas- terful man. Shy from others she may, but she’s always ready to do his bidding—simply because he has reasoned out the easy way of lassoing her, Opportunity pals up to the man who saves money. No use trying to escape him. He’s in a position to jump after her—in any direction, Open a Savings Account with a responsible bank na the ease with which you'll master Opportunity will surprise you. Savings Department Is open every, Sat- y evening from 6 to 8 lence—if you cannot call The Seattle National Bank Resources $30,000,000.00 ar during. the oy | nounced today. |ber 20 jed by BUY THE LINE, URGES BRYAN Ume an effort is made to Acquire a public utility for the peo ple, a how! is raised that the price is too high, declares former Con Kresaman J. W. Bryan, in discuss ing Tuesday's proposition for the purchase of the traction system Iva no new thing, thia price how! ing, says Bryan, they alwaye do it | On the price aspect of the deal Bryan says “The men who Kvery are objecting to purchase at $15,000,000 are ally opposed to condemning the property and allowing a jury to fix the value. In all probability a jury would set the price on the testi | mony of expert engineers at an amount above the sum agreed upon." I would rather pay a year or two longer on utility bonds and then own the system, than to pay for ever to the Boston owners and then own nothing Inaiste Bryan It will be worth $6,000,000 to the people of Seattle and the state to| free the legislature from the Seattle Electric lobby, declares Bryan First Votes Aid Republicans in Kansas Contest TOPEKA, Kan., Nov. 6.—Repub- Hean ¢ dates jumped into the lead when the count of today’s bal lots began in Topeka precinets, ‘The first ballots counted gave Gov, Cap per, Rep. for the senate, 217 votes. as. cainst 87 for Senator Wm Thompson, Dem. The First congressional district at the same time showel 78 votes for Pan R. Anthony, Rep.. incumbent to 22 for Frank E. Whit Dem. flenry J. Allen, Rep. candidate for governor, led W. C. Lansdown, Dem., by a vote of 230 to 48 Russ Government Takes Gold Away From Bolsheviki NEW YORK, Nov, 6.—Four hun dred million dollars in Russian gold has been seized from the Bolshevik! by ents of the Omak government, the Russian information bureau an- The gold represents two-thirds of the reserve in the Russian treasury at the time the Bolsheviki obtained control in Petrograd, late in 191 It was sent by them to Kazan, and thence to Samara, where it had been taken over by the government at er Philip Tindall Is Wounded in Action) Wounded by shell, First Lieut. Philip Tindall, Seattle attorney who left with the Second Washington regiment, i convalescing in a French hospital. according to a mee mage received from Washington by his brother, Lioyd Tindall, 1015 Kant 62nd st, from his father, William Tindall Lieut. Tindall practiced law in Se attle for several years prior to en sting in the army Crowder Calls for 18,300 Men WASHINGTON, Nov. 5.—-Provost Marshal General Crowder today ii sued a call for 18,300 white men for Umited service. The call issued by Crowder today provides for volun’ tary induction of men unti? Novem They will entrain between November 25 and 27 Men from the following states are included tn the call Arizona, 25; California, $15 rado, 20; Idaho, 100; Illinois, 776 Montana, 100; Nebraska, 85; New Mexico, 75; North Dakota, 100; Or eon, 85; South Dakota, 10: Utah, 90; Washington, 150. NO ONE CLAIMS WHISKY Several cases of whisky confisca federal officers, which were found concealed in a consignment of dried apples from San Francisco. were forfeited to the government when no claimant appeared befor Colo- | U. 8. Judge Neterer Monday. There were 232 quarts of liquor in the | | 25 iG ies | : Far and Near ; ; News by Telegraph ; s andTelephone 3 H eocccccccccccccoccces } Funeral services for M. V. Davis, formerly of the Seattle fire depart ment, who died of influenza at Ta-} coma Monday, were held from the Butterworth chapel Tuesday He leaves his widow and six chil dren. Word from Lieut. Ralph A. Horr, former chairman of the King county republican central committee, tells of his assignment to Camp Greene, North Carolina, with a labor bat- talfon of the quartermaster corps, following hin recovery from infiu enza and pneumonia. Additional allotments of sugar for | canning purposes expired October 31, and housewives who have post poned canning to this late date, must eke out sugar from their reg ular suger allotment, according to Charles E. Bryant, executive tary of the food administration SPOKANE—Said to have been the youngest captain in the United States army when commissioned, Jo: 23 secre ‘seph Sarsfield Sweeney, 23, was! | «tiled in action Oct. 3, according to tword received from his brother, Maj, Charles Bweeney More than 1,000 applications for sailing permits for aliens have been | received by the Seattle immigration headquarters, according to Henry | M. White, U. S$. immigration com: | missioner. Japanese and Russians head the list Miss Florence M joffens, depart. ment development secretary for the | Northwest division of the Red Cross, will report for duty at Washington, November 11. | Mrs. Retta MacDonald, wife of Peter R. MacDonald, conductor on |the Milwaukee railroad, died Mon day at the Providence hospital of | pneumonia, which developed from | | influenza Street car traffic was held up for | }15 minutes at Seventh ave, and Un-| lion st, early Tuesday morning by an injured Spitz dog. After being run ver by an automobile, the dog ran | Hor protection under a standing | “|wtreet car, and refused to remove | itself until lassoed and dragged away. | Ss ATTL STAR—TUE Forced to Service, SDAY, NOVEMB Deserts Hun Army; ; END OF “FLU” NOW IN SIGHT Continued From Page aol 6 ple Fogarding the wearing of their amall shopkeepers by allowing cu tomers to enter their places un (Special to ‘The Star by PARIS), Nov Thin is she re masked, and on the part of jitne markable rec of Sergt, Andrew Grivers for failure to enforce mask Kixch, an American, who used to wearing in thelr vehicles, will be be & Germay made the object of special police at torn in Germany 22 years ago. ention the remainder of the wee Kimigrated to America 12 years eticelasts f : ago; lived at 240 River Menasha, oe wane Oe Wis | the complete checking of the spread Forced t1 German army dur of influensa, Dr. J. 8. McBride, cit ing a viw jermany in 1918; health commissioner sent to subdue Africans in a Ger: | ed new vaccine injecti man colony; deserted and returned | the ity and. lainier Valley to America | districts, where people will be treat __ Entered Institute of ed free of char echnology volunteered pople are urged to come to the in United States army when 4 stations and have the injections toa declared war on his made, aw they have been demonstrat atherland | ed highly successful Uni Sete, Biach has two brothers in versity station in located at the he United Staten navy. They also | branch library in that district, while were born in Germany, Six other "i 1 the Rainier Valley branch i» at the Americans of an birth are in| district police ion. This makes Hergt. Kiseh's battalion six branches in operation in the eity Fight for Adopted Land lone of which, located at 319 Mayn yy Tit tell you why 1, a German urd ave., is for the exclusive patron by ‘birth and a former woldier in age of Japanese customers ne ser's army, am fighting Thousands of people were inoc Against Germany.” he waid. “it's! | ed against influenza free of chars oa! Ps ne reaso ns ‘others have by the city Monda d Tuesday, at and Ahe neon . x other Ger SERG ANOREW teISCH | the Georgetown and ard station ans in mattalion and the city howpita It's because we knew that if the ——__-——— --— | Peering ia Deal te atv adiaor United States had not gone into the 1 ewsiaae sew eck Sar win tive tenet Kone Into te | nat would be visited upon the Ger | to those Inoculated that they may ex Germans would be half way acrosa|™&mborn Yanks were they to full) pect 4 reaction covering an interval America, Eventually the United | !"t the hands of the boches Pai tees tie ae igs ; they may have all the symptoms o! States would have beaten them, but Horrors of Fatherland a ee the loss of life and property in our| “Captured German soldiers have |!" A ‘ adopted land would have been ter-| told of the horrible moral con Rouses Vital Forces fons in Germany,” the sergeant! The sterilized bacteria, or culture Gergt. Risch complains ‘because They say it in a violation | that const the Injection has the hie officers won't let him get into|of the law for & women, whether germ on the the frontline trenches, It ian't be. | married or not, to refuse the atten: |t with the ex Tasker tis oe-the cies nicauliie een \Uaaean la ae ception that the dead bacteria do not mans are not trusted, but because! “The soldiers think that sort of | multiply the officers re the terrible fate | thing t* all right. They don’t stop| City physicians point out that the he to think that the German command | injection is not curative, but in pre oe | is taking every ungodly means pos | ventive, in that it rouses all the dor wible to rebuild ite manpower for|mant vital forces of the system to another war. They think {t's all| combat pitch, making it hard for the right because it's the law. The law/ live influenza bacteria to obtain a | of might is the only law a German | footing. knows. We've got to pound sense | into people like that!” Free injections will be given con Relatives Captured tinuously at the stations mentioned Chief among the Huns into whom | until further notice, the hours being Sergt. Kinch wante to “pound sense” | between 9 «. m. and 5 p. om., and from are three lieutenants bullied | 7:30 to 9 p. m. Two injections are hyn when he was in the German within 48 hours of each army. He plans to do the pounding with his automatic revolver One of Binch's uncles, private in the German army, was brought in with a gang of prisoners the Americana took at Solssons, And in the American victory at Saint Mibie! two of his cousins, also German pri Should Take Two who preferable But four additional deaths were re ported late Monday, making a total of 12, while a total of 174 new cases was compiled for th lens than half the av ‘The following two deaths were re ported Tuesday vates, were placed in a working) LEO LUDIKEN, 23, of 2519 Cole- gang under bim. man ave. “They told me what would hap-| L, R. BALDWIN, 32, 9024 10th pen to me if the Germans captu ave. & W me,” the sergeant «miled, “but t Additional deaths reported late didn't bother me made Mor o work, I tell you! I got their photo-| FRA 1ARTON NICHOLAS graphs and nent them home to the 20, 612 yo aay Be folke in America, just to let them! ELDA R. ANDERSON, 10 months ave a@ system and policy know that we're pounding sense into 1504 Rain e. there are no deceptive meth: §| the fool branch of the family that| MRS, RETTA McDONALD, 1510 ods practiced in my office wi the b @ didn't have brains enough to get out EB. Alder st. pparantes tha Werte tay tan 2 | ot Germs FRED JACOBSON, 25, 6560 17th Utation has stood the test of § - — — jave. 8 give same watisfaction in Seattle BEST CROWNS ......... BEST BRIDGEWORK... | Druggist Demands Heart Balm From Teacher of Music! For the second time within the memory of King county court offi clals, a suit has been brought against @ member of the fair sex for silting hér lover, Claiming that his heart and pocket had suffered damage to the extent of $5,495 by the failure of Lulu H, York, a muste teacher, to marry him, J. Walter McClean, a druggist, thru his attorney, Jack Sommer, has filed a breach-of-prom ise complaint in the superior court ‘BELGIAN DUKE IS PRO-GERMAN (Special to The Star by PARIS, No There's one “Bel gian” who's not going to stick around Belgium when the Huns do the double-quick gooxe-step toward Germany Ho's the duke of Arenberg, head of one of the great historical Re! gian families, but closely connected BEST PLAT Obey that pulse and v Insiatent im- e a ye with its German branch 3). McClean afates that “confiding in) The “Belgian” duke apparently eo Ue &. @ made to him on November 17, 1916. distant relative, the “all highest TODAY 4 he has ie era ser ante single. For he has been hastily selling all * has been and willing to MaAFTY | hin house ryt e sin houses and landed property in 8103 First Ave. $ detendant. and hax placed in her pos Rruasels and the Belgian provinces Opposite Colman Bidg $ yession $220 in cash, a $100 Liberty sant Rt Lady attendants at all times, 9| 00nd, & phondgraph and records, | |Student Team Out After Big Games No game has been scheduled by @ ‘nome cut glass and some pictures, | @OO@ni! valued at $495 CREDIT GLADLY the S. A. T. C. football team with ” . the Oregon Age t, but ne goUlations are under way for a mix according to James Arbuthnot | The Vancouver barracks team will |be brought up for a game in Seattle jon Thanksgiving day, says Arbuth not, if present plans carry The Y. M. C. A. has {furnish the campus men $200 worth lof equipment. Practice |be from 3 to 6 on Tuesdays and Thursdays and from 5 to 6 on Mon days, Wednesdays and Fridays, The football men will have from 1 p. m Saturday to Sunday night for ath |letics if they need it Later mass games. ho and cage ball, Athletic November Warns You The advancing season which, with the return to the astronomical time gives us shorter brings us face to face with cooler days and still cooler evenings, when utility wraps not only are comfortable but necessary. Considerations of com fort and health demand that a coat be always available, WARM WINTER COATS This season's distinctive for their snappy lines, Y appearance and rare combinations of useful ness and beauty, This store offers an unusual showing of styles, materials and col ors, to sult anyone's circum stances such as push | COATS are ‘To Open Theatres Camp Lewis Soon CAMP LEWIS, Nov. 5.—Continual decerease in the flu epidemic will permit the opening of camp theatres, Y. M. C. A., Knights of Columbus, Red Cross and Jewish welfare board buildings before the week-end at Camp Lewis, We are showing handsome Coats in a great variety of weaves and cloths — Silver: tones, Velours, Duotones the always appropriate warm and stylish Plush; and the colors include Pekin Blue and Brown, Plum, Burgundy and Taupe We have Fur-trimmed Coats in many styles — trimmed with Australian Opossum, Nutria, Hudson Seal and Near Seal. Some with fur collars both top and bottom wide or narrow — others with plush or self collars. CREDIT ‘GLADLY Open an account at this store, select anything you need in COATS, SUITS or DRESSES, and pay for your purchases on terms to suit your conven jence, by the week or month, 1332-34 Second Avenue 211 Union Street A Senehdey CREDIT GLADLY FOR ALL CREEDS AND ONE CAU Manager | agreed to} hours will | will be adopted | _ FREDERICK & NELSON Christmas Shopping | Facilities Will Be Broadly Satisfactory NDER _ normal conditions, the locai | campaign of Early Christmas Shop- | ping—a campaign which has the authority | and encouragement of the National Council | of Defense—would now be in full swing. | When present conditions in this City H return to normal, with the passing of the influ- enza epidemic, the shopping public will find this store ready in every particular to help make their shopping for the Holiday season easy and pleasant to accomplish. Gift merchandise of the useful sort, | particularly commendable for a war-time Christ- | mas, will be found here in assortments more broadly satisfying than ever before. Toys for our little children, for whom the war is happily a thing apart, will be available in profusion, in the Basement Store Toy Section. | | A long list of store conveniences available for the public includes the following: j | | | | TEA AND GRILL ROOMS | FIFTH FLOOR | Breakfast, Luncheon and Afternoon Tea Service. | Private Dining Rooms, for which reservations | may be made, are available in connection with the Tea Room Service. INDIVIDUAL SERVICE BUREAU FIRST FLOOR A many-sided service for the shopping public, and freely at their service. A home dressmaker’s aid— a help to the out-of-town visitor while shopping within the store—a convenience for men with shopping lists to fill—a medium through which soldier and sailor boys can | choose and forward gifts for the home folks. Gift Certificates issued. ACCOMMODATION BUREAU | FIRST FLOOR —including Postoffice ' Station, where stam: money orders may be bought, and pared post packages forwarded; War Savings Stamp Desk; Lost and Found Bureau; Parcel Check Room with free checking privileges; Glove Clean- ing and Mending Department ; Tele- grams forwarded; Taxi cab calls. HAIRDRESSING DEPARTMENT FIFTH FLOOR Hairdressing, Manicuring, Chiropody, Children’s Hair Cutting. PUBLIC REST ROOM FIFTH FLOOR Here is the Ask Mr. Foster Office, where accurate in- formation for travelers may always be secured without charge or obligation. Hotel reservations made; Time Tables for all railroads; Rail- | road_and Steamship Tickets. The Long Distance and Telephone Booths | are located in this room, also | the City Directory Refer- | ence Library. VISITORS FROM POINTS ACROSS THE SOUND will find the Frederick & Nelsom Motor Omnibus Service a_ convenience. The Omnibus operates from the docks to the store, and vice versa, meeting the principal boats, every day ex- cept Sunday. A charge of 5 cents is made for the one-way trip. Shoe Shining Stand, in Basement Store. é STORE HOURS Until Otherwise Authorized From 10 to 3 AT FIFTH AVENUE AND U. W. W. C. REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whale- bone) plate, which is the lightest and etrongest plate known, covers very lit- tle of the Poot of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob. All work Have impress! and get teeth and advice free. and Bridge Werk. We Stand th: is recommended by our carly tisfaction. Ask our custom- to our office, be sure you are waranteed for 15 years. aken in the morning me day. Examination Call _and See Samples of 0: | Test of Time. Most of our pres customers, whose work is stil! | ers who have tested our work. | im the right place. Bring this ad with you. Open Sundays From 9 to 12 for Working People OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS | 07 UNIVERSITY BT. Opposite Fraser-Paterson Co, Isr AR WANT ADS- BRI RESULTS FER BELTS T ie nen Spat ae PY