The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 13, 1918, Page 2

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PAGE 2 THE SEATTLE STAR —WEDNESDAY, NOV. 13, 1918. GENUINE VICTROLA OUTFIT— —a machine of excellent tone quality —enuine Vietrola (#tyle IX), with the popularpriced cabinet, and twelve SUPERIOR RECORD SERVICE-- —s«pend an hour in our VICTOR STRATING ROOMS and hear RECORD DEMON- | the latest musical hita | renditions of song and instrumental vocal and instrumental, bands, etc our “record experts ously, giving thelr help VICTOR records STANDARD FURNITURE CO. geccad Ave. at Pine St., Seattle L. SCHOENFELD & SONS 101 to 111 S. Bleveath St., Tacoma WHERE CAN BE (DECEMBER WILL EASTERN PAPER LIEBKNECHT?| SEEENDOFCAR ASKS HANSON “Diouas From Fed | DEAL-MURPHINE; ABOUT WILHELM ‘The traction company deal should | By United Press Leased Wire ° completed by the first of De- Direct to The Star leember, according to Thomas F. ES 2 Murphine, superintendent of public PARIS, Nov. 13.—Food is now a| utilities, Wednesday peror, according to Mayor Ha world problem Herbert Hoover ‘There are many legal details to| in answer to a request for his opin- soon en route to Europe, is likely be worked out by the city, but et-/jon on the fate of the kaiser, by to become the world’s food dictator. |erything should be smoothed out 10| 4. New World. Statements from Chancellor Ebert! q short time,” declared Murphine. ey lebih and Minister Scheldemann reveal| 4 conference was held in Cor-| The World's telegram read: that food is the most serious prob poration Counsel Walter F. Meler’s| “The World would like your opin- Jem in Germany. The allies prob-| office Tuesday, in which the elim jon on what should be done to the nation of obligations of the traction | yaiser, Should he be left alone, or instead of bullets, | company's debts was again thoroly | should he be criminally tried? gone over. “THE WORLD.” Ne ee ete Mayor Hanson's answer is as fol General Stopped . “Holland should be urged not to Kaiser Snapshot astow its tana to be made a mncte | AMSTERDAM, Nov. 15.—Further ®TyY for the greatest of international | details were available today con- lcerning the arrival of the former | ted his greatest crime during his 30 music of your own selection (six 10. inch D. D, records), all for this re markably low price tly and courte. | red in selecting kaiser for his crime against them during his reign as German em: ably will assume the position of shooting bread, into Germany. No great faith is placed In Ebert and ints.” Scheidemann as “revolution Both have been strong sur the kaiser thru the war. asked The German people should try dhe | *\ioa and the allies: ertminals. Kaiser Wilhelm commit kaiser in Holland. ale of rain, newspaper men, pho tographers, and officials stood on a| fence near the station platform. Some photographers climbed on top of the station, The Hotel Maids’ union will meet at 727% Third ave., at 7 p, m. Thurs day. In a dismal driz- | years reign against the German peo pla He should, therefore, be re turned and tried in Germany. If the German people fail to mete out due punishment, the allies should do 80. ‘OLE HANSON, “Mayor.” ———— it value your watch, let ip spepate it. Near Liberty When the ex-emperor walked to his automobile, a few cheered. He But the cheers 2a rete 7S BOY GROOKS ARE ‘German Training HELD BY POLICE Ship Torpedoed | Artie Wellett, 16, and George AMSTERDAM, Nov. | men and soldiers have torpedoed the rested Wednesday at 245 a. m, at | German training ship Schlesien, it| Third ave. and Union st. and bave was reported here today. | been turned over to the juvenile au + Advertisement. 13.—Work: | Jones, 15, both of Seattle, were ar- | The Schlesien was one of the most | joe the predreadnaught type. tons, and had a speed of 19 knots. Son-in-Law of Gov. Stephens Dead of Flu | SACRAMENTO, Nov. 13.—Maj | Randolph T. Zane, United States ma- rine corps, son-in-law of Gov. Steph: ens, died October 30, of influenza, at L’Havre, France, according to word received here today. Stephens. ' WAR KITCHEN OPEN | The national war kitchen demon- | strations recommenced Wednesday, in the Central building. Mra. W. R Power, in charge of the kitchen, has RED CROSS WORK . Once, bat E: METROPOLITAN Now Playing 9 St's7 Sat. and Sen. for All. U.W.W.C. | | | to the local chapter of the Red Cross will resume work Thursday, from 10 |@& m. to4 p. m. Ia., Nov. 13.—The will be on the job week, according to Mayor Fairweather, owner of the Des \Moines franchise in the league | BRUSSELS TROOPS REVOLT LONDON, Nov. 13.—(1:55 p. on.) Neutral travelers arriving here today | reported that the German garrison |at Brussels has mutinied, and that some officers have been killed CARL'S CASH STOLEN Burglars obtained $30 cash and a bank book and watch from Carl Strom, Sherman hotel, 104 Seneca AM USEMENTS |announcea that they will be contin | ued daily at 2:30 p. m. | thorities with a charge of burglary entered against them. | They are believed by the police to| it |have broken into other stores the mame evening. Hf. E. Ludlow, 17, was arrested by Officer Robert Hagen half an bour later, after the proprietor of a shoe repair shop at 412 Union st. had fired several shots at the youth for at- tempting to enter the place. Ludlow is alleged to have been wearing a His widow is| Pair of new shoes, stolen from 1636 o | Pike at., half an hour previously. An - vad eagle + and “Mra | cther boy, with Lediow, is being | | sought by the police. Ludlow is car | ed for by the juvenile authorities, ALL JOBS LISTED | AS NON-ESSENTIAL ARE NOT AFFECTED Plans for the enforced transfer of |men employed in non-easential indus. The Longfellow school's auxiliary | tries, as listed by the war communi ty board, will be discontinued, ac cording to a telegram received by | Lawrence Wood, director of United | States employment in the state of Washington, from Director General Densnore, in Washington, D. C, DRAWING TO SETTLE ALL TIED ELECTIONS | County precinct justices of the peace and constables tied in the offi celal count of the general election will be decided by lots to be drawn by coun Auditor Norman M. Wardall, | in public session Saturday, PAWNBROKER’S RECORD RESULTS IN ARREST On the night of November 4, Chas. THEATRE | DLAYERS Wi NOW PLAYING UNTIL SAT. NIGHT | ‘The Funniest of Farces | “What's Your Hashend Doing?” Nighte—25e, 0c; Plus War Tax. Wed. and Hat. Mata. Ble PALACE HIP Continuous Daily 1 to 11 } Six Fine Acta of Hippedreme Vaudeville { Feature Photopiay: Frits! Brenette || in “The Velvet Hand” Weekday Mats. 10¢; Eves, & Sun. 20¢ | NEW PANTAGES Mate, 2:20; Nights 7 and 9 “RACK OY LOVE” Musieal Comedy Hit Bert and Harry Gordon “Mirth and Meledy” Other Featares, General Admisston, 26. tap Rice was slugged and robbed of a My TUNOAY TN watch on Sixth ave. §. The ipl U. 8 DECORATES JOFFRE | Picked him up and later recovered PARIS, Nov. 13--On behalf of |the watch froma pawnbroker's. ‘The President Wilson, Gen. Peruhing to- | record of the transaction that was @ay decorated Marshal Joffre with | kept by the latter enabled the officers the distinguished service medal. to arrest Louis Kemme! Tuesday, Stomach Dead; — $2,000 ‘FINE Man Still Lives Pleading guilty to the charge of bringing liquor into Seattle from Cal ifornia, hidden in a consignment of People suffer from sour stom- ach, fermentation of food, distress | #04P chips, Archie tay was fined after © and indigestion, and | $2,000 by United St. Jud, ter: geek relief in large chunks of arti-| er, W " f digestors, Killing their |e Wednesday Just as purely | vietim of morphine is deaden- ing and injur’ PNEUMONIA VICTIM body, Funeral cea for 12-year-old ch of every wuffer- | Mabel‘Durham, who died of pneumo er from indigestion needs ix @ good | nia at her home, 919 W. Silat st., will prescription that will build up hit | be held Sunday, at 1:20 p, m stomach, put strength, ergy and elasticity into it, and ma t sturdy)! ,,, grnerr4 enough to digest. nm hearty meai| The total number of British sub- t without artificial aid. jects bet a 2 d 3 The best prescription for indiges- iz Gall? ih pb ara ag 8S ad tion ever written in sold by drive. | iM California, ax shown by regixtra inte fyerywhere and by Wartel! | tion statiatics, is 7,700, und it is enti- Vrug Co, and is rigidly guaranteced « nat 300 ry pre to build up the stomach and cure ine | meet that 10,200 were registered digestion, or money back | September 12, This makes a total of This prescription ia named Mj-o- | 18,000 Pritishers in California gubject na, and is sold in small tablet form |to military service, in ‘large boxes, for ont vs of whom 38 per Remember the name, Miocene stom |cent have offered themselves for en- ach tablets. They never fail, | Hstnent i MASON STILL (OFFICIAL COUNT == ~ SKEPTICAL OF | GIVES MAJORITY icc nc Brown le nent, Dr ve i otes, and Dr ing his democratic tdwin J, Brown Edwin J Brown | ented or not was not announced by | | } the democratic comrnittes, in charge of Dr, Brown's candidacy | | The iamue to meet outstanding BY J. W. T. MASON (United Press War Expert) NEW YORK, Nov, 13.--There ts danger that Hohengoliern will to mount the throne of Germany delegates to the peace conference suceeed in disturbing the }na®nony of the allies, or sow dip |cord between America and the world’s other democracies. German revolution shows evi |dence of having been too carefully organized in too short @ Ume for it to be accepted at ite own value, Hohenzollern's self-imposed exile has taken him into the nearest new | tral country, from whieh he could Imake a quick return, if conditions | warranted a duplication of Napol | eon's excape from Elba, | ‘Transition Not Basy When « nation has been erahed into medievaliem, as Germany has been, a certain amount of ineff> ciency is inevitable before the true road to liberty is found. Germany bas not yet passed thru the transition period, There is no indication that new mac’ |the government Ix being ured, altho new names are replacing the old minist If the on had deen care fully planned jong in advance by German efficiency experts, ax a | final piece of organization to save | the old autocratio fatherland, it | Weuld not have been arranged any | differently than it has been. A revolution that permits a crown | prince to return to the head of its jarmy, after renouncing the right of succesnion, is not a revolution to be trusted Death Too Lenient A revolution that retains in office all the autocratic army officers, revolution to carry conviction. A | }from Hindenburg down, is not al | revolution that allows {ts former emperor to croms & neutral bound ary, whence he can conveniently re- turn after peace has been signed, in a revolution to be held under sur- velllance. Hohenzollern’s surrender should manded of Holland by Amer After sentence of guilty of world murder has been imposed on him, he should be im prisoned for life. Execution would |be too lenient. It would fix the | conditions of the case, if Great Britain would cede St Helena to the |league of nations for a prison for the former kaiser, Thereafter St. Helena would serve as a perpetual place of Incarceration for high of- fenders against the "s peace. FAIR RENTALS BOARD EVEN HANDLES BOATS Eleven tenants obtained rent’ re- duction at Tuesday's meeting of the fair rentale commiasion of the emergency fleet corporation. The owner of @ houseboat on Lake Washington had given notice of @ rent increase from $20 to $36 & month. The board fixed the rent at $20 for the winter and $30 for the summer. ‘The greed of one landlord tn raise ing the rent of an apartment from $28 to $30 resulted in an inspec tion of the place by the commission that was followed by a prompt re duction to $20. | 'Driver in Stolen ar Eludes Police After eluding the police for over six weeks, Noel C. Beers is under ar reat, charged with stealing a Chand ler automobile, valued at $2.000, from W. R. Hocking. The officers were inspecting the powerful of the German battleships) ‘These boys, in company with two | number of the machine Tuesday when She | others, are alleged to have entered was built in 1906, displaced 13.200) an establishment at 1536 Pike st. it began to move. Am the shades | were drawn, they did not know that was occupied. The chauffeur | Jumped from the car when he ob | served the police and escaped Throws Liquor in Street, Police Say | EK. McMania, arrested while drunk on a downtown street in the early hours of the morning, threw a full juart bottle out of the patrol wagon en route to the station, the police say. He is held in lew of $100 bail. $100 dail. Emperor Karl and His Family Leave Palace BASEL, Nov. 13.—Emperor Karl and hia family have left Schonbrunn palace on thé outskirts of Vienna, ac- cording to the Vossische Zeitung. Presumably, their destination is Switzerland, Kill Rats and Mice and Save Food In there days when the high cost of living pinches nearly every home no waste should be overlooked, One of the moat flagrant Bnd the mont easily prevented, in the destruction of food by rats,’ One rat will often do a hundred dollars’ damage of food and property in a single night, and a careful eatimate gives over $200,000,000 as the value of food- stuffs destroyed annually by theee Pests. Exterminate them — with Stearns’ Electric Paste and save this enormous los of food. A small box of Stearns’ Electric Paste coats only a few nts and is usually enough to completely rid the house and m also effective against cockrow nd waterbugs HERE'S RELIEF FOR YOUR COLD! |Dr. King’s New Discovery helps to bring the desired quick relief It holds @ record of fifty continu ous years of relieving—promptiy }and pleasantly—the usual winter | colds, coughs, and bronchial attacks | It holds a following of armies of users in whose family med e cabinets Dr. King’s New Dis covery is the watchword for cold and cough correction Sold by druggists everywhere, | SS |The Boon of Regular Bowels Fred C. Brown, republican, in elect. | bhd® Of the county was defeated, ax ed prosecuting attorney. of King |“,* county, according to the official | check approved by the county ecan-| vaasing board Wednesda The final count showed Fred C. needed to carry the bond insue. ‘There are 176 kinds of bananas. Pennsylvania has 50,000 jobs ready for veteran poldiers. © of approval of 60 per cent in|, | nounced Wednesday in a telegram | i: oppo | |trom Charles Hebberd, following » 1 3 by 41] | conference of food officinin at Wash 1 C. Brown received 24 Jington, D. © | Hereafter, housewives may make straight wheat purchases, releasing the wheat substitutes for badly | needed stock feed in Gurope and the Abandonment of the purchase of; No more inductions will be receiv per cent wheat substitutes with |¢ into the students’ army train corps, at the University of Was 0 of men who wer it had not bee been sent to ery purchase of wheat, was an % traini ducted, bh Beck trator received in Seattle by B.C nt state food admin NOW, IF EVER, YOU SURE NEED YOUR HEALTH Whenever we consider how necessary it is in these strenuous times for every one to “do his bit” to the very utmost of his possibilities, anything which is allowed to re- duce a ‘person’s efficiency when it could just as well be avoided must be considered carelessness and negligence of the rankest sort. And that decayed teeth do reduce a man’s efficiency to a most dangerous extent, there is no doubt whatever. This is so well established now that no one at all familiar with the facts would even think of denying it. Both medical and dental authority are entirely agreed on this point. A decayed tooth may be responsible for about as many human ills and derangements as any single agent. Tiny pus sacs are often found around the roots of the decaying tooth. These sacs slowly distill, bit by bit, their deadly poi- sons into the system. This poison gradually accumulates around some point, usually a joint—and soon swelling, in- flammation and pain ensue. This affliction is now usually diagnosed as “rheumatism,” and all sorts of treatments are tried to bring relief to the unhhappy patient. Needless to say, none of the treatments are or can be effective. The root of the trouble—which in this case is the root of the decayed tooth—must be gotten at and remedied, before permanent or effective relief can be experienced. Then there are many other things—some serious, some painful, and some both serious and painful— that come from diseased teeth. Eye, ear, throat, stomach and even serious diseases of the spine are 3RD—PAINLESS METHODS Our system of painless dentistry has been brought to such a point of perfection at this office that we are now able to guarantee to perform prac- among a few that we might mention. Bad cases of heart trouble have also been known to come hurting the patient a bit. tically any and all kinds of dental work without This is a matter of big from diseased teeth. And stomach trouble is one of the commonest ailments that come from bad teeth. You can easily see that the poisons from bad teeth are transmitted directly into the stomach as the food comes in contact with the teeth in the process of mastication. It must be evident to you that these poisons are going to exercise a bad effect on the stomach—that they are goifg to interfere and interfere seriously with the digestive apparatus. And there is no one thing that can bring as much real misery to a person as to have his digestive organs out of order. Your physician will tell you the same thing if you will talk the matter over with him. Altogether, for a person who has bad teeth, to neglect them and let this condition continue is about the most foolish thing that he can do. Now, just a word as to what we have to offer you in the way of dental service at this office. In the first place, we have one of the largest and best equipped dental offices in the United States. We make this statement unreservedly and without fear of successful contradiction. We occupy the entire floor on which our offices are located. When it comes to equipment, we have practically everything that modern science has perfected for the better performance of painless dentistry. We have spared no expense in fitting up our offices. Our only idea has been to give the people of Seattle the very best. Second—Every operator on our staff is a gradu- ate registered dentist. Every one of them has his certificate from the State Dental Board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair, in plain sight of all. This proves to you beyond the shadow of a doubt that he knows his business, and knows it thoroughly. It shows you that he spent years of hard study under competent instruc- tors, and has then passed a thorough and searching importance to you, for possibly you are among the many who have put off having necessary den- tal work done on account of being afraid of being hurt. If you are, then we tell you that “you need delay no longer’ on this account. 4TH—LOWEST PRICES Quantity regulates price. This is a fundamental axiom of business that cannot be denied. There- -fore, the fact that we do a very large volume of business permits us to take a smaller prefit on the individual patient.than an office which does only one-third to one-half of the volume that we do can possibly afford to take. So when you compare our prices with others you will find that ours are the lowest, especially considering the fact that we turn out nothing but the very highest grade of work, STH—BEST OF MATERIALS The best is the only kind of material that we can afford to use. We found this out long ago, 6TH—OUR GUARANTEE is a binding agreement on our part that if for any reason whatever work done at this office does not give you entire satisfaction, come back to us and we will make it right. This guarantee is signed both by the operator who did the work and by L. R. Clark, D. D. S., owner and manager of this office, who is thoroughly responsible. 7TH—SANITATION | This is a hobby with us. In fitting up our of- | fices we put in all the best appliances for sterilizing instruments. All operators and assistants are garbed in spotless white at all times, | FREE EXAMINATION We invite you to call at our office and let one of | our experts give your teeth a thorough examina- | tion. He will tell you just what is needed to put your teeth into perfect condition and also just what the cost will be. This examination and estimate won't cost you a cent nor will it put you under |—the health-promoting properties of |active bowels, these are yours when you occasionally take Dr, King's New Life Pills. Keep the stomach | sweet, the breath untainted, the sys tem cleansed, Gentle but positive in | action. Sold everywhere, examination before the State Dental Board as | to his knowledge and ability to practice dentistry and do it right. When you see this certificate you may rest as- sured that the holder of it is a man of experience and that your work will be done the way it ought to be done to give you lasting and permanent sat- isfaction. want it. can possibly help. DR. L. R. CL ARK, Manager. 1405 Third Avenue In Every Respect Seattle’s Leading Dentists. Diagonaily Across the Street From the Postof fice. Be Sure to Get to the Right Place. . LADY, ATTENDANTS ON DUTY, AT ALL TIMES, any obligations to have work done unless -you But for your own sake you ought not to neglect this important matter a moment longer than you Don’t you think it is about time that you gave | yourself the advantage of a good set of teeth? Regal Dental Offices N. W. Corner Third and Union e_—_—_—_—_— ' CT a rN ssn hes P pemmmen EE tt 1-94 1

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