The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 20, 1918, Page 2

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ehcp aaah ks will you have a Talking Machine in your home Christmas? —come and hear the PLAYER PHONE — “the quality talking machine"—an in strument of the highest musical value, playing all makes of records pertectly without change of equip: ment -- beautiful in tone quality, design and fin inh! = | this PLAYERPHONE— (STYLE Ast) ith 12 rendition selection), VIC $80.10 finished or genuine neh turntable double spring Ls of your TOR re introductory offer! in quartered oak mahogany larme ¢ ‘ tinehes, depth redectery it "$80.10 be ie with other ling at $90— eed this PLAYERPRONE (STYLE B-1) —with 16 reeditions (of your own selection), VIC- ‘OR records $106.80, CiOry —finished tn golden ar! offer | tered oak oF end can be wound while —by special” ar- | puying: metal parts rangement with plated, height 45 the manufacturer } mebes, widtn we are in a p. tion to m extraordi instruments retailing at site reverds. facts about the PLAYERPHONE to be considered when selecting a high-grade instrament— —plays all makes of records. |—standard motor made by the —no scratch or hiss | gest manufact ef talk —deautiful cadinet work. } machine mot in the world —rafined tone, soft and sweet or im great volume, but all in per fect fullness. —simplicity of design, elegance. denoting | strument. Sailor to Address _Stores to Remain Democratic Club Open Three Nights ‘The King County Democratic Fight downtown specialty stores club will hear Cornelius C. Fohm, have announced that they will re main open until § p. m. on Saturday, USN. at ite regular weekly! sonday and Tuesday to ease the Speheon Saturday, at Good Eats! ci istmas shopping congestion. cafeteria. He recently returned ne Att from a trip 300 miles at sea on 4 ment should own and operate the submarine chaser, one of the flotilla) merchant marine and the railroads, which escorted the U. S. S. George telegraphs and telephones of the Washington, with President Wilson) United States.” Dr. E. J. Brown ‘aboard, on his way to Paris. | and George N. Hodgdon will present ‘There will be a debate on the the affirmative, and H. Hale Smith subject, “Resolved, that the govern. and Walter B. Allen the negative. STORES OPEN EVENINGS To relieve the congestion of Christmas shopping, and for the eonvenience of those who cannot come during the day, the follow- ing stores will remain open until 9 p. m. Sat- urday, Monday and Tuesday: KING BROS. CO. . Men’s Clothing and Furnish. ings—Two Stores— 1200 Second Ave. 711 Second Ave. BAXTER'S High Grade Boots and Shoes Second Ave. SHUART'S Smart Footwear for Women F. N. BROOKS & CO. 1318 Second Ave. Hatters and Men’s Furnishers 1317 Second Ave, FRANK J. VICTOR, Inc, Jewelers and Diamond Merchants CHEASTY'S 1202 Second Ave. 0, C, Graves, President “Values Tell” HOPPER-KELLEY C©0. Talking Machines Victor, Columbia and Edison Phonoger phs and Records Third Ave. and University St. TURRELL SHOE CO. 903 Second Ave, THE SE BY MILTON BRONNER YGTON, Dec | rector Gen feAdoo'n request will }be fought, but thin tx th If the time of governn trol is extended to a perio | years and the question of what shall |then be done with the roads is left open until that period ends, a very Jamail group of progressive senators feould block any legislative move. | tking the roads out of government hands, As the law is written no no further legisiation is needed. Gov ernment control automatically ends 21 months after peace in proclaimed and no one can block it ne roads were taken over under Jextraordinary circumstances. They had nm down under the double strain of tremendous wartime traffic and unusually bard winter condi DRAFT OFFICER - INSISTS DIETZ. principal t con of five SPOKANE, Dec. 20.--"Major Rin er's defense of Coach Lone Star Dietz In reference to my charge that Dietz is a moral slacker of the worst variety, Is uncalled for, and further more there is nothing to it,” declared Commissioner J. C. Argall, of the local draft board today, 1 know ‘that Diets registered as Jan Indjan alien before ever he re ceived his questionnaire,” continued |Argall, “Furthermore, he claimed exemption in every possible clause in his questionnaire. It was & flagrant case. If he had intended to join his coaching job was over? “If he had wanted to go In he would have gone in at first. This would have assisted instead of bin |dered his coaching, Other athletes have used that method. The real fact im, an I stated before, that Diets i @ moral slacker and I feel he should be ticketed as such before the worid.” FIRES LAID TO [ W. W. ON TR SACRAMENTO, 20 dence tending to connect thre of the silent defendants in the 1) W. conspiracy case with the Fresno incendiary fires of September 4, 1917, was admitted in the trial today over the objections of the defense. T. M. Johnson, Fresno grape grower, told of a wage controversy with defendants Tabik, Latour and Anderson, and of the burning of his two barns, 30 tons of hay, his rage, and two fine horses, and of two hay fires in the neighborhood the night after the men were dis charged The same night, Jobneon's grapes and the fruit kicked into the sand. “1. W. W." was found written on one tray and the words “I. W. W., Ford, and Suhr” on a sweathor. Johnson, questioned by Attorney Coghilin, defense counsel, stated that the men had been arrested in Fresno and released after YAvestigation ot the fires. 1 | 1,400 trays of REDS TAKE BONUS, THEN DESERT ARMY (Special to The Star by N. EB. A) COPENHAGEN, Dec. 20.—Bolshe vik Red Guards believe “every man for bimpelf” is the logical product of their brand of government. Volun teers to go east to Mlaht the Crecho- Slovaks were paid $500 apiece. They left Petrograd at night, and next morning more than half were back in the capital, having deserted at the first station. Regional G. O. P. Chief Has Plans for Coast States SAN FRANCISCO, Dec, 20.—Co- ordination and co-operation—those are two big words that will actuate Ray Benjamin, who will be in direct charge of republican affairs in the six states of the Pacific slope Benjamin has returned from New York and Washington. He is now regional director of the republican party for the Coast, and, as such, is one of the chief aides to Will H Hays, republican national chairman ANZACS CLAIM FIRST AND LAST WAR SHOTS (Special to The Star bf N. EB. A) LONDON, Dec commonty known as Anzacs, clain both the first and the last shot of the | war, on the part of the British em | pire, were fired by Australians. | The last shot is credited to an Aus tralian on the Western front | The first #hot, it is declared, was | fired in Australia, across th |the German scout steamer Pfalz. Captured by the Australians, the steamer has been used for the trans port of Australian troops. bows of |DUNKIRK HAS HAD PARIS, Dec. 20.—Dunkirk has |been bombarded 177 times by air planes, times by big guns, four times by arships and once by Zep: pelins, There were 356 alarms that were not followed by attacks. Four hundred and twenty-four persons were killed and £80 wounded by air plane bombs, 114 by long-range shells and seven by naval bombardments GEN. HOFFMAN’S BODY BURNED BY SLAYERS PARIS, Dec, 20 |message from Porskouracz, the mu tinous German soldiers who broke in |to the home of Gen, Hoffmann killed the ge with their bayonets, and burned the body | large sum of money to Galicia, Hoffmann was one of the G representatives during the Germano Russian peace negotia tions { After stealing a they escaped in erman Government Control Favored by | Rochester Reconstruction Confab The Wilson administration's plea to con grease that a great laboratory test cane of government control of the! Ire of the country be made for | five * Will be denied by rv tion j artes in the house and senate } There a hy reasons why Di IS A SLACKER the marines why did he wait wat | AL were overturned |{ 20.—-Australians, | | SHARE OF SHELLING According to a! DECEMBER 1918. ATTLE AR—FRIDAY A Toothache Is Bad Enough But It Is by No Means the orst tions, McAdoo ironed out these ership would be tremendously ad} things and got the roads #0 they | vanced j funclioned helpfully in winning the! At y rate, congress would not 4c blindly and would have an | opinion to back ‘There wan no chance for econ: | be v The main thing was to move | educated — public food and supplies | whatever it did. Would Afford Test | war | omy n to believe that for of the railroads are mer controllers With peace at hand, it would be | me ane ee eee S| possible in five yearn to make & real | NOt #0 anxloun for i ve { t test of governm control, Fur. | the roads | © thelr ol Part ofa a 00 her economies could be effected, du nt heir old a 7 B d T I l eation of servi and of traina|Ulea have been completely mmaaxhec - sid be out out, termina could be Th i new of freight traffic re LETTE pepe been entirely turned over, The pas enlarged and used in common, stand Ser eal | |ardised care and locomotives: could | senker and frelaht solieitor for bust It only a Sao be more generally put into service, | Ness have argely laid of you nly had sutter ‘00: Then at the end of five years stock /OF elae wlillaed elvewherr, Not only) @ehe from @ bad tooth, that would be it. weve nment control of the} Old competitive conditions hard, but bad enough, of course— noth- roads wed they could not be han-| removing government control would | c because once mbre restore the off claimn ot} 48 state railroad commintons to reg ulate within their own #p! ot in | Nuence | dled without a defielt and if other | grave difficulties bobbed the case against government ownership would be stronger than mere sena ing is more painful than an aching tooth. Bat the ache is one of the least com | | torial theory or Wall Street preju:| Government control did not | dice On Ube other hand, if it were| pletely seramble the railroad eter . found’ that govers ener | ete ve tect ao tatty mixer | harmful things that comes from bad sured better service at leas cont and|in going to be hard to may “whore teeth. Poison gathers around the roots and slowly and insidioasly it works its way into the system, gathering at some convenient place, a joint pref- erably, and soon causing swelling, inflammation and pain. This is often diagrosed as “rheumatism” when as a matter of fact if the bad tooth were even made money, the case for own: | in which How About Firlands? It’s Christmas Time But the leaguers are enough good feel fellows that there healthy at Firlands sanatorium to be a lonesome Christmas this year is going day ones wh are willing to make such . ors The 25 little youngsters and 198/a practical contribution to the aick| pat into a healthful condition the oO ufe rm dal ieon Any cash will be gratefy 4 4 Trereulocis want “have. visitors {ty received at the league ottices,| tole trouble would at once disap- |The influensa situation is so seri-|348 Henry building pear and the unpleasant symptoms jous that their friends must stay As for the Firlands grown-ups : away they'll have a Christmas movie e. This means that the big. happy|show. Star readers, if you will re . “pe [Christmas eve entertainments of | member, all pitched in to provide | These poisons are also taken di- other years, when dozens of Heattie fine movie machine for Firlands 2 2 |folk» went out to Pirlands, must be |two years age this Christmas te | weetly into the stomach in the course | abandoned jcal film men, since then, have bee ‘| of the mastication of the food and | But members of the Anti-Tubef:| providing many, many entertalr e gulonis nociety ‘are not goin {0 tet| menta many unpleasant disorders of the | Seattle altogether forget the Fir! The plan is to send Christ * ° | iands family box to wich grownup patent | stomech and digestive organs result. DR 1. R CLARE j In fact, everybody can help send) There are wom: t there wh ° na a . : Jeheer to the hoapital trying hard to gain. their strength If you will ask your physician he will tell you that nothing is of greater 1 the first place, the 25 young | Ma of iT S A ; sters really, ought to have warm | fight. Many don't get wel ner] Uiportance to, the general health than a good digestive apparatus. : weaters and a good supply of|they all enjoy fruit, and healthful Impaired digestion is at the bottom of more diversified human ailmenis warm stockings | goods So the b ne o j i " le | Sweaters and stockings cost| vided. And you can help by teatine| than almost any other one. factor. And nothing will make you feel more gen lots of money these days donations at erally miserable, more “unfit” or tess efficient thanto have your stomach out 448 Menry building Scene of order. heey ry , * ° | E , Rose, throat, and even diseases of the spine, are now ’known to Kind-Hearted Policeman Takes {| te vay often caused by bed teeth. Care of Stranded Boy Visitor {| __if you have ; eT At ee re | _ ~ are making a grea you Ssiiiane * Shepspens: Si sume thine ahapelied than 4r er tac At this dental office you get the services of the graduate registered .den- | Sit. who lives at home with his par: /enough to pay his own fare back to! fists—men of the highest standing in their profession. Every operator in this vay eT Tees BA Eeeed office has graduated from the very best dental colleges and passed the exam- He decided to visit the metropolis the lurch, bereft of funds ination of the state dental board. And:each and every one of our- operators Thursda and conspired with a Laurence was ambling along for : . den board hanging i the - wall 7 | larger boy, named Arthur MeM! lornly, on the point of tears, at | has his certificate from the state " tal . eright on wien make the wip. The pair would|p. m. on Second ave. He had! front of his dental. chair, in ptaim sight--ef all. | take in a few movies and eat at | chosen a southerly course, and was : the dowest—our <workmanshipzis « theibest*thatzany | teal cafe and have a devilish fine|at Washington st. before a kindly Our prices are very: | time. ‘ cop took charge of him one can torn out. ‘ So they set out. It was under. Laurence spent the night in the _ guasantee work. And, bptite | stood that Arthur, being 16, would! public aafety building. He is in We use only tie-best.of-materiats. We all manage the finances, mont of which | charge of the juventie division. The | were his, anyway | ‘They found the pleasures of the | Great White Way (Second ave) “| Laurence mays he will never visit trifle expensive, and late at night, the wicked city again. esses police are making efforts to get in touch with hia parents Lenguhevesian May Refuse to Handle Russian Supplies invi Seatue atevedores Week We invite {Italy Prince’s } Smile Now Grips | Hearts of Paris | { | PARIS, Deo. 20.—Ratranced by the smile of President Wison. noon will meet to consider resolu Paris in now enthralled by the || U0n* passed by the Central Labor smile of Crown Prince Humbert. 19-year-old heir to the Italian throne The young prince is reputed to {|Councli urging them to refuse to }handie any military supplies con {) signed to Russia Officers of the union expressed doubt that they be the handsomest an miling- {| could carry out the program, deapite pad nF aoe deapite a \ sympathy with its object. They de long cruises on Italian warships (! -iared that neither chec: | and the hardahips with his father (/)” Gicsen wane shoremen could distinguish military . } +, Ll go Sront. supplies from goneral freight be. on this, his first visit to Paris, || caue practically all consignments shy gm bagel, panes 6S on’ (/are crated in a manner that makes | © yish pleas a pom it Impoasible to 1 * citement. Hin dancing eyes ond ’ - = anes nest = hin dark, eager face, radiating the ot oe runniest of amiles, instantly won | Socialist Says He ) ) Hi j the hearts of Parisians. He iw 9 ’ already the idol of the Italian || Can't Answer ‘Yes people } or ‘No’ to Query! CHICAGO, Dec. 20—Adolph Ger- | mer, one of the five socialist leaders Renton, |” trial on espionage charges here, He | declared from the witness stand that | was formerly cashier for the United | he could not answer “yes” or “no” Iron Works, and was later employed | to the question of whether he be: | lby the Pacific Const company, and| lieved he should have supported the| at the time of hix death was federal | War Jauditor for the Pacific Coast Rail.| Germer admitted distributing cir | AARON W. EDWARDS DIES | Aaron W. Edwards, of | died of pneumonia Thursday co ‘oad Co. e leaves a 'e ¥ Nn culars which denounced thi nd 4 2. . - “ Ngee * | iarieewes. “arawesal mvs wit "ye | opposed tis onto o€ tabatie eed. Bob Fitzsimmons, STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS held at the Methodist church, Ren. ee Bull Terrier, Has aie ations | ton, Sunday Quinine That Does Not Affect Head | Recause of ite tonic \Discharge 150,000 Men Per Week Now Answered Call Bob Fitzsimmons joined the Red and laxative! WASHINGTON, Dec. 20,—More | tifect. (LAXATIVE BROMO QUI~ | than 300,00 soldiers have been dis-| Cross yesterday anyone without causing neryoun-| charged in this country to date, and| Not the deceased Bob of fighting ge eh EF Da elias the rate ix now about 150,000 alfame but “Bob Fitzsimmons,” bull | week, it was officially stated by the K 8 signature on the box war department today in W, GROVES terrier, who has submerged the im. pulses of hin fighting blood in 12 years’ devoted attendance on the in | valid daughter of Morris B, Sachs. Bob's mission in life has been to en |tertain and cheer the invalid and so, in each successive Red Cross drive, a [membership has been purchased for | Bob | “Bob barks whenever he hears the roll call," said Miss G. I, Griffin, who | visited headquarters yesterday to | take out four memberships to make | |a hundred per cent enroliment for ‘the Sachs home, 802 West Crockett jst. “He barked so loud we decided not to walt for the home canvass and so got our memberships direct.” Inquiry at the Sachg home devel oped that Hob is now proudly wear jing his button on a white ribbon tied around his neck. He was given! a red ribbon but barked for the true |Red Cross uniform colors, 80 4 | white ribbon was substituted and he | was content in the world, placed together in a row stretch for a very long distance. would You can make your dollars go further by plac- ing them together. Spending a dollar here and a dollar there soon scatters your money, but sav- ing a dollar here and a dollar there brings them together. —New shoes cost $12 to $14. —We shoes for or two. renew worn a dollar Take the Savings Habit seriously. The man who saves systematically, depositing each payday something, builds up for himself a strong character and establishes for himself a banking credit which will be of infinite value in commercial business. —Why not have your A worn shoes repai RED ed and contribute CRosSs the difference to a | Make good. L W. W. Laughed at | Death of Sheriff | These are the days of opportunity. Make your pay day your thrift day. Savings Department open Saturday Night, 6 to 8. SACRAMENTO, Dec, 20.—Sheriff Fine Shoes Meadows, of Inperial Valley, lived a Specialty five years too long, but finally LEN died “in terrible sony” from 4! ison, HOUG according to a letter read in the fed: | 1 trial of 47 alleged I. W. W. here. . 7 | “They finally got our dear old friend”, said the letter, which was —BRANCHES— ae friend,” said the letter, which was r iE ‘ET America’s Greatest Shoe Repair ing, “Wheatland Defense Commit BALLARD 2 . GEORGETOV b Shop tas 20th N. W. and Ballard Ave. Vale St. and Duwamish Ave. Reading of letters designed to show overt acts by the I, W. W. was continued today, ‘

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