The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 5, 1919, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

o——— —_———0' exes 3 » Fight ’ Strike | _ /BERMANY YIELDS ~T0 NEW DEMAND © ae Clemenceau Order Regarding Austria * ‘ LONDON, sept ntain her pres 1 to Austrian sg and tution The Rerlin by Premier ¢ manded =the clause in the ¢ providing for Austrian de recent note sent to neeau, de of the » constitution legates to allies, in a the reichstag. It was declared this clause was in violation of the peace treaty P peduoors Open Fight on Movie Tax LOS AN cs Angeles m t and exh On the tax on m 200 teelgrams we yesterday | to members of congress and to sena tors asking repeal of the tax Lats go eat at Boldt’s—aptown, | M14 3d Ave. downtown, os td Ave. — The most bitter oppowents of the striking actors are Jake and Lee Shubert Seattle's Leading Dentist 106 Columbia St | AMU SE MENTS Wi Fifth at Pine Now Playing, with a v to stop walkouts by Injunctions. {LOCAL PORTIAS PUYERS » Mille. Bertillon VAUDEVILLE woman at ey of France was the] guest Friday noon at a luncheon| given in her honor by the Pht Deita! |Deita, honorary legal sorority, at |the University Women's club. Other guests at the luncheon were Assistant District Attorney Charlotte Kolmitz, Peace Reah Whitehead and Mrs. 0. G. C. Beales and Miss Cordelia . formerly chief clerk in the attorney's office, now com oRrHEUM | ¥ersity Mile. Bertili who is only years old, is in this country on be half of the French government to| study the juvenile court here. She leaves shortly on a@ trip! to British Columbia. FIREPROOF PLANE LATEST INVENTION BERLIN, Sept. §—A new fying machine, made entirely of metal, and consequently proof against fire, PANTAGES Matineces, 2:30; Nights, 7 amd © NINE ROYAL UYENO Jars SIX VENETIAN GYPSIES Sttber and Nerth—Lady Alice Pete —Weber aad Elitett—Makarenke PALACE HI Continuous Daily. 1 fons n SIX BIG ACTS HIProvpROME rytines ILE BESSIE LOVE in “THE LITTLE BOSS” played here. compound and is very motor is of light imately 110 miles an hour. Last One of the Season HOOD CANAL The wonder cruise of the Puget Sound, rival- ing the Palisades of the Hudson. SUNDAY September 7 Don’t miss this trip—the last of the year. Brooks’ Whangdoodle Entertainers and Jazz s . producers and owners of! ‘la string of theatres thruout the | country They have begun suits |for $500,000 against some of the Brown atriking stage stars, and have tried |Man Afraid It Might License) HONOR GUEST <3") ‘=: \Give Luncheon Here for Mlle. Jaequeli Bertillon, niece) cheaper for oatmeal to travel from | of the famous Alphonse Bertilion| Chicago to Maine than it waa to eat who invent a universal system) Maine oats there as my grandmother for iden criminals, and] Justices of the! pleting a law course,at the unk! ci | 22) brow ayetem | the terror of aviators, is being dis- The main part of the [machine {s made of an aluminum The} 160 horsepower and/ gives the plane a speed of approx! THE SEATTLE STAR--FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, BURGLARS HAVE. BUSY NIGHT Enter Hotel Rooms and Reap Harvest | | J, Donnelly Yorsyth hotel, 8703 Duwamish ave. awakoned bright and early Friday morning and pro time during his purse i 1 Wells Pa amounting to $360. tale of woe to the morning. E. Hinton, 15091 Duwamish ave Palace hotel. reported a thief re moved $66.50 from his trousers dur jing the night, G. W. Bergin t Jackson st, had his room entered |by some one with a pass key and lost a suit of clothes and three shirts He reported his police Friday |while BL, White, 2103 Sixth ave jlost a way ! 7 Tenth ave, 8, re » entered his h A $100 Liberty Bon warrants worth § *. Virginia {Fourth a 1 Joutfite and a wrist wateh given him by the Butte Undertakers and Em jdalmers company WOMAN DEFENDS two complete al Newspapers w ASHINGTON, ¢ ant price of ors in part.” Mra Kelley, secretary of the Consumers’ league, te te agricul: | of the] ay ture committee in Kenyon packer regulat “For Instance, we learn that the Armour company is now producing rolled oats,” Mra, Kelley said. “Does | any person believe it In in the end/ eur j did | | Ken men was Chicago, vice president of the Corn Belt Farm Dailies. | He cited the clause which provides that no person shall “carry on the business of collecting information | in connection with a stock yard and| distributing in commerce imarket news” without a license from | ne secretary of agricultur The wage of thin « eft maid livestock use is very “and we have no| doubt the courts might take} the view that it applies to all news papers carrying livestock market re ports. Adoption of this principle | would be at least a step toward the) Meensing of al! newspapers. This) we consider—most objectionable.” Neff explained that Senator Ken yon might have had in mind Ueensing onty papers published at stock yards, but added that this would be's unfair discrimination, BITE OF CAT CAUSES AGED FARMER’S DEATH, PITTSBURG, Pa. Sept. 5.—Ajtho he had received the Pasteur treat | ment in Mercy hospital here, Levi! Kurtz, aged 71, a farmer of Enon val: | |ley, died of hydrophobia from the jbite of a cat which clung to him #0 tenaciously that it had to be} hacked to death to release the far-| |mer's hand | Hearing @ commotion in his chick | en Coop several weeks ago, Ku In | vestigated and found a cat chasing! the chickens. As he tried to seize the| animal it turned on him and sank | its teeth deep in the flesh of bis |left hand. The farmer struck the cat | with his free hand, but was unable to |distodge it. Neighbors responded to | ja call for help, but they failed to) |force the animal's jaws apart until lone man severed its head with an ax Kurtz, fearing hydrophobia, came |here and remained two weeks, taking the Pasteur treatment He was dix charged, supposedly immune, at the} lend of that time. ENTIRE NEIGHBORHOOD | EXCITED BY SKELETONS KANSAS CITY, Kan., Sept. 5.—| Coffins and skeletons! | | Residents in the neighborhood | |were ina panic. They had visions of | jfome one being secretly murdered | jand the crime being hidden for years The police were notified. The officers arrived at the home| of Ralpf Truaer and found a fren-| | zied crowd in front of the house. A | babel of voices declared that Truaer |had been carrying coffins into his! o 1919. FREDERICK & NELSON FIFTH AVENUE HE Featuring New Hats at $7.50 REATHS of velvet flow- ers over grosgrain rib- giycerined ostrich and bons, natural ostrich fringe and smart wing effects adorn these Hats, lending the ap- proved style to large, straight sailors, styles with upturned back brim, draped crown ef- fects and other” current shapes. ‘ The hat pictured, of beaver-color velvet faced in black, with wreath of velvet flowers over gros- grain ribbon—$7.50. THE BASEMENT STORE The Basement Store Provides Well for Children’s Millinery Needs HETHER mother’s idea of an appro- priate hat for the little girl is a soft tam, a streamer-trimmed tailored hat, or a hand-made shirred affair with fruit or flower trimming, she will find it in the Base- ment Store. Here are Velour, Beav- er and Felt Hats with The Hat sketched, streamers, Stitched-brim with puff crown of Velvet Hats trimly tail- navy velvet, and ored in effect, Shirred- mushroom brim brim Hats with dainty formed by _ scarlet fruit and flpwer clusters and many others priced from $2.75 to $12.50. plaited ribbon; adorned with fruit nosegay, $3.25. —THE BASEMENT STORE A Purchase of Men’s Fiber Silk and Lisle Half-hose 35¢ Pair; 3 Pairs for $1.00 HIS unusually low price is due to a very favor- able purchase. The half-hose are in fiber silk and lisle qualities, in a good assortment of colorings—tan, white, black, gray, Cordovan and Palm Beach, with reinforcement at toe, heel and sole. Priced at 35¢ pair; 3 pairs for $1.00. ~THE BASEMENT STORE. Corduroys Mean Durability: —that is why so many Corduroy Suits are chosen for boys’ school and play wear. The Basement Store is fea- turing a particularly attrac- tive value in Corduroy Suits at $7.50. The coats are in waist- seam model, with belt and slash pockets and are fully lined; knickerbockers are cut amply full, tailored with belt loops, and buttons are rivet- ed. Sizes 8 to 16 Price $7.50, years. PINE STREET—SIXTH AVENUE Hundreds of Dainty Blouses On Display in the Basement Store _ ;° at $5.75 . HIS attractively low price sets no limit on the number of styles of- fered for choice in these Georgette and Crepe de Chine Blouses. In addition to beaded, embroidered and soutache-braided effects in Georgette Blouses, there are novel- ties with insets of net in collar and front. The Crepe de Chine Blouses are just as interesting with their tucking, vest fronts, large collars and hemstitching. Some are in high-neck effect, with clusters of pin- tucks. A generous assortment of pastel and suit shades to choose from—White, Flesh- color, Mais, Coral, Rose, Peach, Copenhagen, Gray, Bisque, Navy and Black. Sizes 36 to 46. A showing full of interest for women in search of moderately-priced Blouses—$5.75. —THE BASEMENT STORE The Basement Store Has Cause for Pride in its Displays of ~~ Women’s and Misses’ Autumn Coats —for with all the care taken to include only authentic Autumn styles and worth-while materials, the Basement Store’s reputation for low prices has been thoroughly upheld. To suggest the scope of these displays, here are Coats of Velours, Tweeds, Melton Coatings, Plushes, Muskrat Cloth, Cheviot, Long-nap Bolivia, Burella Cloth and fancy Coatings in Black, Brown, Navy, Green, Wine, Gray, Taupe and Mix- tures. Many of the Coats are full-lined, others lined only to the waist. Women who appre- ciate that half the pleasure of having a new Coat is in having it early in the season are making selections now. Prices $18.50, $32.50 to $47.50. —THE BASEMENT STORE. $22.50, $25.00, 50, The New Ideas in Neckwear Corduroy House Coats $2.75 } + | home. | rar cn ae O brighten and smart- | . After questioning Truaer, the po-| BOYS TAPELESS ‘ Orchestra will be the feature of the day | After questioning Truser, the po-| BLOUSES {f stfived ver- en the somber cos- HOUGH primar- | skeletons had been given him by the| USES pes 2 tumes of Autumn many ily intended for | Janitor of @ local lodge, where they cales, ginghams and blue cleverly-styled Neckpiec 7 Me ay SETS th «i ihioelin hein Glee |had been used in special degree work dhambray, also. all-white, hark heee vesaived, “ekbe- — od ese Leaves | F z Py) iv Joats are just as ap- | sizes 6 to 16 years, $1.00. cially emphasizing the lace- ‘ - COLMAN DOCK { 50 |PATIENT, 73, AND A 7 . ruffle ad 7 propriate for wear i s NURSE, 72, WEDDED! BOYS’ CLOTH CAPS in blue serge, brown and gray instead of a jacket i Children Half Fare, 75¢ Including War Tax 9:00 A. M. Dairy Lunches at city prices served on the boat. Staterooms May Be Reserved. Puget Sound Navigation Co. COLMAN DOCK MAIN 3008 | YORK August n engineer ears old, | £0 became Ill a to his bed. led in Miss Sept | a membe © of the uel church They. had met where she had been a busy worker in the Ladies’ Aid society, She nursed him so capably and with such solici- tude that his health wag restored. I don't suppose you will need me | any more,” sald Mias Gerber, when | Walther’s recovery becam mplete | “Stay here,” said Waith So they went to tha Rev. George A.} Linder, pastor of Exnanuel church, | who married them in the parsonage. | wa: PANTALETTES RETURN, | DEFEAT MOSQUITOES 1ILADELPHIA NY cause of the Pennsylvania mosquitoes the pan’ lettes of grandma's di are retur ing. Having been discovered as sure protection for silk-clad ar they are being worn extensively, In stead of being starched and with; ruffles the modern pantalettes are} loose and of dark material Sept. §,—Be-| ressivencss of | — 1.00. THI mixtures, sizes 6% to 74, $ BASEMENT TORE. Boys’ Army-last Shoes Ideal for School Wear HESE Shoes are mod- eled over the same last as that adopted for our sol- diers—the Munson Army Last — and it is just as fine for boys as it is for men. The Shoes are of heavy tan leather, with extra heavy soles—priced as fol- lows: Sizes 10 to 1814, $3.50 pair. K s 1 to 2, $4.25 pair. Sizes 214 to 6, $4.50 pair. sTORE. THE BASEMENT COLLARS OF PLAITED FECRU NET with black velvet ribbon or sweater. and bow fi 81.25. : They are well- COLLARS OF PLAITED NET ; : “Hin ecru and white, Made of good quality corduroy, in VESTEES OF PLAITED OR Delft-blue Coral GANDIB with trimming _ of “—r fine Valenciennes lace, 83.50. Wistaria WHITH VESTEES with Old-rose Cherry lo roll collar and insertion trimming, 88.50, Light-blue DAINTY WHITE NET VES Attractively low- THES with frills and touch of t black satin ribbor priced at $2.75. 5. THE BASEMENT STORE. BASEMENT STORE. Gold-banded Cups and Saucers 6 for $1.50 FINE quality of pure white china, with gold band dec- oration, on the ovide-shape as pictured, set of six, $1,50. THe ENT STORE THE

Other pages from this issue: