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THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1919. —————— SEND GERMANY CITY'S BUDGET WondtoaseGrbaum Furniture Co, in. |" ALLIED ORDER NOW APPROVED OTTO S. GRUNBAUM | } |]\Foch to Draw Up Command) Taxpayers Must Provide ‘Man Shoots Grocer; Commits Suicide) SACRAMENTO, Cal, Oct. 7 George T. Ryan, grocer, wan fatally shot last night in front of his home by a man believed to be Irving M Carroll, Carroll after he saw Ryan 416-424 PIKE STREET WE'LL TRUST YOU UR CREDIT SYSTEM has been established for your conven: tence to assist you to furnish your home along your ewn tn @ividual tdeas. than will be found anywhere, No extra charges; no interest. JUST YOUR WORD THAT YOU'LL PAY STORE HOURS—8:30 TO 5:30 Stoves ree Tay Col iD iu WW Our Stove Department is ready with the very stove you want. In any size and any style your taste dic- tates. Don’t wait until cold weather sets in, better | make the selection now, as steel is scarte and prices are almost sure to be higher. YOUR OLD STOVE TAKEN IN TRADE AS PART PAYMENT ON HEATER OR RANGE. Albert, old scout, you are a regular fellow, and we "shall try our best to forget that you are a king. Tubing throughou it. Women Give Enthusiastic Welcome fo Beauty of New Patterns in Simmons Beds _ { Now in the Stores—the First Metal Beds Ever Designed in Harmony with Interior Decoration Today. Old-established House of Simmons, Kenosha, Strengthens its Commanding Position as Leading Producers of Metal Beds ‘O woman who sees these beautiful for Baltic Evacuation Our terms are easier and our prices are lower | h to draw up an resentation to Ge ing the evacuation fin the Baltic The Germans’ reply to the allies |B | demand that Kielt M nl Von der Goltz’s troops be withdrawn, did not satinfy the supreme council. demand | Savage Purchases Interest in Butler BE. F. Sweeney, president of the Butler Hote! company, sold out bh interest Monday to John E hotel proprietor Sweeney's poor health was the rea son for his withdrawal, it was an | nounced, Savage Savage formerly was manager of |? the Hotel New Cecil and the St Regis He is present owner of the Rerneva apartments, $35 17th ave, | Sst ave, and Yesler way | A. Cheshire Mitchell, manager of the Butler under Sweeney's owner |ehip, will be continued in this post | tion _ Scalp Sores needy help try 1) D. v, Preectintion. So easy. to apply not Greasy or mensy. it washes into the scalp and the reilef is instant. Try it méay. It le quaraniend. Sie, O00 and |D.D.D. The Liquid Wash Bartell Drug Stores | “Tate go cas at Boldt's—uptowa, | 1414 34 Ave; downtown, 913 2d Ave. and the Monmouth apartments, | | $1,638,397 Increase ‘© meet its bills and indebted. for 1920 Seattle taxpayers t pay into the city's coffers 1,638,597.82 more than they did | in 1919. German troops words, Seattle's | ‘The task of ruising the 1920 tax was definitely assigned Monday after. ypoon when the city council formally adopted the budget the fiscal year exinning January 1, 1920, The budget carries estimates for Operating expenses in 26 municipal Gepartments totaling $19,663,524.03. ental revenues and sur will have provided $11,948, leaving a balance of $7,714. to be raised by a levy of 20.42 mills, an increase of 3.55 mills over 1919. Ry the terms of the budget aa Monday, an average increase a month in the salary of every nd woman in the employ of the will have been granted. The salary item alone will total close to | $1,000,000 over city salaries in 1919. | In other words, two-thirds of the tax Increase in 1920 will be due to increased salaries for city employes. Policemen, firemen, street railway men and city employes generally will #hare in the salary boost. With its adoption by the city council the salary Increases will be retroactive from October 1, 1919. POLICEMEN ATTEND FUNERAL ‘The fu al of Mra, Mabel Harris. wife of Detective L. C. Harris. | who died Sunday after an Mlness of more than @ year, were held Tuesday Jafternoon at the chapel of the Home Undertaking company. Members of the police department attended the wervices as a mark of respect. fall to the sidewalk, committed #ul- cide. Ryan died on the way to the hospital | | sNo motive for the tragedy can be wiven by members of Kyan's family | Carroll was a relative by marriage of Jan unele of the slain man. Ryan was a brother of Captain of Detectives Arthur D. Ryan | ‘Don’t Suffer _ | Matting From Piles Sample Packa: Pyramid Pil Offered Free | ie Wilt D Pyramid Pile Treat quick relief from itching, bleedin of protruding piles, hemorthoids anc Traveling Bags and Suit Cases Main Wloor Rear Suit Cases at $2.25, $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00. | ji] Fiber Suit Cases at $2.50, | $3.00, $3.15, $5.25 and $8.50. Famous ° Leather Suit Cases at $19.50, $22.50 and $25. Fiber Hand Bags at $6.50, $7.00 and $7.50, Leather Traveling Bags at $8.75, $14.00, $16.50, $18.50, $22.50, $23.50, $25.00, $27.50, $30.00 and $32.50. Leather Boston Bags at $4.50, $5.00, $7.50 and $10.00. such rectal tro the privacy of your home ® box at all! druggists, Take no substitute, A single box often r: Free sam- ple for Trial mai plain wrap- | Per, If you mend on below FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYn DP DRUG COMPANY, vyramid Bide, diarsball, Kindly send me a Free Sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper Name Street ..... city Es The “COLONIAL” No. 1961 Te is made of Simmons Seamless Square and i running Your choxe of Double Width and Paire—and especially pleasing in Twin Pairs. casters. Twin Simmons Company, 1919 Has the Simmons Patented Pressed Steel Noiseless Corner Locks. Enameled in Ivory, the Decorative Colors, and Mahogany, Oale and Circassian Walnut effects. You know how it ‘= 4 tae) (C (ae MG (/ Cotton Blankets, in plaid patterns and with wool finish. Bize 60x76. ath $4.50 Wool finished Cotton Blank ets in plaid patterns, Size 66x80, A pale $4.75 Heavy felted cotton Blankets in large block patterns. Size “Woolnap” Blankets in plain tan and gray. Size Dall ceseresses.+ DO0d. Wool Mixed Blankets of heavy weight, in plain white. Size 70x80. A i] pair. os )\)) oo S| gf ee mS) Silk and Wool Afternoon and Street Dresses Special at $39.75 New Second Floor UBSTANTIAL reductions on thirty-five Dresses from regular stock are of- fered' for Wednesday's selling in order that an immediate disposal shall be made on broken lines. These dresses, which are designed for afternoon and street wear, are modeled of Silk Tricolette, Paulette, Georgette and Taffeta; also of Wool ‘Tricotine. They are displayed in sizes 16 and 44 to 42, with the size of 16 predomi nating. The color range includes Sand, Navy, Battleship Gray, Rookie and Black, but not every color in all sizes. They were formerly priced at $49.50, $65.00, $75.00, $85.00, $95.00 and $125.00. Special Wednesday, choice at $39.75, Blankets for Every Requirement— Blankets for All Upper Main Floor t Leta the first to the last page of this paper there is no news item of more importance to the community than this. Every woman in the | land is just now taking an inventory of winter | bedding needs and from this immense stock of ours, now ready for inspection, every woman in Seattle and adjacent territory will find a blanket of standard value in quality and weight desired. Wool Mixed Blankets gray and blue plaids. 66x80. A pair Wool Mixed Blankets of heavy weight, in gray and blue plaids. Size tus. A pur. 912.90 Woolen Blankets in pink gray plaids. Size 66x 80. var $13.50 A white Wool Blanket with cotton warp, in size 72x84 with silk bound edges and col- ored borders. A pair “$13.75 Wool Blankets in pink, tan and gray plaids. Size 66x .. $16.00 in Size Plain white Lambs Wool Blankets. Price, per pair Crib Blankets in plaids and — plain white, bound with plain colored ribbons, Size 36x Crib Blankets, in plain white with pink and blue borders— Size 36x50. Size 32x42. a $2.45 Crib designs of pink and Size 30x40. Each .. and | if j ij | * | Limps to Post With the water seeping in her seams and slowly rising in her | bilge, the §,800-ton steamship West Hepburn, built by J. F. Duthie & f Co, limped into Shanghai Sep- tember 29 with distress flags Mying, according to reports received by Merchants’ Exchange Monday noon.) Altho no details were given in e dispatch, it took the vessel 31/ to cross the Pacific, and the yed voyage indfcates the ship was crippled. She left Tacoma with a cargo of lumber August 30. ‘est Hepburn is operated aged by the Pacific Steam- ship Co, and the Robert Dollar Co. | i i| Canadian . Flyer Evades Customs, Flying from Victoria, B. C., to the Puyallup fair, where he was to give exhibitions of plain and fancy flying, |W. H. Brown, formerly of the Royal Air Forces, failed to notify local c | toms officials of his arrival. His m chine was detained Monday in Puy ] lup by customs inspectors, pending | Fy | investigation to establish the status} of the machine | ‘This is the third aviator to make Mian irregular entry into the United My | States with an airplane to be used/ for commerctal ‘purposes, customs is with the old-fashe ‘Stomach Troubles beds will wonder at the way they are being received. Every day goes further to confirm the initiative of the Simmons Company in pro- ducing metal bed designs“based on the sound principles of line, form and com- position — such as the “Colonial”, illus- trated above. This Simmons idea of putting real de- sign into metal beds is just the latest ex- ample of initiative that has expanded the Simmons Company from one small plant twenty-five years ago to one of the great American industries today. It was the Simmons Company that first thought of sleep in relation to metal beds. That led to the Simmons Patented Pressed Steel Corner Lock-—the lock that holds the bed together firm, like one Sen Francisco,Cal. Newark, N. J. Montreal, Canads SIMMONS BEDS | Built for Sleep piece of metal —the lock that prevents squeak and rattle and makes the bed noise- less, inviting relaxation and deep repose. They have consistently advocated the Twin Bed principle. They have invented Springs, too, that yield evenly to the contours of the body — always resilient and elastic. The Slumber King—a spring com- posed of flexible steel strips with, spirals of high-test spring wire; so combined that the spring action is equal in all directions. The Mount Vernon—the Simmons improvement on the box-spring idea. Now this latest achievement — good design in metal beds — involves also the invention of a truly seamless tubing. SIMMONS COMPANY Kenosha, Wisconsin ioned metal beds. ‘The tubing always has a seam running the full length of the tube. It is likely to be rough — does not take the enamel nicely. When you see these new Simmons Beds, notice especially the tubing — its exquisite finish, free from seam and roughness — and how beautifully it takes che enamel, OU will find them in the leading stores | b en and with them some very charme ing Brass Beds and Children’s Cribs — built for sleep, by the Simmons Company. Prices of Simmons Beds are little, if any, higher than those of ordinary beds. If you cae any trouble finding them we shall be glad to send you the names of Simmons merchants near your home, * Seattle Wash. offic | ay Boldt's French pas ry, Uptown, 1414 3d ave; down. | town, 913 2d Ave. WHEN YOU WAKE UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER Wash poisons and toxins| from system before putting | food into stomach. Saf Wash yourself on the Inside before breakfast like you do on the outside. | This is vastly more important be: | cause the skin pores do not absorb | impurities {nto the blood, causing | illness, while the bowel pores do. | For every ounce of food taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of} waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and generates poisons, | gases and toxins which are absorbed | or sucked into the blood stream | thru the lymph ducts which should | suck only nourishment. | A splendid health measure is to| drink, before breakfast each day, a} glass of hot water with a teaspoon: | ful of limestone phosphate in it,| which is a harmless way to wash these poisons from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening and freshen- ing the alimentary canal before eat ing more food, A quarter pound of limestone phos: | phate costs but very little at the} drug store, but ts sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on inside bathing. TO HONOR CARDINAL | NEW YORK, Oct. 7—Cardinal) Mercier will receive the degree of!) LL.D, at Columbia University late today. GROWING DEAF W HEAD NOISES? \} TRY THIS 1 If you are growing hard of ing, and fe tarrhal dea! if you have roaring, rumbl ing nolses in your ears, go |druggist and get 1 ounce of Wm. O'Neill, Camp 9, Hamilton, gee gg ‘h), = Pr to Wash,, says: Received your medi- |Pitea iene’ take t tehioene cine, Jo-to, and will say that ft re-| four times a day. Meved all of the distress in my/|, This will often bring quick stomach, and it did all that you|{fom, the distressing, head said, and I feel fine now; no heart-|ing become easy and the mucus | bu | dropping into the throat. It is is sold at Five Bartell Drug |'0 Prepare, costs little, ad. Saige and at Swift's Pharmacies. | 20¢ to t# srehel Gonna d with Sample at most any soda fountain. deafness or hal head s, Should give tl ription a trial. October Houseware Sales YOU WILL FIND MANY ATTRACTIVE BARGAINS IN OUR HOUSEWARE DEPARTMENT House Broom, Special 59c Extra Special—Daisy House Broom, made of select Eastern corn stock. They are strongly sewed and have a polished handle. Extra special at sees. SOG No Phone or C. 0. D. Orders. Toilet Paper, 7 Rolls 25c. A Big Special—7 rolls of Horseshoe fell Toilet Paper for see ee eens OE i -& No Phone or C. 0. D. Orders. — | i= Coal Grates for the Fireplace $7.50 33-INCH SIZE, SPECIAL. ....$5.98 $8.50 24-INCH SIZE, SPECIAL $8.98 These Coal Grates are made in the popular dull black finish and are mounted on casters. ’ 22-in, size, special $5.98; 24-in. size, special $6.98