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rt ee i i neh KILLED BY = y Pilotiess Car Deals Death in Plunge Down E. Thomas ’ St. Hill Police and the coroner were In ‘Westigating Thursday the wild of a pilotiees auto down maken me feet like @ queen when he walke at me side, But what is he, I dinno? I've me suspicions. The marnin'l! coom whin he'll throt out the picture av his baronial halla and ax to have a week's rint hung up in the tee ohist along wid all the rist of em.” “Tis thrue,” admitted Mre, Demp- eoy, “that he seems to be a wort iv a Dago, and too coolehured in biv @pache for a rale gintleman, But ye may be misjudgin him. Ye should niver suspect any wan of dein’ of noble dexcint that pays h and patronixes the laundry the eame thricks of epakin’ and rneyin’ wid hie hands,” sigh- ed Katy, “as the Frinch nobleman dt Mra, Toole’s that ran away with Mr, Toole’s Sunday pants and left the photograph of the Rastile, hie grandfather's chattaw, as security for tin weeks’ rint.” Mr. Brunelit continued his calo rifie wootng. Katy continued to hesitate, One day he asked ber out to ding and she felt a denouement was in the air, While they are on their way, Katy in her best muslin, ‘jyou must take as an entr'acte @ brief peep at New York's Bohemia. ‘Tonio's restaurant te In Bohemia. The very location of it is a secret. If you wish to Know where it is #000 /ask the first person you meet. He will tell you in a whisper, ‘Tonto discountenances custom; ho keeps his housefront black and forbidding; }The gives you @ pretty bad dinne: Ht pl RHE 7 é i : [ at 4038 10th ave. N. Thursday from Bon: Pallbearers were all ‘These are a few of the high ex- shells in the verbal barrage will be fired over Eastern cities John Noon, sourdough represen- @ative of the Pioneers of Alaska and Mizations, who is in Se- Frisco Cafe Girl . . Dies From Poison BAN FRANCISCO, Sept. 16—Po ‘were Interested today tn the Geath of Marjorie Shields, pretty girl “known im the San Francisco cafes, yyy ‘was found dead late yesterday hotel room, evidently ae Becatns. On the floor near by was a paper, | showing the signs of close reading, ‘and telling of the death of Oltve Thomas, American actress, in Paris. In the room police said they found & quantity of narcotics / Seattle Hero Wins Commission in Arnty Arther William Bradbury, Beattie feal estate man, veteran of two il of the regular army and will for Camp Lewis on September ' agsignment to duty. always in hot break the ice. he looks his door at the dining hour; but he knows spaghett! as the doarding house knows cold veal; and he has dopoatt many dollars in & certain Banco di -——-- something with many gold vowels in the name on_its windows. To thie restaurant Mr. Brunelli conducted Katy, The houre was @ark and the shades were lowered, but Mr, Brunelli touched an electric Along @ long, dark, narrow hall way they went and then thru a an@ spotless kitchen that Dempsey and held her motiontess. Mr, Brunelli stepped into the yard and seemed to spread and bow ovér the entire company, And everywhere there was a great clapping of hands and @ few cries of “Bravo! and “Tonio! "Ton whatever those words might mean, Ladies waved their napkina at him, gentlemen al Most twisted thelr necks off, trying to catch his nod! Whon the ovation waa concluded Mr. Brunell, with a final bow, stepped nimbly into the kitchen and flung off hia coat and waistcoat. Flaherty, the nimblest “garsong” among the waiters, had been as signed to the special service of Katy. She was a little faint from hunger, for the Irish stew on the Dempsey tablo had been particularly weak that day, Delicious odors from un- known dishes tantalized her, And Flaherty began to bring to her table course after course of ambrosial food that the gods might have pro- nounced excellent. But even in the midst of her Luo ullian repast Katy laid down her knife and fork. Her heart sank as Jead, and @ tear foll upon her filet mignon. Her haunting suspicions of the star lodger rose again, fourfold. Thus courted and admired and emiled upon by that fashionable and gracious assembly, what else could Mr, Brunelli be but one of these dazaling titled patricians, glorious of name but shy of rent money, con cerning whom experience had made her wise? With a sense of hin on iligibility growing within her there wag mingled a torturing conviction that his personality was becoming more pleasing to her day by day. And why bad he left her to dine opened directly upon a back yard. |, ‘The walls of houses hemmed three sides of the yard; a high, board fence, surrounded by cats, the other. A Gozen and & balf little tables set upon the bare ground were covered with Bohemia-hunters, who flocked his guests. White, jewelled hands @ignalled him from every side. A glase Of wine with this one and that, smiles for all, @ jest and re partee for any that might challenge -truy Prinams could be #0 eth Lydia BE. Pinkham's Nogitable Compound — overs! indeed is the success of great medicine, fs aberse pols it, all other medicines for women's ills seem to be experiments. Why is itso successful? Simply because of its sterling worth- For over forty years it has had no generations have depended upon it ual ~=Women for two confide: nce. Thousands of Their Letters are on our filés, which Prove these statements to be facts, not mere boasting, Here Are Two Sample Letters: Mother and Daughter Helped. Middleburg, Pa.—‘‘I am giad to state that Lydia E. Pinkham's VegetableCompounddidmemnuch good when I was 85 years old. I and was not able to de anything, could sono G44 @ year and: could not work. poets tee Table Compound ‘as the best m: Ine I have ever ‘Mrs. W. Yerour, R, rg, Pa. ‘Wise Is the Woman Who Insists Upon Having Lydia E. Pi Vegetable Com pound nd UW a Fall River, Mass. — ‘Three years I gave birth to a little girl after 7 ‘was born I did not pick ae well. twomonths and tting up I had Bevake! like i Phd belice andne dizziness, and in two weeks felt about as well a8 ever."’—Mra. Tnomas WILKINSON, 868 Colum- bis Street, Fall River, Mass. nkham’s Mi foe LYE THE SEATTLE STAR Indian Mothers Honor Sons Who Fought in W ar BISMARCK, N. D., Sept. 16.— firat chapter of Indian War seal han been organized at Stamling Rock aa a part of the American War moth- om. This waa the result of « plan formulated by Mra. Alice French, na- tional war mother, on her recent visit Bismarck and carried out by the women of the Bismarck chapter of the organisation, One hundred and 18 young Indian Braves enlisted in the United States army at the outbreak of the war from the Standing Rock and Fort Yates districta, They went overseas and several distinguished themselves for bravery in the Argonne fighting. Standing Rock ta Sitting Bull's old agency. It waa from here that he led his warriors to the Custer massacre on the Little Big Horn in 1876, Here he made hia bh from his long here he was killed by Indian police during the ghost dancing excitement 0 which reached its climax ttle of Wounded Knee. ‘Within the memory of the Indian mothers now united by the war with the white mothers of the nation, the BSiouz were deadly enemics of the whites and visited with fire and death the lonely settlomenta’on the prairies where now the homes of immigrants present a picture of peace and pros perity, With the war path forgot, the Standing Rock Indians are learning the customs of civilization and have acquired considerable farm wealth. Many of the later generation are well educated, and @ number of the young men and women are college gradu aten T. CLINTON, for years a whole sale piano traveling salearnan on the Coast, and owner of & big business in Tacoma, has leased the new brick store at 1612 Elghth ave. and opened & retail plang store under the name of “Clinton's Piano House.” OTTO @reat! Sure, I'l marry wid ye! But why didn’t ye tell me ye was the cook? I was near turnin’ ye down for bein’ one of thim foreign counts!” SOLDIER KILLS MAN FOR CASH He Wanted ‘to P Pay Debt of Five Hundred Dollars NEW Tonk, & Sept. 16-—Max Rabinowits, 60, in dead; Mra, Rabino- wits in in the hospital with three bullets in ber body, and Harry Van Reed, corporal in the United States army, faces a charge of murder, all for a debt of $500, Van Reed did the shooting In the attempt to rob Rabinowitz, who is @ furrier’ and bond dealer, of $3,000 in money and $27,000 in Liberty bonds, in hia office across from the Pennsylvania station, yesterday. In & confession after his capture, Van Reed said he wanted the money to pay off a debt of $500 “that was wo! him.” He was attached to the army recruiting headquarters here, and is a veteran of the world war, serving as a mechanic in the 319th aero equadron. INDIAN KILLER TO BE HANGED Slayer of Oregon Sheriff Is Sentenced PENDLETON, Ora, Sept. 16.— After pleading guilty to firat degree murder, Emmet Bancroft, aling Neil Hart, the Indian who killed Til Tay- lor, Umatilla county sheriff during a Jail break recently, will be hanged in the state penitentiary on Novem- ber 5. Four other men who participated in the ‘break pleaded not guilty to — charges and will be placed on Hart ts the first man to recetve the death penalty in Oregon since the restoration of capital punishment. Miss Giadys Unger, an English playwright, who has married her Persian collaborator, Kal Ardanchir, wrote her first play when she was 7. —$—$<—<—$——$—— WOMEN’S COATS 9F AND DRESSES $10.00 to $25.00 LESS GREATEST VALUES IN SEATTLE 200 PLUSH COATS About fifty different beautiful models. Plain and fur trimmed; all lengths and sizes— $19.50, $25.00, $29.50, $39.50, $49.50 to $100.00 300 CLOTH COATS Every color, every desirable style and model; best ma-' terials; plain or fur trimmed. All sizes. , worth $25.00, on sale at... 15.00 15 COATS, worth $30.00, on sale at. Also wonderful values at— $25.00, $35.00, $39.50 and $49.60 TWO GREAT SPECIALS DRESSES DRESSES Worth $20 and $25 Worth $30 to $40 Albwool Serges, Jerseys and Silks, All-wool Tricotines, Serges, Jerseya, more than fifty to $15. 00 Velveta, Satins $19.50 choose from ....... and Zaffetas ..... O’HARA’S UPSTAIRS WOMEN’S STORE ‘Second Floor, Economy Market Corner First Ave. and Pike St. Sh Addi > - Mmesere DLE Dw seco » v —— — Think well lof the Dealer 4who is thinking of You BSERVERS of chang- ing conditions know there hes never been a time in the higtory of the retail: business in this country when quality and economy ideas—and the dealers who stand for those ideas—had such a hold on the public. Ademand is now sweep- ing over the country for better—more serviceable —more economical mer- chandise, The straightforward dealer knows this. He knows that once public confidence is estab- lished, a dealer’s success Canedion Factory: New York 73 St. Alexander St. Chicago Moatres!l, Quebec San Francisco Milan is assured—that the public is only going to continue to buy from dealers whom it can trust and esteem— men who always place the interest of their cus- tomers first. That is why, in the stores of over a quarter million dealers in this country, you will al- ways find the Gillette out where you can see and ex- amine it. On top of the counter—in the show window—ready to be handed out .first whenever a man comes in looking for a fazor. The Gillette is the only sci- entific shaving instrument ever produced. Londop Madrid) Paris Brussels Ameerdam Geneva Sydney Calcutta Shanghal Constantinople Tokyo Copenhagen Buenos Aires Singapore Port Elizabeth It started—not with a theory or a desire to sell razors—but with the actual shaving needs of men everywhere. And working from that, it developed into a personal shaving service—a service that has gone ’round the world and changed the shaving habits of thinking men everywhere. 6 e & Whenever or wherever the topic of a good shave comes up, the Gillette habit is always the final answer. Vouched for and acknowl- edged by twenty million men the world over as one of the cleanest, safest, most eco- nomical, most valuable habits they have ever formed. The dealer who hands you a Gillette is thinking first of your interests. Think well of him. Rio de Janeiro