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SEPTEMBER VOCALION RECORDS ARE HERE— Ask for the RED RECORD —operatic selections ' Forza det Destino—Pace, mio Dio (Mercy, O Lord) Rosa Taisa } 2013 Madam Butterfly—-O quant! Gechi fisl—4Oh kindly heavens) UBtnch sso14 Gullo Crim! and Mafle Sundelius/@1.75 °° —standard selections 2.nch ' Se Saran Rose (Love in Springtime) May Peterson} ga.75 2018 Oh, That We Two Were Maying Nellie and Sara Kouns \o1.2 20003 i . . Because Colin O'More {10-1 ch Yaoi? ‘ A Dream Colin O'More [$1.25 ! —eacred selections t Throw Out the Life Line Helen Clark and Biliot Bhaw | 20-tnch 4 y9iy i Hymn Medley Shannon Four} 85¢ — instrumental selections : Happy Days Adler's Trio) 10neh garg Herd Girl's Dream Adier’s Trio/ 85¢ : —Hawaiian selections : Walts of Love Ferera and Franchint) 10-inch 4 4945 M Somewhere tn Honolulu Ferera and Franchini > 85¢ —popular selections i Shores of the Shannon Arthur Burne) 210-Inch 4 go4q Love Sends a Little Gift of Roses Sam Ash{ 85¢ Jane Crescent Trio 10-inch yyyig j Ain't You Coming Out, Malinda Shannon Four | B5e¢ Melon Time tn Dixieland Harmontaers’ Quartet | co neste It Takes a Good Man to Do That Alleen Stanigy | 8B: Down at the Old Swimming Hole Ernest Hare and Billy Jones | 10 ra 14223 Nightmare Blues Harmonizers’ Quartet | 85¢ oe —musical comedy selections Selections from “The Last Waltz" (A Baby in Love-—The Next Dance— ! The Last Waits) Asolian Light Opera Company | 13-inch 45594 Selections from “Two Little Girls in Blue (Who's Who With You?—~ | 91.25 Oh, Me! Oh, My!—Dolly) The Acotian Orchestra | —dance selections AN By Myself—Fox Trot The Newport Society Orchestra |10-1mch 44019 i] ‘Mi Mi (lee Mee)}—Fox Trot The iat “Al Society Orchestra | 85¢ x One Kiss—Pox Trot Max Fisher's Dance Orchestra |10-tnch 1 4a1q Canadian Capers—Fox Trot Selvin's Dance Orchestra! 85¢ Saturday—-Fox Trot Leroy Smith's Dance Orchestra, 1O4nch Leve Will Find a Way and Gypey Blues-—Fox Trot } se anus Leroy Smith's Dance Orchestra) Every Girlie Wants to Be a Sally—Fox Trot ) Yerkes’ 8. S, Flotilla Orchestra }10-1nch yo09 T'm Looking for a Bluebird and Sweet Malinda—-Fox Trot | s6¢ Yerkes’ 8. S, Flotilla Orchestra A Baby tn Love—Fox Trot Al Jockers’ Dance eed ined 4505 Learn to Smile—Fox Trot Al Jockers’ Pance Orchestra [ 85¢ ‘When the Sun Goes. Down—Fox Trot Selvin's Dance Orchestra | 10-inch 4 4559 ‘Why, Dear? Selvin's Dance Orchestral 85¢ WITH OUR FRER RENTAL DEPARTMENT Zotte * rT Sekevite | fisubeth, Reattio 38 More, ‘para Tacoma Parker. Cathirine “Ta Seattle . Relur, Ben, Sen’ Sidi, Rachel, Beatin Hornetri * Fenson Myail G. Auburn ith, Jobn Philip. Seattl gg chivas | Be: Sunt FUNERAL SERVICES for George Sait, 63, were to be held Wednesday at 3 pm. from Bonney: Watson's Witkin, Ada, 48, 1010 8. Highth et. Tacoma. Vail, Edwin B., ah! an: | Chatham, Kuhiman, Bina Eakins Trempe, Louts > (hee tent Litem ‘Seen tee Foldrick, opguomn. 5 “| Hotel M. from Hilman. ern bel F. from A. Le Roy. live ti Floyd ve tres Stee Ross, Carle G. trem Chark Morden, Harvey B.. from Carrie J. Call Maln Sake y ip aire t ticket Doct fot information and Shoes our business—and, we are proud of it. THE PHILLIPS BOYS Cut the Price 1313 Third Avenue pprsite Pantages Theatre Building WHERE YOUR DOLLAR DOES ITS FULL DUTY School Starts Soon—Sept. 6! Are You Ready Boys’ Girls’ Boys’ Gunn Blucher Growing Girls’ Brown Lace Sizes 1 to 7 Sizes 2144 to 7 $2.50 $3.50 $3.50 $4 $4.50 Little Gents’ Gunn Blucher : Sizes 9 to 1814 Misses’ Brown Lace Sizes 1114 to 2 $2.00 | $2.50 59.50 $3.50 Boys’ Heavy Unlined Tan Blucher Children’s Sizes 1 to7 Children’s Brown Lace Shoes $3.50 $2.25 $3.00 Sizes 10 to 1314 $2.50 OUR SHOES PLEASE THE KIDDIES OUR PRICES PLEASE THE MOTHERS Quality the Highest, Prices the Lowest THE PHILLIPS BOYS 1313 Third Avenue pposite Tantares The Birthplace of Most-for-the-Money Shoes ? , SHOES FOR THAT BOY OF YOURS-SHOES FOR THAT GIRL OF YOU +e * Great Story There was no war, War came, tremendous, awful. It ended. Still we live, mont of us, and in our lives the war is but an incident, an event, terrible, but passing. Upstairs im a bare apartment high above the luxurious quarters of Jullo Desnoyers, if you know the story, lived a sombre, queereyed phitosopher, @ Russian, Tchernoff. Uncanniiy one night he pointed thre his window to @ rifted cloud. Who bas not seen horsemen riding in the sky? There were four that evening. “‘And power was given unto them?” he quoted, ‘to kill with the sword, and with hun: and with the beasts of the earth. HOT BLOODED YOUTH ADMIRES WOMEN Handsome young Desnoyers was hobblooded. Like his Argentinian srQndfather, who had brought him up, he admired women. His tothe-devilwithcare — spirit. after he had left Argentine and fone to Paris, led him to tango palaces — Tt was inevitable that he mert Marguerite was lovely. She was unfortunately married to a French man, Laurier, for whom she cared not a snap of her pink fingers. WIFE AND LOVER CAUGHT IN STUDIO Julio paid ttle heed to the vision. ary Russian, who might have rahed him good advice, .| thelr rich grand@father’s favorite. HERE'S ALLEGED edge among the patients at the time he was gt Sedro-Wooley. polisher one day when he had a sinking epell, and fell down,” Arnold said. “He did not stir when told to said, ‘I'll make him get up,’ and hit him a crack on the head with the heavy polisher. He died.” & Seattle wood dealer. He spent 27 montha in the Northern hospital after being nent up over the protest of one of the alienists who examined waa that he had been seen listening at a key hole, and had been over. heard to swear to himself. | SEATTLE MAN SEEN |BEATEN TO DEATH While held in the institution How- ard worked in the dining room, He finally managed to smuggle @ note takef for his release, which was granted as soon ag the court was ad- vised of the facts. Howard told of witnessing the at leged murder of a man named Saltzer. “I never knew his first name.” Howard testified, “but he came from Seattle, Ho had just arrived, and wae in Room 10, Ward 9 in. bed. They always keep new arrivals in bed for the first few days. “A man guard was in charge of the ward. This was on Friday, (March 1, 1919. With another attend- ant, the guard attempted to give |Saltzer a dose of castor oll, Whether ‘he needed tt or whether it was in- jtended as a punishment, like salta, 'I do not know, Anyhow, Saltzer said ye ete | aoe s | the , and when I put my arms he didn’t want ft. They said he had 50 ‘00d cigarettes ae 0 GENUINE ke “ DURHAM SEATT “Four Horsemen’ Parisian Love ‘Picture FERRY SERVICE “Those who did sce it told me that /PROSTRATE FORM KICKED John La Chance was pushing « floor | IN FRENZY Hugh Howard, 619 W. 83rd st., ts! him, The evidence against Howard | out, and legal steps were at once) STAR Encompasses (Above) pert eka’. prophesying Russian, ing out the sign of the four horsemen riding in the sky. (Left) Julio bah 2 a going artist from and (below) Matguerite fo Lan.| rier, victim of a loveleas mar- riage, who is trapped by her husband in Desnoyers’ studio apartment. These are leading figures in “The Four Horse- men of the Apocalypse,” the “million-dollar picture” com- ing to the Blue Mouse theatre September 10. Laurter caught them there. struck young Julio In the face and bid him to send his seconds. And in another country were Julio's three cousins, German born and reared, cold, calculating fellows. They hated him, for he had been Hel, 1 Julio painted Paris red. His ap of the prophesying Russian, KILLINGS ©, PAGE , tried to give it to him forcibly. Salt-| persons interested in bettering condi. tions are invited to join the Humant- tartans. J. B. Hunt, Salisbury hotel, is presi. “Then the two guards got mad. | ent of the society; Mra. Carrie Clark They grabbed the poor fellow and|'s vice prosident, and Dr. L. A. Royse, |rolied to the floor with him, beating | 401-2 Epler building, is secretary and get up, and the warden of Ward 2/him unmercifully. They Jumped on | treasurer. Ber resisted the best he could. his prostrate body and kicked him gave Saltzer a vicious boot in the pit of the stomach, and then the other, in a frenzy of rage, raised the Ump form from the floor and slammed it back, the head #triking the hard wood first with great force. It is & wonder Saltzer was not killed outright. “All this time I was standing only a few foot away. There was not a thing I could do, The first move I made they would have given me the same medicine, “They must have beaten that poor |body for at least 10 minutes, Then they laid him in the ‘iron room,’ |room 11, #0 called because it ts barred and grated, lay in bed, without medical treat ment, until the life finally passed out from his miserable body at 2 ja. m, Sunday, March 9. “GANGRENE OF LUNGS” CAUSE OF DEATH “The only reason Saltzer lived that long. was because they forced egg- hog? down his nostrils, thru tuber, He couldn't take anything thru his mouth because his face was so terri- bly bruised and broken from the beat- ing. “At 2 p. m. on Friday, March 7, I heard Saltzer groaning louder than usual and went in to see what was the trouble. He was suffering terri. bly. I tried to case his position in around him I found that his ribs had actually been caved in. I did what I could for him, As I was leaving, he looked at me pitifully and asked, ‘Did | you see it? “*T saw it all,’ I replied, and went back to my work before the guards caught me, I think those were the} last words Saltzer spoke, “The two guards were a little bit) afraid of me, for they knew I was ra- tional and had the goods on them. A day or two before Saltzer died one of them came up to me in the dining room and said, ‘Poor Saltzer, I think he will die, He has gangrene of the lung: SOCIETY COLLECTING DATA ON ASYLUMS “I never heard of gangrene of the lungs being contracted in that man- ner,’ I said, and walked away.” The disclosures made by Arnold and Howard were added to the data the Humanitarian society is collect ing on the treatment of inmates of the state insane asylums, The Humanitarian society, former. ly called the osmopolitan Humane society, was organize t Febr \ Its objects, as set forth in the con stitution, are to foster a higher de. gree of skill in dissemination of kind nees to all human being, and to seek enactment of proper laws so inmates of educational, penal and charitanjig chateau in t Marne and furnished Ks rooms with whimsical, prodigal iavinhness. His aister, boy, Vincent realized how small an incident it | was compared with human life, and | wrote the story of Julio and Mar- guerite Chich!, the German cousins and the Russian Horsemen of ¢ ride in the sky and have power to | kill and are seen by visionary per | rons. | still, and engulfing it, man interest drama, STORY IS CALLED CENTURY'S GREATEST Horsemen called the century's «# why rend ‘by miliong, and why the| SOP and up Without Garters photoplay, Mouse theatre Bept. ing such widespread attention. our neighbors, most of them, lived war was but an incident in their lives, cloud, as the four galloped out of sight, proaching duct with Laurter didn't | sword, and with hunger, and with worry him. No more did the words | the beasts of the earth.” institutions shall be treated tn a hu- mane manner. trating its efforts to better conditions in the sta membership of the society, while at which was, he said, common knowl-|to take it. He remonstrated, and they | present «mall, in the body and face, One of them | night at 617 People’s Bank butiding. Slew Mother, Step- —John D. Pace confessed yesterday that ho had slain his father, step father and mother at Manchester, Ky., six years ago, ind the crime, broke jail, joined the war, crime but again escaped. He was ar- There Saltzer|~ ¢—WILKES fir! Prat ene 31, CARRIER = PIGKO) released from the summit of Mt. Rainier Tuenday arrived at the lofts of Fora | Bothell, « hell at 2p. m., make ing 64 miles in two hours Calif * World "War TO BE CUT OFF Only 4 Ports of Call, Commissioners’ Plan After September 15 only four towns will be served by county ferry rystem, according to plans now being formulated by the board of commis: | monern The county will operate the four ferries rather than turn them over| to Capt. John L. Andersoh, who wanted ap annual subsidy of $75,000 to run the lines, Kirkland and Medina on the east shore of Lake Washington, Roanoke on Mercer island, Vashon Heights) and Harper, acrose the bay, are the only points that will be served, un- leas present pians are altered. ‘This means the withdrawal of three small boats that have been giv: | ing service to points all along the lake shore. The Vashon-Harper ferry ts the only craft that has been running at) 4 profit, In June, the only month! for which figures are avatiable, the} run showed # profit of $1 ‘The three runs on Lake Washing ton that are to be maintained have! al) been running at a loss, altho they | ‘Water tank © depot at Fuls persone nare ton collapses: several 1 oupe death have been competing with smatier boats that covered ol! the smaliep nettiements of the lake front. Tt ts the intention of the commis: sioners to keep the lona on the ferry jsyetem below the $76,000 subsidy that Capt. Anderson demanded for operating the lines. —— You can easily learn to dance at Bright's, 1604 4th, cor, Pine. —Ady, enn dachanttnli THRILLS AWAIT YOU ‘The Big Game’ AT THE WILKES MATINEE TODAY WAIST AND GARTERS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS Buy Hickory And You Buy Wisely Thereisso much thou promt care and painstaking watch- fulness tailored into the Hickory Waist that Paps know at a glance how oar tae or it really is. Weak ype you wa nd for pel fica | r girl because it every need pes 1 - tng children the support, com= fort and oevink that they require. Pd of the Hickory wert nade of Gaeta, i materials—wears well Talored in the faultless full bodys wee as well as the popular style illustrated. For all ages2to 14. Each | garment fits ly. All buttons are genuine un! = Hie father bought a flashy léepy valley of the Chichi, fell in love with a Rene. War came, And after it ended Blasco ibenes, an author, and Laurier, Rene and “The Four who | He called his story Apocalypae,” The war was big. But bigger encompassing, clreumveribing is the great ho life iteelt. rfectl able Sones te pin tube attachment prevents the pin from bending or breaking. Guaranteed to give absolute satisfaction. That may be why “The Your of the Apocalypse” pi tf the book of Ibenez bas been RS. You should find them at your dealer's—tn the notions, boys’ or infants’ cepartment. If eae) please write us, ° the Biuve ts attract to ”, coming For “The Four Horsemen” and he people of Ibenez’s creation, like hra the war and still live. The Tchernoff, pointing into the rifted eaid: “They will ride again, to kill with And still we live on. At this time the society ts conc@m. hoxpitals for insane. The is growing, and all 88,000 PEOPLE IN pp HAVE Lorna tg THIS FAMOUS MAINING 227,000 Loe ONLY THREE DAYS Meetings are held each Tuesday father and Father GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Aug. 31 He was arrested ‘anadian army and fought thru the He was arrested for the triple here when he attempted to forged check. AMUSEMENTS _ Fitth and Pi This Week—Mats. To Saee and Sat, “THE BIG GAME’? A Play W ih a Punch Bagh hf SA Matinees, 2:30, Pee General Admission: Matinees, 28¢; Nigh LOEW’S PALACE HIP Continueus, 1 VAUDEVI L L E AND A GOLDWYN FEATURE PHOTOPLAY WILL ROGERS N_UNWILLING HERO” “IT’S THE TALK OF THE TOWN” is « FIFTH AND POSITIVELY LAST BIG WEEK NOW Two Big Shows Daily————2: 15 and 8:15 P. M. FREE—TONIGHT LECTURE —PRICES— | SPECIAL MUSIC Eves.: 30¢, 55 and 85 BY A_ LARGE These Pricea AUGMENTED A Few Seats at $1.10 PSYCHOLOGY ORCHESTRA Matinces: 30e and B50 Include ) BUSH America’s Greatest Orator Subject: “How to Be Beautiful and How to Develop Personality”