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MEMBER AMERICAN HOMES BUREAU: FOR BETTER’ AMERICAN HOMES’ not in years such a display of new fall draperies— not only a wonderful display—but qual- ity and style at the lowest prices of the season. ir expert drapery designers and workrooms are at your service. HANDBLOCKED IMPORTED CRETONNES —superior quality custom prints import- ed by America’s leading importers of English and French drapery creations. J. H. Thorpe & Co. Johnson & Faulkner F. Schumacker & Co. B. Altman & Co. Stern Brothers —are some of New York's nationally known importers of cretonnes, whose importations are now on display in our new fall showing. Priced: $1— to $3— rp. TUSCAN NETS —large or small mesh. -85¢ or ecru color. Fringe 4 in. YD. Sie" ate tO ae SFA a LS a =") i ot deep, with black heading to match, 85c per yard extra. > warm blankets for ~~ chilly nights— —substantial weight blankets in very durable quality in various colors and a variety of designs. . Nashua cotton blankets— —very best quality cotton Shon tse GTS celal value Pair all-wool blankets— —attractive 3-in. jock pl Size oct oo $50 extra quality all-wool blankets— best quality all-wool blankets— very attractive broken plaids —pure all-wool blankets Sin. Swans oe 9450 SASS cz $1 990 70x84 in. Pair 70x80 im Pair Four Hurt in Train Wreck Recovering WINLOCK, Aug. 30.—The three men and one woman Injured when a logging train jumped the track near here Saturday night are progressing satisfactorily, Six cara left the track and were smashed to splinters. Mrs. Cc. H. Ingram sustained a badly smashed ankle, a split kneecap and severe cuts and bruises, M. T. O'Connell, president of the Winlock Logging Co.. was burt about the spine. John Reich suffered a broken collar bone and had three fingers on bis left hand dislocated Oa "TAKE THE TRIANGLE TRIP The Scenic Sound Route with the Comfort and Service afforded by Princess Steamships SEATTLE to VICTORIA and VANCOUVER, B.C. Depend Might Beate Leave Dally trom Colman Deck, foot of Marlen Street. 9:00 A. M. Daily for Victoria and Vancouver 11:30 P. M. Daily fer Vancouver Direct. Seattle to Victoria ...$3.00 One Way; - - - - $5.40 Round Trip Seattle to Vancouver $4.25 One Way $9.90 Round Trip wie Sep-orey ot Vetere , Direct Train Connections at VANCOUVER for ail points East, | | } Resort Owner Held After Whisky Raid Henry Hargens, of the “Snake | Ranch,” «a dinner resort near the Green Lake district, wag under ar | rest Wednesday on boore charges, | following the second raid in a week joa the place by federal prohibition agents, who way they selzed 30 quarts of bonded boor and 130 quarta of beer concealed under a haystack at jthe inn. Hargens posted $1,500 bail __ MODERN DENTISTRY DR. EDWIN J. BROWN, D.D.& 106 Columbia St. Fer mere than 80 years SEATTLE’S LEADING DENTIST In making high class, modern plate |work, artificial teeth, | gold and porcelain crowns, gold and cement or alloy fillings, also an ex- pert In extracting teeth without pain. Chloroform and gas are unnecessary for painless extraction of teeth at Dr. Brown’s Dental Clinic Uwough whe Wonderful Canadian Pacific Rockies CITY TICKET OFFICE, 608 SECOND AVENUE Telephone, MAin 5587 EP. L. Sturdee, General Agent. pie: pie rena rig geet one don’ know the neaning of these words ve traveled-by-water here restful hours and salt bea breezes relax and in- ce ie Keep cavity clean! Prevent further decay—stop the ache until you can get your dental work done. Use Dent's Toothache Gum it does four things for bad teeth. DENTS TOOTHACHE GUM 1. Stops toothache Instently 2. Cleanses and protects the cavity 3. Retarde further decay 4. Destroy: odor Dest's Toothache Gum is a ecientific preparation for treating bed teeth. Contains no creo- sote, or harmful in- | shear ay ge your rugeist for genuine Dest’s and be sure of the pure, harmless | gon DETAILED INFORMATION APPLY: smarren | 225 Fike sty si eoorth Avent venue Facoma—ii11 beoita BELLING: 1961 5 ©. G. MeMICKEM, Pasa TraMe Mor, L. 0. Smith Bidg, Seowtle, Wash, GET RESULTS STAR WANT ADS) Detroit, for 35 years, bridgework, | THE SEATTLE STAR CHARGES FALSE, SAYS. CORONER Dr. Withelmy’s Statements Malicious, Avers Corson Coroner W. Hi. Coreon tued Wednesday the attack on the administration of his office Dr. | Withelmy, a rival candidate for coroner, aa “malicious and without foundation tn fact." He avers that Dr. Wiihelmy, in hia desire to at- ‘tract attention to his candidacy, has) “indulged a morbid imagination and has been willfully untruthful. | “The records of the coroners of. flos, and particularly of the county) morgue, have been carefully kept! and there has been @ punotilious) jcomplianos with the law in every| lease,” sald Dr. Corson, “The @rue- |nome picture drawn by Dr, Wil-) lhelmy of mutilated bodies and of! unnecessary autopsies in limaxinary and he knows, or should know, that ft hag no counterpart in reality. “The law governing the right of laepulture provides that no body! jtaken to the county morgue may be! used for furthering the ends of |notence except by permission of the |next of kin, by ante-morterm dead are unclaimed and are buried lat public expense, journstances Is the mutilation of « jbody permitted. A member of the letaff of the coroner's office ts al ways present and w lwtatement that physiola nd leurgeons of King county have | broken « law ts pure fabrication, | “The inestimable good resulting to the living is the Justification for |the laws permitting the use of the |dead in certain cases for scientific purpones, Operations of a delicate nature performed by Geattle eur eons have been done at the county morgue prior to the successful operation on the living, No one can say how many precious liver have been aaved because of this wise provision of the law, The ad vance tn surgical science tn the last que of « century has been mar velous, Surgeons are dally saving |lives which If subjected to the has jarde of 26 years ago must have | been lost, Will Dr. Wilhelmy say |that the patient who must undergo & delicate and dangerous operation | should not have the added safeguard jwhich the laws of the state pro vide? “Autopstes are performed only tn cases where it ts necessary to om tablish the cause of death beyond |doubt. In many cases the cause of jdeath ts apparent from « mination and no autopsies are It frequently happens that the circumstances are fo well known that inquests are unneces sary. Aufopsies are timited to the Purpose of Bacertaining the cause of death and tn all cases the coro her's office makes every effort to he jal elapse before the body ts cremated lat the county expense, The state ment that within an hour after a fatal accident the deceased ts mut fected to mutilation ts on a par with Dr, Withetmy’s other {i-considered | statements, “Surgeons who are privileged to avail themecives of the opportunt ties granted by law are required to give surety that there wilt be no mutilation In any of Operations in the interests of science are per. formed exactiy as they are per formed in hospitals and are com pleted with the same care. Dr. Wil helmy knows this, or should know it, If he had made use of hia oppor. tunities to Inform hi if.” “ Narcotic Addicts Flocking to City Narcotic addict ‘@ again ewarm. ing Seattle etreets, according to fed |eral narcotics officers, who blame the police department far abolishing the police dope squad for this result. The addicts declare, they any, that as the police squad ts gone, they have noth- ing to fear at present. \Mrs. Axtell Making Talks in Wenatchee Mra, Frances C. Axtell, progressive republican candidate for United | States renate, was scheduled to make two addresses Wednesday in We natchee. | GIRLS! LEMONS WHITEN SKIN AND BLEACH FRECKLES Bqueere the juice of two lemo: into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter |pint of harmless and delightful jlemon bleach, Massage this sweetly ifragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then! shortly note the beauty and white. ness of your skin. Famous stage beautios use this jemon lotion to bleach and bring that soft, clear, roay-white complexion, also es # freckle, sunburn and tan! bleach beéause it doesn't irritate. Advertisement Don't suffer longer with stomach trouble. | JOYNER STOMACH REMEDY Can now be had at any drug store, or went direct for $1.00 and §2.00, by Joyner Drug Co., Spokane, All good 1619 2ne AVE SEATTLE {be bought for lene than 20 cents & eamual | | IMPORTANT | [ment because in no other way could The Story of a Senator Meing ® Plain, Unprejudiced, Unvarnished Chronicle of Miles Poindexter—Installment No. 3) The Campaign of 1910. : Backed by Seattle Progressives. Burke and Wilson in Field. Standpatters Badly Beaten. By Robert B. Bermann To get the proper atmosphere for this phase of the life of Miles Polm dexter—his first campaign for elec ton to the United Staten senate it i necessary to turn backward the hands of time for a dozen years or #0. Conditions have changed #0 since that tt take « iittle while to acclimate oneself. That was tho year, you may re member, when a nation-wide meat boycott was contemplated—because Porterhouse steak could no longer }pound. ‘That was the year when) Jock Johnson and Jim Jeffries fought for the world’s champion ship at Reno; when Taft was cut ting loose from Rooseveltian policies | when Aldrich waa! | and the kaiser; non in the house, and the founda) tion was laid for the split in the lrepubltean party which was to car lry Woodrow Wilson to the White House three years later Got the picture? All right! TTLEITES PLAN POLITICAL STROKE | Alone about thie time—in the late winter and early spring of 1910, |to be exact—a Little group of Be| jattle were meeting every day lover the luncheon table, in a Iittie lrestaurant where Wolfe's cafeteria now stands, discussing politicos) prospects, They weren't discussing their own personal prospect—they were thinking of the fate of the |nation. They were trying to decide on & man to run for the senate that fall—a man who would truly lrepresent the progressive spirit | which was just beginning to typity | Washington at that time | In this group were Austin E. }Griffiths, now running against Poindexter for the senatorial nom! nation; J. W. Bryan, now running for congress; Joe Smith, Tom Mur- phine, Jim Johnson, W. H. Fiett and Possibly twe or three others. They were republicans—but ineur- gents And they wanted to send to the senate a man who would help free a boaeridden country. They @iscunned all the candidates then tn sight—Judge Thomas Burke, John L. Wilson, Gen. James Anhton, Jude John K. Mumphries, Robert L. McCormick and a couple of oth-| ¢m whose memory has been com- pletely dimmed—and found them all wanting, All were too “rerular.” Bo it was more or lens to be expect: | od that their gaze should eventually | turn to Miles Poindexter, the young | | congressman from Eastern Washing: | ton, whose vailant stand against the | Cannon machine in the houne of rep: | reventatives bad won him national | prominence. DECISION 18 MADE IN APRIL He was from enst of the moun- tains, which was considered some. thing of an obstacts to getting West ern Washington votes, but In every other way he was an ideal candidate. | His election was already son, who, by the way, seemea to have taken this step entirely without au- | thoriation, just aa |aroup did in Seattle, and as Ben Poindexter (no relation of Miles) did | in Bremerton. ‘Things finally came to a head with & meeting at the old Arlington hotel, | the night of April 14, 1910. Most of |the original “luncheon club’ men were there, and, in addition, the man. | aging editor of The Star At thie meeting a King County Poindexter club was formed, with | Griffiths as president, Hutchinson as vice president, and Smith as secre. tary and treasurer, Smith soon aft lerward was auccesded by Murphine. | | ‘The most far-reaching effect of | this meeting was the immediate an nouncement, made editorially by The Star and its associate papers in Ta coma and Spokane, that it would sup port Poindexter for senator “The reason,” The Star explained, | “in that Congresnman Poindexter ts | an opponent of the Aldrich.Cannon regime in congress, Political or geo | graphical considerations are given no consideration by The Star, The fact that Mr, Poindexter ig a republican | lor that be is a resident of Spokane. | (has no weight. ‘The Star ts support: | ing him, and will continue to support | him, because of the record he has made in congress, down to the bright day of insurgent retribution, when | he was one of the nine who did not | lack the courage to vote to depose the whipped but still snarling speaker. “King county has three candidates for the United States senate. The! Star will opopse the King county | candidates collectively and individu: ly “The election of a United States | senator has ceased to be a local ty: | sue or & matter of city or county sen. | timent, It i# not even an east-or-west ofthe-mountains question, but questioy of the whole state. * ¢ JUST TARIFF “The Aldrich-Payne tariff bill was forced thru congress by ‘patronage’ | and ‘trading.’ Representatives and | senators voted for this iniquitous measure against their bette? jude- they get appropriations for federal buildings, navy yards and rivers and harbors, * * * . | “The Star believes that it ts of more importance to have a just tariff law than an additional story to the Seattle postoffice or a new tugboat for the navy yard. * © © 104 3rd Ave, | of course, precludes the possibility of | |\Chinese Bandit | | hin being supported by ter as an anarchint, Star wants @ man tn the senate from this state who will represent the whole state the whole time, “And The Star believes that Mr. | Poindexter ts the man “All other qualifications being equal, The @tar would have been | glad to support a King county man, but ft so happens that none of the} three candidates from this county monsures up to the standard of | quirement er Senator John I. Wilson has frankly announced his fealty to} the republican organization domi- nated by Aldrich and Cannon. That, thia news. Thomas Burke has all his life begp affiliated with corporation interests; thru his corporation activi Judge Burke could not be otherwise Under no etr-\overthrown in the senate and Can)... 4 organiaation man. “Ot Judge Humphries there ts lt tle fo be surmined that must not be taken on the word of the judge him self, and that savora too much of the professional ‘friend of the peo ple’ and the ‘joiner.’ ” HEAVY ATTACKS BEGIN ON POINDEXTER ffect which this editortal had and-pat press in Beattle— and elsewhere thru the state—was jectrical. Until The Star took ite stand, Potndexter’s candidacy was not considered seriously west of the mountains, But after that editorial all the big guns of the standpat re- Publicaniam were turned loose on the “Bpokane upstart.” One Seattle paper—which ts eup- porting Poindexter now, by the way -denounced him because of hiv | “iniquitous” attacks on the late R. A Pallinger’s efforta to grab public lands for the great intereste, An other Seattle dally pletured Potndex- preparing to blow up Washington Industry. “A vote for Poindexter ls a vote) against Western Washington!’ was the rallying ery of the standpat prose weet of the mountains, The “regu- | lar" papers east of the mountains couldn't very well appeal to sectional prejudice, so they shrieked, “A vote for Poindexter ls a vote against the re- publican party! Even then, however, the standpat press didn't take Poindexter quite ee. | riotaly enough. It didn’t confine its efforts to defeating him. One Seattle paper, for Instance, was supporting Judge Burke, and, while tt said plen ty of mean things about Poindexter, it sald much meaner things about ex. Senator Wilson, Burke's most for midable opponent among the “regu. lars.” And Wilson's paper, while it was vituperative against Poindexter, was far more violent in it attacks against Burke On the eve of the primary election the standpat republicans suddenly came to the realization that their ep terparty warfare was spoiling any chance they might have had to beat Poindexter, and at the last moment the two most prominent “regular” candidates, Burke and Wilson, got together, the latter withdrawing, Immediately the entire «tandpat except in Tacoma, Gen, on, the local candi was supported, got behind The Wilson papers forgot date, Burke. sad about the fudge and praised him to the skies. “Anything to beat Poin. dexter!" wan the watchword. But Poindexter was nominated by & comfortable majority. Tomorrow: His First Six Years in. the Senate, NEW YORK, — Jobn Harriman, 19-year-old son of Oliver Harrima marrion Miss Alice A. Laidley, 1 daughter of Mra, Willlam H, Laid. ley, of Chicago, Painless Extraction of Teeth Free From 9 to 11 ag | | Specm! for 30 Days— | Set of Teeth.......... $5.00 A real specialist in charge of our | Plate Department. | — eR $4.00 22K....... Radiographs — the only reliable method of knowing the exact condt-| tion of your teeth. One X-ray free. Our treatment of pyorrhea is con-! sidered the beat; $2 per tooth. In One Location for 21 Years BOSTON DENTAL CLINIC 1420% Second Avenue Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water to free the pores of impurities How with a gentle application of Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal. hb ire ideal for the toilet, ‘0 Cuticura Talcum for pow- dering and perfuming. Se eee cpme aT Ne EN a lr 6 Wednesda re-| while hie patron was over in Afric’ |i. ny has amassed a fortune which | bery quest of the deceased or when the/and Germany, chumming with Hons) iin oe ne ne geveral millions. | Washington st., inte Tuesday L WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1922. SERGEANTS GET BEATS SHIFTED 17 Are Transferred in Big Reorganization Move feventesn police sergeants were definitely informed Wednesday by Chief of Police W. B. Beveryne of transfers to different territory, pur- suant to Beveryne’ policy of a gen oral shakeup In the department, he announced Wednenday. It in expected that several hundred patrolmen will appear on the Mat of nges to be put into effect Thurs y, all under different sergeants and working in districts strange to! them, ‘This polley Severyns stated was “for the best interests of the depart: | ment.” The changes were made not alone to put an end to alleged “petty grafting” by policemen, but to make | the men more thoroly sequainted ike, delightful quality —dmpossible to duplicate. with the different beats in the city Robs Countrymen| A Chinese bandit wan sought by | following the rob: Suey, grocer, at 2 an You Tell Them? Bu lowt $100 cash, @ gold watch and | t: Married Flappers BERBER EERE EEE of Lew Bi. : WOWY!s ALL LAUGH RECORDS SMASHED! The cause of the whole thing is | | | | the Griffiths | all the unpleasant things they had | a It's a roaring burlesque on “The | Sheik,” and it’s so darn r] FUNNY that every night after the show our i repair man has to look over all the i seats to see that they are capable } of resisting another day of laughter! a And That Isn't All--- s2ACK HOLT is here in the Peter B. Kyne story that holds the audience motionless, WHILE SATAN SLEEPS” And Then comes the enchanting Sunset-Bur- al rud Scenic, “Beautiful Yellowstone.” Bl Following That We Have a The Liberty News—the whole world before your eyes! So Then Miss La Mont sings “My Machree’s Lullaby,” one of the most beautiful song hits ever composed, Consequently Malotte, Liberty’s gifted organist, is on the giant Wurlitzer. So Don’t Miss this 100% entertainment— NOW playing at The SEATTLE'S COOLEST SPOT “Let's Go to The Liberty” is always good advice emi zg 23