Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STAR THURSDAY CORSET COVER EMBROIDERY Values to 69c, for 49c 50 pleces Corset Cover and Camasol Embroideries. Beau- tifa in Swiss and Nain sooks, Values to 690, special Thursday, 49c yard, Remnants 5c Yard White Embroidery Rem nts, including Edgings and Tnsertions, in lengths up to 4 yards and from 1 to 8 inc wide. Some e hav Speciat of ||Interesting | $2 Casseroles Special $1.19 f Nickel Plated Casseroles. |] brown inserts with white en- amel lining. Sold for $2.00 elsewhere. Our price, $1.19. Child’s Parasols Special 25¢ _ 12tnch Parasols in white, pink, blue and fancy colorings. Values to 39c. Special, 25 each. 75¢ Hand Purses Special 49c Strapped Hand Purses with ickel trimming, in red, navy and Diack. Regular price T5c. Special, 49¢ each. Ri. Ladies’ Belts Half Price 500 Ladies’ White Washable Belts. Regular prices 25c and ‘| 35c. All go at half price. England, Russia France, as members of the Triple Entente, are clearly Bligned with Servia against common bugbear, Ger- many. Spain has also be- come a party to their pact. Roumania and Greece, as an outcome of the Balkan ‘war, will throw their strength to the Tri tente and Servia. ceoteagy the Austrian cause are irmany, Austria and gat too, is naturally aligned with Austria. ‘Fifteen thousand Austrians and Servians in United States sail to fight for na DON’T SUBMIT TO OPERATIONS lor Appendicitis, Gallstones and Stomach Troubles few chiropractic treatments wil) \ ton, dyspepsia, ‘stones, yellow Jaundice or nervourxnens, few Chiropractic treatments will adjust the conditions which your Miness, thereby enabling —to restore you to bh yl be surprised at the of this natural method My Chiropractic tr Fensonable in price, giad to diagnose your case withou charce. Come and talk with me Office hours, 10 to & and 7 to # p.m You wii For Star 12\c Percales Special 9c Yard 1,000 ufacture Per and ma of yards short lengths Nght, grounda, In stripes, checks and figures. Worth 12%c yard tn the bolt. Spectal, per yard, 9. Huck Towels 19c 50 dogen fine quality White k Towels with seal handsor may medium Readers $2.25 Bedspreads Special $1.88 Tax White Crochet Be in Marseilles An extra hemmed, and worth Special, each, $1.88. Sheets 45c 72x90 Bleached Sheets with \ terns quality improved center seam & and serviceable she mmed ready for priced ‘at 45¢ etally STAR—WEDNESDAY PANTON’S Thursday Star Bargains LADIES’ ONYX HOSIERY Values to 50c, for 25 The famous Onyx Hostery for ladies, in either plain isle or lace Hale; white only, ia sizes 8, 8% and 9 Values to 50c. Special, per pair, 25c Vests 10c This lot includes Vests with high neck and long slo also the low and » a 8 and ve light quality each. medium Re Thursday Wwe ulor Specials in Our Ready-to-Wear Section Attractive $6.98 VAL This ts an fon, gr Specially priced at $2 excellent am reared sik popular st Dress Waists UES FOR $2.98 of Watsts, made of chit. Regular values to $6.98 sortment volle, ere nd shado’ Children’s Outing Dresses $2.48 VALUES FOR $1.25 One large display table dren's Outing Wash Dre: and beautifully trimmed. Wash Dresses Half Price Two racks of Little Wom en's and Big Girls two-plece Wash neatly made and well ished. Prices $1.49 up one an Dress: ft $6.98. HALF PRICE MEANS | 75e up to $3.49. ‘These Bonnets are very attractively trimmed to lace, embroidery, fancy ribbons, etc. Regularly Priced at 250, 85c, 590, 750, 98e and up to $2.48. All go at half price. $2.48 Dress Hats one, 98c Children’s Hats of straw, poplin, ratine or Milan, trim med with flowers and ribbon; some are finished with fancy piping. Values to $2.48. Spe of nicely made Misses’ and Chil | in a large assortment of styles alues to $2.48, special, $1.25. | Outing Shirt Waists 98c quality | cheviot and flannel; all sizes nd *, n- | Good Juat the thing for every kind | bargain at 98¢. se $4.95 Dress Hats $1.48 These Hata are of fancy braids trimmed with dainty flowers or ribbon, and other styles in fine Milan, shirred lace and ribbon. Former val- ues up to $4.95. Spectal, $1.45. Seattie’s Popular-Priced Department Store SECOND AVENUE, BETWEEN .S. Has a Billion to | SEEKS PARDO SPRING AND SENECA Offset War’s Drain NEW YORK, July 29—The New | $400,000,000 in gold stored away in state penitentlary upon conviction York stock exchange was the only | one in the world today offering op-| portunity for unlimited trading in| securities. Foreigners dumped | cents on each $100 today. the Denver mint alone, The insurance rate on transat lantic shipments of gold was 15 Bankers of an outing and a splendid Special 19c English Rockingham Teapots -big, new shipment just tn Regular size and not decor ated. A S50 value for 19¢, Table Tumblers Special 2c Each The famous old-fashioned kind, with the horseshoe fn the bottom; good = quality glass, Regular value 45¢ doz Speeial, each, 2c. 85c Clothes Baskets Special 45c Made of good grade willow; medium size, large enough for the average family. Special, 450, Wire Clocet Hooks Sc Dozen Either ceiling or wall hooks Regular price of these Is 100 a dozen. Special Thursday, So a dozen. OLYMPIA, July 29.--Formal ap- pileation for the pardon of Dr, Lin- da Rurfieid Haszard, starvation specialist, serving sentence in the of manslaughter In connection with the death of Clatre Williamson, an English girl and former patient, was filed with Gov. Lister yester- their securities on the exchenge | predicted another rise in the event day by Wilson R. Gay, Seattle, at- here, and buyers were plentiful. | Heavy loss were registered in the first few hours’ trading, but} there was no sign of a panic. | Heavy gold shipments to Europe | jcaused no anxiety here. It was| sald that the federal treasury has | $1,280,000,000 in gold bullion and jeoin on hand. There is more than ‘Austria Str of additional foreign shipments. Southern Pacific was off 2% and Canadian Pacific %. The cotton market also was weak. Gold shipments to Europe con tinued today day carried $12,500,000 in addition to the $11,000,000 sent yesterday. ipped of Its Male Population VIENNA, July 29.—Except where | troops are concentrated, Austria is | literally stripped of its adult male population today. The whole coun. | try is in arms. | | Business is paralyzed, Shops are | closed everywhere. Patriotic dem- | onstrations are occurring constant-| ly, but there are no men to take partin them, Wome . PARIS, July 29.—Servia is con-) centrating its military forces in the} Sanjak of Novibazar today, prepara tory to a junction with the Monte-| negrin army for a Joint resistance of Austria's troops, according to mes- sages received here from Nish and Cettinje. An Austrian invasion of Servia is) and Montenegro are left to fight Austria alone, none here jdoubted that Austria will be ulti | mately victorious, but military au-| DR. A. M. JOHNSON LAcensea Chiropractor. "American Bank thorities express the opinion that! & a few very old or crippled repre- sentatives of the masculine sex aro the demonstrators. After food prices had reached al. most prohibitive figures throughout the country, the government took the situation in hand. It estab- lished a maximum scale and ordered the arrest of all dealers who ex- children and! ceeded it, Montenegro Joins Hands With Servia the two little allies would first put up a desperate struggte. All able-bodied Servians, regard- leas of age, have been mobilized. White-haired old men and mere boys are in the ranks, In France all army leaves of ab- sence are cancelled and a concen- tration of troops on the frontier is in progress. President Poincare, who has been visiting in St, Petersburg and Stock holm, arrived home, and was re- ceived with a patriotic demonstra tion. BRING RESULTS . Vessels safling to-| |torney for Dr. Hazzard. [RACE FOR CREW NOME, July 29.—The Smithson- jan institution's schooner Eagle ar. rived here yesterday from the St- berfan coast, and Capt. Koren re- ports that three Russian govern- ment steamers will sail for Wran- gell island in an effort to rescue the officers and crew of the wreck- ed Canadian exploring ship Karluk, marooned there. The U. 8. rev- enue cutter Bear is on her way to rescue the party. ‘ MILLS STUNG TACOMA, July 29.—Ipholding practically every contention raised by attorneys for the recallers, Su- pertor Judges Card, Chapman and Clifford yesterday handed down a decision dissolving the temporary injunction restraining the city clerk from proceeding with the re- call election against Commissioner Milla. | | TACOMA, July 29.—The confer. ence of Congregational churches here yesterday named Rev, T, H, Harper, Spokane, moderator; Rey. Anson 8. Murwell, Seattle, assist- ant moderator, and Rev. Hugh El- mer Brown, Seattle, conference preacher, REDMEN MEET HOQUIAM, July 29.—T wo hun- dred and fifty delegates were in attendance at the great counell of the Improved Order of Redmen and Degree of Pocahontas, which opened here yesterday. ‘Tacoma was selected as the 1915 meeting place, JULY 29, 1914. PAGE 2, What Is a Husband Worth? By Nixola Greeley-Smith How much fs a husband worth? Idah Parker, formerly the fiancee of Danforth Brooks grandson of Hor man ©, Armour, has just declared that she will not accept $1,000,000 to give the young man up! This happ in New York Simultaneously, in Chicago, Mra Felicle ndah Modjeska, In an nouncing that she will oppose a suit for divorce filed in Portland, Ore, by ber husband, a son of the famous anserted that all the money in the workt could not tn duce her to consent to the legal severence of HER marriage bonds! “He la my own husband, the lov- able father of our three children, and I love him dearly, regardiess of jhin actions!” she explained dra matically, As Mra. Modjeska claims ually to have refused her hus. band's offer of $80,000 for his free dom, we must accept her statement as truth and not merely as third act eloquence. d “ Refor coubl Gorgoza Madame Emma Eame me Madame Emilie de a transfer of more than $100,000 had to be made to the fam ous prima donna’s predecessor as | Gorgoza's spouse, On the other hand, Lillian Rus- sell, whose husbands have transient as her charms are manent, declared ried Alexander Moore would have to show or would not with him! that he her $1,000,000 go to the altar Innumerable other instances of high cost of husbands might ited, But a husband bas other values besides those that can be expressed by the dollar sign. What is a husband worth men. tally? | What fs he worth emotionally? What protectively? You see, the most Insignificant of husband» has & certain scarecrow value tn that he ps #0 Many other men away and so sw & woman the trouble of turning them down, Every an is entitled to life. liberty and the pursuit of a hus band! The constitution guarantees this right. But, as in the case of many other things the constitution guarantees, a whole lot of people don't seem to know about this or to get any profit out of it, I shan't undertake to tell any woman how to get e husband. The thing we're discussing now is what ts he worth financlally after she HAS got him COMES FROM wo | W. R. Hogeman spent a year at the reformatory. Hogeman ts willing you should know it. He does not boast about It. Don't met that idea. He tsn't proud of that record. But he's willing to let you know he served a term in the reformatory in order that he may accomplish a great, big purpose. He wants to give the fellows to whom fate had been unkind enough to send to a reformatory a chance to rehabil! tate themselves—a chance to make good. He Has Money Now Hogeman has no selfish purpose. For Hogeman has money now- $16,000. And money covers a multt- tude of sins, Hogeman declares, Money gives a man a chance to make good where he wouldn't get it otherwise. Money protects a man against unjust espionage and exactions of detective and police departments. Money keeps the au- thorities from hounding you from place to place, If you have money your reforma- tory record will not bob up to drive you from home and employment. But {f you haven't, you're up against it. There was the time when Hogeman didn't have that $15,000, and he was hounded by the police. Sent to Reformatory Hogeman was convicted at Spo- kane in 1910 of taking an automo- MEAT PRICES CUT TOMORROW, THURSDAY, AT | To many women he worth far too much! | Every man has a certain pacity. Because many women have not — ALL WOMEN SHOULD HAVE —they ex aggerate the value and the difficulty of earning a living. I would rather take any man’s job than almost any wife's |job. In comparison with the |unpaid professions of home- | | keeping and child rearing, any |man'’s work, no matter how arduous, is a cinch! Nature gave man a the matter sinecure in of parenthood 8h made maternity an immolation and paternity a pastime To do man justice. r he realizes | before she mar-| éRD TA REFORMATORY WITH $15,000; | TO HELP MATES IN PRISON) BY WORKERS STARTS SUIT bile. Hogeman says he was going |to steal a Joy ride, and no more, ‘The owner of the machine said Hogeman was going to take the car itself. However, that is not import- ant now, Hogeman was rent to the reformatory for grand larceny for from one to fifteen years. He was | reteased after one year with a per- fect record. He came to Seattle, practically penniless. He secured employment. But it was not long before his re- formatory record confronted him, and he was compelled to move. The police periodically round up ex-penttentia®® and reformatory in- ‘mates on the general theory that they are responsible for the various thefts around town. The police are supplied from the institutions with} | pictures of these men and their Ber- tillon measurements. < | Police Always After Him | 80 Hogeman left Seattle and went |to Spokane, It was the same story | there. some time. bobbed up again, however, when he brought suit against a wealthy nadian for seducing his wife. Immediately every effort was made to deport Hogeman before the case could come to trial. His pic- ture and record were obtained from the former superintendent of the Monroe reformatory, handed to the chief of police and immigration officials, and a determined cam- paign to banish him from Van- couver was on. Returns to Washington Hogeman, however, stuck to his guns, and fought desperately. He succeeded. The trial resulted in a verdict of $15,000 for Hogeman. Inatoad of taking the money and disappearing to some place where he ts not known, Hogeman returned | to Washington, and, through his at-! torney, Ivan Blair, has now com-| menced suit against the state re-| formatory to prohibit it from ever} sending out photographs and Ber- tillon records of its inmates, “The reformatory,” says FRYE & CO.’ MARKETS AS FOLLOWS: Choice Rib and Loin Mutton Chops ... 15¢ Pot Roew cis ssciceus 148 12:¢ Look for U, 8, Purple Stamp It signifies purity and quality Shops open until 6:20 p, m. Choice Spa Ribs Anchor Brand Bacon, per Ib Pork Liver, 3 Ibe. for ... Hogeman, not a peniten- tlary. It wae meant entirely as an Institution of correction—an Institution of ‘another chance. ‘That ‘other chance’ disappears if the photographs of the In- mates are sent out promiscu- ously.” It is the first time this question has been raised in any state in the country. Hogeman intends to fight it out in the highest court of the land, If necessary. Then he went to Vancouver, | 1B. C. | There he was left in pence for His reformatory record | ig|thix fact quite as much as women | | do, gen | home, and he has made himself the lly cheerful mainstay of the recause he knows that oth Ferguson, economic value, an earning ca-| erwise he wouldn't amount to much in the family. Indeed, he wouldn't belong at all! At the job he has create? for himself he is a wonder Hut since our frightful conditions have forced to becom a wag realized that no labor for she receives money is as hard or long as the UNPAID work of wives and mothers Because woman's work isn’t | pald—IT SHOULD BE PAID— | she will continue to look with | a little awe at the sort of labor that brings a pay envelope. Financially her husband will always be worth to her the price of her own pathetic incompe- | tence. As an economic zero econornic an, too, she whieh } ] } ow. much js a fhusba worth ?’asks Nixola Greele». Smith & | | HANSON GIVEN BiG. WELCOME TACOMA, Wash. July 29.— Pierce county yesterday gave Ole Hanson, progressive candidate for senator, most enthusiastic recep- tions at each of the four meetings he addressed. At McKenna, Hanson was loudly cheered by the mill workers when he demanded that the state and government lands be sold to work- ers and not speculators. At noon, Hanson spoke at the Milwaukee shops. The railroad workers evinced great interest in Hanson's success, At the meeting | in Roy in the evening, farmers | came from miles around. Hanson} discussed state development and his 4% money plan. Local bull moose leaders concede Ole's nomi- nation. eens Mrs. E. M. Rhodes was awarded an $83 judgment against Gus Naher of the Reman apartments, by Justice Fred Brown yesterday when it was shown that the col- ored janitor of the place carelessly burned a number of paintings of Mrs. Rhodes, which he mistook for | rubbish. BARBER KILLED TACOMA, July 29.—While walk- ing with his wife and child at South 40th and L streets last night, Claud I. Mead, a barber, was shot to death by an unknown assailant, who escaped, The police have no clew to the murderer. DIX IS NOW O. K. BREMERTON. July 29,—After undergoing repairs which cost about $15,000, the transport Dix is out of drydock, and her place has been taken by the monitor Chey- enne, which will be given a thor ough’ overhauling BREMERTON, July 29.—Reor- ganization of the Pacific reserve | fleet stationed here and redistribu- | tion of the officers is under way today upon the order of Rear Ad- miral Robert M. Doyle. EVERETT, July 29.—Unique tn the annals of recall elections was that held here yesterday when Al- exander Thompson, recalled from the office of city commissioner a few weeks ago, was nominated for the same office by a subatantial majority. In the final election Thompson will run for commission- er of public works against J. M. RECALLED, NOW NOMINATED Salter, soctaltst two years ago. W. H. Clay won the nomination for commisstoner of finance over C, Christenson, also recalled, by a lfew votes, and, In the finals, will also face a socialist candidate in whom he defeated Frans Bostrom, There were 22 candidates in the field, The vote was not heavy, IDAH PARKER RE- FUSED $1,000,000 — MRS. MODJESKA SAYS HERS IS PRICE- LESS—LILLIAN RUS. SELL SAID, SHOW ME “$1,000,000.” she will barter her soul for bread and butter and condone adultery—sell her own soul—to make certain that her children will never be without shoes! (What is a wife's value to her husband? Who bears the brunt of the domestic arrangement, the husband or the wife? The next article in this series is written by Max Nordau, the famous German author who strenuously takes is- sue with Miss Greeley-Smith, de- fending the husband and placing a high value on hie place In the hom ___ AMUSEMENTS —__ METROPOLITAN. THEATRE ALL THIS WEEK on Wednesdoy und Saturday ALICE FLEMING And the Metropolita “THE MAN INSIDE” Matineos Evenings PANTAGES “FRONTIER DAYS,” “The Round-Up on the Stage” Other Big Acts 10¢ and Ma Bhe. 200 Film Production at the MOORE THEATRE July 26 to August 4 Matinees 3 p. m. Evenings 8 Admission Free. No Collection, MAIN 4891 Our service is swift. Our work high class. Our prices reasonable. No fabric too delicate for our process of cleaning. We remove shine or gloss when possible. Send us something Bard to clean. We will demonstrate the truth of our claims. Phone Us Today Six Wagons at Your Service The CROWN CLEANERS Two Stores 1908 Second, 1831 Fearth, Pt. Bids. War Times Are Higher- Price Times. At All Times You Will Find South-End Public Market In “Market Square” THIRD—WASHINGTON— PREFONTAINE—YESLER Easiest on Your Purse. Some Specials for Thursday: Fine, white new Pota- toes, 13 Ibs.........25¢ Lamb Shoulders, Ib. .9¢ Choice Boiling Beef, Ib. Genuine Pork Sausage, Be. Asics 12%¢ Smelts, 2 Ibs. .. 15¢ 2-Ib. brick Prim-Ost.25¢ Jilg’s Smoked Beef Tongues, whole, Ib. .30¢ 20 Ibs, Sugar.......95¢ Fresh Creamery Butter, RNa 3 Sweet Orange Special, per dozen........... 0 All good, small Canta- loupes, per dozen....25¢ Watermelons, Ib...1%¢ Fancy Hams, half or whole, Ib. .........19¢ Fancy Eastern Bacon, Ib. 22¢