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. “Franzenburg,” Summer Home of Emperor F ancla Joseph. STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 3, 1914, PAGE 5. Austrian Parliament Bulidings in Vienna. With Fels-Naptha Soap the drudgery of washday vanishes. Did you know that a } size? you frigh right. Anty Drudge Helps Others , DR. L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8. PERSONAL ATTENTION HONEST METHODS WRITTEN GUARANTEE No transient and non-graduate help that {s not personally inter-| ested in your case is @ point that) makes us the best. TEETH THAT FIT Remember, if you are bothered with your plate slipping or drop- ping when you eat or talk, then there is only one thing to do. That is, investigate our famous Never- slip Plate. You can bite apples or eat corn off the cob. Regular extra heavy $10.00 Gold Crown, $4.00. WE GIVE GAS Regal Dental Offices Dr. L. R. Clark, D. D. S., Manager 1405 3rd Ave., N. W. Cor, Union St. Note: Bring this ad with you Send the Heavy Work to Us. Wet Was ROUGH DRY 2% Cents Fer Pound Dry Weight 419 Cow Per Doren Minimum Bundle 50c A Coupon in each package tells all about our Colonial Dinner Set offer, S Call Queen Anne The Washing’s Fine CENTRAL LAUNDRY AUTO SERVICE Snow White Work EXISTS HERE today in the offices of J. E. Chil- berg, it was decided that no emergency existed here to warrant the issuance of clearing house cer- tficates. “We are watching the situation, said Chilberg, who is vice presi- dent of the Scandinavian American bank and at the head of the local clearing house, “and that was the purpose of the meeting.” | Seattle bankers today recetved | word from Secretary of the Treas- | ury McAdoo, offering them the loan | of $1,000,000 to tide over any embar- | rassing condition here. There bas been no acceptance of the offer, in- smuch as the local condition is re- garded as satisfactory. ‘SEIZE STEAMER NOVO ROSSIYSK, Russia, Aug. 3.—The port authorities seized to |day the German steamship Atlas. | Russian war vessels are also pur- suing German craft which sailed from here Saturday. | THE HAGUE, Aug. 3.—German | troops are reported today to have occupied Arion, In Belgium. Fight- | ing between German and French detachments is reported at Joncher- \ry, near Belfort. There was much anxiety concerning Holland’s fate in the present struggi ROME, Aug. 3.—Italy almost si- multaneously proclaimed today its neutrality in the war and ordered a complete mobilization of its mili- tary forces. It was insisted the mobilization was merely precau- | tionary. Modern Dentistry EXAMINATION 22K Gold Crowns...$5.00 Bridgework ........$5.00 Full Set of Teeth.... Porcelain Crown Gold Fillings . Silver Fillings. We do exactly as advertised, Lady Attendant, Terms to sult All work guaranteed 16 years. ELECTRO PAINLESS DENTISTS jet and Pike, Opp. Public Market Laboring Peoples ventists. doesn’t it? But you need tened if you know the way to do it EMERGENCY | VESSEL SEIZED At a meeting of Seattle bankers Primula, bound in twenty-five years a woman washes through a pile of clothes 1000 times her Sounds big enough to fri hten m t be By using Fels-Naptha Soap you can do these things: in half the time it used to You can get through e; youcan use cool or lukewarm water, because it works best in that; you can throw away 4 your washboiler, because clothes washed ‘). with Fels-Naptha Soap don’t need boil- ing Pt can save your hands, because the clothes won *t need hard rubbing. Better bry Fels-Naptha by the carton or box. | THEATRES | THE METROPOLITAN COPENHAGED Aug. 3-1 first capture of a commercial ves sel of the present war occurred yes- | @ terday, when the Finnish steamer; from Lubeck to Helsingfors, with 50 passengers, was captured by Germany. The pas sengers were sent here aboard the steamer Malmoe. “Graustark,” the new play at the Metropolitan, fs a splendid vehicle for full display of the finished work of Miss Alice Fleming, the new leading woman. As “Princes: Yetive” she is charming and man fens ages the difficult features of the Listen, fellers. Two circuses|role with marked ability comin’. ‘The Gentry Brothers’ show|A. Meade, on his return was is to be here August 7 and 8, at/cheered last night as “Grenfall Fourth ay. and Lenora st. Barnum|Lorry.” The Metropolitan Players & Bailey will show August 17 and|in the cast live up easily to the 18, at Third av. and Republican st. ‘high ndard of the house, Carnation Milk From Contented Cows Whipping cream not always necessary Instead of paying extra for special whipping cream, try Carnation Milk next time. You will be well satisfied with the results when used on desserts, puddin, gelatines, etc.—also when serv with coffee or chocolate. Carnation Milk is clean, sweet and pure —alwaye ready for use. Try the accompanying recipe for whipping. At your grocer er delicatessen j wae Dwight) The letter from a “Sensible Moth er,” printed in my columns a few days since, has brought some in. teresting discussions as to whether it fs the best policy to bring chil {dren up with the rod The following letters arrived in the same mail-—a curious and not unusual coincidence; one from a | mother, the other from a child, and | both serving as a sort of answer to the other: Dear Miss Gray: Please let an | old woman answer the mother who | uses the dog whip on her little one. | That was always my system exact ly. | made them toe the chalk |mark. | found more good “moral suasion” in a whip properly applied | than in all the goody.goody theories of those who bell d in natural development. | believed in pruning same as a young tree, and my gir! certainly a model—nice, well- behaved. She married very young and In raised on sympathetic lines. The daughter was a nervous child and it was seldom she visited me | without her mother, but one hot day in August, 1896, in Ohio, they, the boy and girl, 6 anc 8 years old, |eame early to apend the day with grandma. Their father had died | three years before, and their moth- day to attend to some ess. By some miechance, Ruth broke a vase | prized very highly and | got down the dog whip and used It exactly the same as i had on her mother, and James, the boy, came at me like a little fiend, so | had to whip him also and quite severely before | conquered him. They ran off in the heat of the day for home and be. fore reaching there, Ruth, who had cried all the way, fell in convul- sions and neighbor found them and took her to her mother. The child must have been sick for two | days, anyway; later, she died and | | did not even know it until a neigh. bor came and told me. 1 went right over and never wil! |! forget how my daughter looked at me and said one word, “Murder. before knew anything time | listened over and over to the story of her childhood, the = Ringstrasse, Beautifully Double-Parked Street in Vienna. turn had a fine girl and boy that she! er went to town on this particular) Chk whippings and fear of a child Ilved over. When she was able to sit up she | sold her farm for @ song, took her boy and, without on: rd, left for- ever her girlhood scen ind me. Two years ago | lost everything | had and she wrote offering me a/ home. She Is kind. | have my |lodge and church and everything |comfortable, but | have no daugh- ter—jur stranger, who sees | 1 kept. 8 8 married again. | never saw | her angry but once, when her hue- pose TABLISHED Dougall - fouthwick KR. B. GAGE, Necetver SEOOND AY. and PIKE BT. co 300 Messaline and Petticoats Have Just Been Received to Sell “ $1.95 $2.95 $3.95 Messaline and Silk Petticoats with 12-inch pleated and corded flounces, in all the new shades, at $1.95. Jersey Jersey Top Petticoats with fitted bands and messa- line flounces 6 and 12 inches wide, in a full range of new shades, at $2.95. All Jersey Petticoats with fitted bands, 6 to 12-inch | Other models have the | May be had Second Floor. pleated flounces, snap fasteners. Jersey top and 1@-inch messaline flounce in the latest shades at $3.95. Broken Lines of Waists There are many lots of new Waists which are minus some sizes and therefore offered at very much reduced prices. $2.95 to $6.50 Waists Reduced to $1.65 band brought home a whip tc use! on a pup he was trying to train. | thought she had become unemotion- | al until then. j Her husband and son, who h grown into a promising young ma worship her and | have the mem-| ory of many dog whips to carry into the beyond with me—and, God |help me, nothing else. | MRS. J. EL. My Dear Mises Gray: My mother, (1 can ecarcely call her that), used to beat me three or four ti: My mind was never fr time something overbu It. She was always suspiciously watch- ing me, longing to pound me, utter. | ing matidictions and threats. No freedom or girlhood was mine until! | was married at the age of fifteen. | Now all is sunshine. Sometimes | 1 think | going to awaken and find myself back there again; som | times that that other was a terrible |nightmare, | must tell you now, }1 told you before, but under differ. ent Initiale—l dared not use my own. You told me to go to Judge Frater and ask for protection. My mind ie free at last, no malidictions, not even ig. My happiness has come | have found peace at last. Tonight, when | read the letter of “Sensible (7) Mother,” it reminded me of all. If she doesn’t make any- thing of this, perhaps she may live long to regret it. Love and best wishes to you with \real meaning, from My. 1. B. ° “Mra. V. L. V.": Send me a || stamped, self-addressed —en- velope and repeat your request | and I will an r you per- sonally. CYNTHIA GREY. 1 ©) $25 For Three Months Evening Courses in Electrical, Gas Steam Engineering or Me- chanical Drawing. SEATTLE ENGINERRING SCHOOL 110 W. Hoy st. ATTENTION, LADIES | We are the only factory tn Beattie) ovating lade Milan, hemp, We guaran straw, ER HAT Co, Windsor Apts. . dys and curt plumes paradise rebranched SEWING %$ MACHINES New Machines rented. WHITE SEWING MACHINE Co. and Up 1424 Third (Near Pike) NU BONE CORSETS able Sik Hostery ws BANK 4435 Main 18% Optical Department CUT RATES Dr. ©. 'T. Knowlton in Charge. |BEST IN THE WORLN Do, you nee pe eo rieiatbie aT¥0OM jlens? It tsa HL NI LSI perfect lens for istant as well UOTSTA a1qnoq ae near reading or vision. 8 ATAISIANI but until ist I will them for ing to the re- quirements of the case, It is your advan- @ to consult this Optometrist about yo eyes; he preseribes, grinds and fits ail lenses, 1 wt ‘ou money and guarantee sa DWN, f . EDWIN Main Optical Department, 705 First Ave, Washington Bldg. Oftices 101 t to 190. BROWN’S |” Q—A few days ago, | happened |to go into a 5, 10 and 15-cent store |to buy some stamps, They run a [slot machine with stamps in it. | You put In a Scent piece and re- |celve only four t-cent stamps or two 2.cent stamps. Now, Miss Grey, is this right to Uncle Sam? || have always understood that it Is a criminal offense to make a profit on stamps. Perhaps | am wrong, but | wouldn't buy any at that store, as It seemed unfair to me. | Please answer, If it Is against the law, It seems to me they should be reported. MRS, R. L. T. A—The government disposes of stamps in the same proportion when they sell A book of 12 2-cent stamps for 25 cents, so I presume private parties cannot be prosecut- jea for dealing in a like manner, Q.—(1) Should a young man al- | ways call ona girl after taking her |out somewhere? (2)—(a) Should he his calling card every time he calls or only the first time? (b) Should he leave one for her mother, too? (3) Can Tuxedos be worn anywhere that a dre suit should be worn? (4) Is*there any reliable, up-to-date book or booklet on iquette which one could read to advantage? (5) At the t Is it proper to have a fork, a knife or a spoon partly on the table and partiy on the plate, thus forming a sort of gang plank? 1 will be more than thankful to, you, Cynthia Grey, if you will an- | swer all these questions. A.—(1) Not unless he wishes to| continue the friendship, in which |case he may either call again or ask her to accompany him some- | where again, (2) It is not neces-| sary always, It depends largely }upon the home he visits and the | ;customs of those living there, If |they are punctilious about such things and wé@uld consider the omission a breach of etiquette, he | would better regard the conven. tion. (b) If’he leaves one for the | young lady, he should leave one for | her mother or some older member of the family, (3) The diction as regards Tuxedos is different in vari- | ous sections of the country, but it is usually worn only on certain oc- casions that are governed by so- clety and is worn for the most part by the younger men, while a dress suit is correct at any formal affair, (4) “Manners and Social Custdms.” (5) No. /—Please tell me on what day of | week | was born. | was born| y 25, 1866, LAURA, A.—Wednesday. ELKS GO VISITING | Five hundred Seattle Elks went to Anacortes yesterday, where they were the guests of the Anacortes lodge, th I — | through the INEXPERIENCED, |* Lingerie waists that are lace trim- med and plain, high and low neck with long and short sleeves; hand- kerchief linen waists with low neck and short sleeves in white and colors also a few flannel and challis tai- lored waists in white with colored stripes, all reduced to $1.65. Lingerie Waists Reduced to $2.95 These are high and low neck models, with long and short sleeves, plain, embroidery and lace trimmed also semi-tailored waists in col and handkerchief linen, low neck with full-lengtn sleeves and shorten There are also some models in caded and colored batiste, al values at $2.95. Second MacDougall-Southwick Second Av. and Pike Wilson Warns [RESERVES ARE news! CALLED HERE : Financial News appealed today| M. R. de Lobet-Mahy, vice com WASHINGTON, dent Wilson - sul for France at Seattle, has im Washington newspa- | siieq a call for all reserves to ap pef correspondents to the press of |Dear at the consulate, 1302 Seneca the country not to publish any sen- | s+ to arrange for transportation in sational or unverified statements. | page they are called to war. He declared that the U. 8. 1s pre-/cimilar call has been issued by the pared to meet any financial situa-|German vice consul, Baron Wolf tion which might arise from the | yon Loehneysen, European war. | The Russian vice consul, N. Bo Unfounded reports, he said, | olaviensky, declares there will be might cause unreasonable alarm. (no Russians leave Seattle for the The president told the corre-| front, spondents that America could reap greatest lasting glory by “seeing that no one lost his head.” ae BEST JOKE SERVIANS TAKE THE AGGRESSIVE jesse soto 'cerriace, and he wer | lected to assist her. “You are not so gallant, John, as NISH, Aug. 8.—Servia assumed|whon I was a gal, sh an aggressive attitude today. With|in gentle rebuke, ae Montenegrin troops supporting | “No,” was his ready response, them, Servians were preparing to |« invade Bosnia with the view of pro- voking a Bosnian revolution. BELGIANS HOLD | OFF THEIR FIRE. | BRUSSELS, Aug. 3.—The main | portion of the German army in Bel- gium had reached the River Meuse, ten miles northeast of Liege, today. Belgian troops were refraining from firing on the invaders, Ant- werp was under martial law. d you are not when I was a boy!" SUSPENDS PAYMENT PARIS, Aug. 3.—The government today suspended payment of debts until August 31 Wa REDUCED FARES TO THE EAST Summer excursion fares on sale daily until Sept. 30, to all principal Eastern points. Take your so buoyant as vacation or busi- ness trip via the Union Dentists Gold Crowne Bridgework Plates Gold FI Alloy Silver Fillings Painioss Extraction . Wn offer yi tal work would Ike garding the Our consulting good, first ol; moderate pric ars | your mouth. spectalist has had years of experience, and his opinion of your condition will be valuable to you With the ald of first class material and a modern equipment we are able 0 serve you well, and having confi i Genee In our ability to produce tasting J] Going limit, remults in all branches of dentistry, we || 15 days; final offer you a 16-year xuarantes. ‘All work done painlessly by modern || return, October electrical devic 31, 1914, Liberal INVESTIGATE OUR EASY]! stopovers going PAYMENT PLAN, Bxamnation free, Office hours, 9 to ¢; evenings by appointment. Sundays 9 tol pm Union Dentists LADY ATTENDANTS and coming with choice of routes. For fares, reservations, tickets, schedules, routes call on | J H. O'Neill, D. © A, 715 2nd Ave. Main 932 permanently located on cor. e and Third, with entrance © at, over Owl Drug Co. ner 805% Pik