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‘STAR—WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 12, 1914, PAGE 2. STAR THURSDAY The Balmacaan or Every-Event Coats We have just received twenty-five of these 3S Ladies’ White Lingerie Waists, values to About 100 Misses’ White Middies, values to 7 sm About 48 Ladies’ Striped Wash Skirts, value Mm About § dozen Children’s and Misses’ ¢ EMAM will go Thursday at one price jored Embroidered Towels 19¢ Fine White Huck Towels, | size 18x34. scalloped ends; also beautifully embroidered in a number of handsome de. signs. Specially priced, each | 190. red border; Huck Toweling priced, yard, 3c, 19¢ GLASSWARE Tea Pots |Fish or Game Sets White | FOR toc Imported ones (English $1.50 Plates 5c A table Rockingham), worth up to| Fish and Game Seta, | Preesed Ginssware. | 490. Three sizes, plain consisting of six serving | Pie or meat a Sak or decorated. Your choice | plates and medium sized | sizes. Price be ag agg tor 26e. platter. Price, set, $1.50, | each Mata Fleer. and Costume Pliese in a full colors and patterns. For ladies’ dresses; also kimonos and dr 32 Inches wide. “Worth tse a yard. of & to 20 yards. Special price, Windsor Cro) line of desirable or wash sacqu At Our Drug Counter Sanitary Napkins, filled with absorbent cotton. | Box of @ Napkins, regular 26c, now.. -1e Box of 12 Napkins, regular Sec, now . Be Glycerine Toilet Soap, 3 cakes for. sashes, for 25¢. An adv $1.48 5% Wash Dresses Special Announce Unusual Buying Opportunities for Star Readers for Tomorrow — Thursday New Fall and Winter Coats Coats, made of Scotch Heather wool mixtures, houses, comprising the newest styles and new im gray and brown, the most serviceable, good est clothe to be worn this season, are now Jooking garment any woman can buy. This ts awaiting your inspection. Popular prices pre A regular $10.00 coat, Thursday, special $6.98. vail, Your criticism solicited. BARGAINS FROM OUR ECONOMY BASEMENT Toweling | Siac 17-inch brown cotton Crash, also white cotton ly | x 75c French Crepes 49c Imported French Crepes, 40 Inches wide, tn « line of plain colors blue, gray and lavender, Spectal priced, yard, 49 STAR THURSDAY shipment from three different tar Bargain JUST for Thursday (Odd and Broken Lots) \39c COMFORTS 98c to Sap Mere y want 1 or down have them Main Floor, white, otel, Regular pink, peach, The values At Our Ribbon Department A lot of new Fancy Silk Ribbons, in Hght or dark colorings. belts, ete. JOHN PANTON(O. Seattie’s Popular-Priced Department Store SECOND AVENUE, BETWEEN SPRING AND SENECA AMERICANS IN WAR ZONE) T[ABHINGTON, Aug. 12.—Ac- to a bulletin issued by the ip department here, the following of Americans is estimated fm the war zone: Russia, 200 to 300; Dinard, France, ; Bergen, Norway, 30; Venice, ; Lisbon, 25; Sweden, 500 to! Italy, 6,500; Geneva, 300; St Switzerland, 200; Atx-la-Bain, 300; Barcelona, 300; Havre, several hundred; Carlsbad, | bad and Frazenbad, 1,000; and suburbs, 10,000; Den- 500; Switzerland, 8,000; Par- 7,000; Austria, 1,200. ts depend upon her digestion | ition. Saliow ekin, pimples, | blemishes and depression dis- after the » sel ne been d and the b! ified by EECHAM'S PILLS Deedes Soc! Vale to Women wth bond t- Ay Mr. Out-of-Town Buyer Order your printing by mali ed States of clothes. ing “ready-to-wear’ pean goods now ready to meet | wearing apparel. But peace-abiding clothing. |for Europe's carnage ing apparel. |the woman who Paris” ivory combs FRANK P. NOLAN | 1407 Fifth Ave. wg will save you money on all toca orders. on PARIS, Aug. | wy, it w ing. _ ALBERT HANSEN deweler and Silversmith Is Now Located at His New Store 4010 Second Ave.. Near Madison. | tler fortifications The Germans are bays Just right for Values to 45c. hair bows, Your choice Use our Rest Room. Telephones. Visit our Tea Room, Ack for our Spectal inducements. WAR STRIKES DAME FASHION; PARIS MODELS PUT ON BLINK Europe's war may strip the Americans will pay “war prices” for their fall the Unit-| Within the next few weeks Amer- fean women will be helping to pay by paying double for hats, and hosiery, kid gloves and other articles of wear- The girl who buys a 2-cent hair |net at the notion counter; lady who wears cashmere gloves, “made-in- and brushes | tor her dresser, will be reminded | within the next few weeks that) | she and every other American is in the grip of a world-war. old | Although. dealers in all parts of } the country have thelr fall and win American factories are already|ter clothing stock now on hand,| working overtime, mills are weav-|they are disposing of it *Paringly | ing silk and cotton, shops are mak- clothing—the ; American manufacturer is on the|the war and Job, and before the supply of Euro-| guess when foreign trade will be on hand fs ex-| resumed. hausted American factories will be the demand for and at advanced prices. They cannot foretell the end of they cannot even Kid gloves will appear from the American market. | We have very few kid glove fac tories in this country, and all of the fine grade kid gloves are tm ported from «rance. Dame Fashion Gets Hers Dathe Fashion of Paris will be one of war's first victims, Her scepter is likely to be tossed in the rubbish heap with the crowns of war-breeding kings and kaisers {f the war continues until Easter time. This is the prediction made by Mme. Ala Ripley of Paria and Chi cago, and president of the Chicago) Dressmakers’ soctety. American style will rise from the! ruins of Paris fashions, French |movement through Belgium to Lille. | at Long: announced here today. It is said there was severe fight- tainty. The official version ts that It was at Longwy that the Ger- province are entrenched south an army of the Moselle attempted Mulhauesn, to invade France, striking at a gap German attack. north of Verdun, on the Gallic fron- reported great strength, with cavalry raiders Germans Using Krupp Guns on French at Longwy | 12-—The | have checked the Germa Concerning developments in Al sace there is considerable uncer-| *| he French troops which invaded the| of withstanding a fierce The Germans, {t 1s said, are using thelr new Krupp guns of tremen-| in dous range. | The French artillery ts declared screening their entire front. It was to be extremely effective, and the believed this attack Is designed to brilliancy of the French cavairy divert attention from a German charges is especially commended by two weeks EXAMINATION 22K Gold Crowns. ,.$5.00 Bridgework 5.00 Full Set of Teeth... ''$5.00) Porcelain Crown. ....$3.50 Gold Fillings .......$1.00 Silver Fillings. 50¢ We do exactly Lady Attendant. boys in wooden guns downtown streets. to save gasoline. 'erms to auit and away from the war excitement The vacation SCHOOL CURBS WAR SPIRIT hed in LONDON, Aug. 12—-A hur- ried opening of schools has been ordered by the London ‘ounty council in order to take all boys and girls off the street of was shortened At the signal for war troops of paper caps mare! and with The police were powerless to stop them and they interfered with such traffic as remained after bus lines stopped in order | ATLANTIC ROUTE IS OPEN; SHIPS CLEAR MONTREAL, Aug. — The route is now clear from Montrea! to LAverpool, according to advices officially received today from Otta 12, Information Wanted An appeal to the publid for tn- formation concerning (the Ot! Fields of Clallam and , Jefferson County, There are thousands of people who would be glad to know {if there is iy i me 4 gatural/ oll seepage work guaranteco 15 veara jcoming to the “surfdee in these CODE 18 DEFECTIVE jcounties, and if so, your informa Oo Defects ip the city building code | tion Will anaist in the development permit an increased fire hazard, ac- jand upbuilding of thd great natural PAINLESS DENTISTS§ corcion to the betiet of the build | resource tet and Pike, Opp. Public Market Laboring People’ ead grounds committee of the ial league. The com: fittee | information ‘is wyrking out a remedy. Please write at one and give all possfble to 8-728, Care Star. . practically dis-| | morning, Mme. Ripley also predicts that/ wa, and ships will be permitted to sail when they choose. As a reeul’/! of this information, several cargos of wheat will immediately ledve for England, BRITISH WAR | grounch. Turkey May Take Crack at Roumania SALONIKA, “hur. 12—There ts one country tn Burope without a spark of anti-militarist sentiment Turkey How ft has managed to keep out of the general melee so long ts a mystery In the rest, even of the Balkan states, there are elements which op. pose participation in the war, If there fs a Turk who holds such views he has yet to be heard from, The whole people are boiling with eagerness to recover what they loat in thetr struggle with the Balkan| The general opinion among Greeks Is that the ruling powers at Constantinople have mn holding off until they see how they ean take & hand with the best advantage to the » n, Unless they decide either In favor of Germany or the Anglo-Latin-Slay alliance, it ts cer tain that they will begin war inde pendently within the next few days The beat Judges look to see them join Bulgaria tn an indiscriminate attack on Greece, Servia, Roumanta | and Montenegro. Kaiser Puts Veto | on Plan to Take | Liege by Assault Aug It was the f who vetoed the carrying of the Liege forts by storm, Gen. Von Stein of the German war office an 4 here today nt of delay, Gen. Em. man commander in Bel. ted to resort to assault, ine of ‘waiting for siege guna Learning that the Germans had/ stready lost heavily in their infant ry and cavalry attacks, his majesty | ordered operations lopped until | ommuniecation could be restored and «lege batteries pushed to the front, where field cannon had) proved Inadequate. The kaiser was of the opinion, Gen. Von Stein edded, that the forts were not of suffictent mill- tary {mportance to warrant the loas of life which a general assault would ‘o involved. The general also asserted that Belgian eccounts had greatly misrepresented the Liege fighting. In the first place, he dectared the Belgians outnumbered ¢ le denied, too, th the German losses even ap- Proximated the figures given out by the Brussels war office. The siege guns, he conclude ed would soon demolish the fortifications. Impatt CRAFT DIDN'T | KNOW OF WAR SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 12.—~The captain of the steamship Beaver, | which arrived from Portland this reports seeing the Brit-| ish cruiser Algerine at 5:30 p. m. Tuesday off Cape Mendicino, The. two vessels hove to and talked freely for some time through megaphones, According to the Beaver's captain, the command-| er of the warship told him the Al |xerine had been cruising about | jaimlessly for 10 days and had re | ceived no word from the outside world She did not even know, he said, that France and Germany were at war. A request was made that {f the Beaver met the German crufser Laipsie, that the latter be not told of the Algerine’s presence in Northern waters. Seattle isn't an old city, and tf ft has growing pains, don’t foster a PR LL LOONIE LLEN NIE MEAT PRICES CUT FRYE & COS MARKETS AS FOLLOWS: ve AOC Choice morules Pork Steak Choice Shoulder of Lamb .. ‘ Choice Steer Shoulder Choice Steer Pot Roast Anchor Brand Bacon, per Ib Choice Dry Salt Pork’ (backs), per Ib. ...... 136 Look for U. &. Purple Stamp It signifies purity and quality Shops open until 6:20 p. m, ‘$1 People surging through Hyde Park, London, waiting for bulletins ve ‘mes peace negotiations with Ger- This picture taken about four days before the declaration many. oe a a i osc A API ed 3 MORE NATIONS FACING WAR Denmark to Move Upon Kaiser Next COPENHAG Aug. 12— Denmark is massing troops along the German frontier. The Danes are convinced they hav ly escaped an at- tempt German inva: long because naval operations between the kaiser’s and the British forces have lagged. They feel sure that sooner or later, the German fieet will the Baltic its refuge, and to keep the British out control of the nd a strip of along Sweden's land western coast—perhaps also a bit of southern Norway. All plane have been made In ion by land or a landing by Sweden and Norway also are prepared to defend their neutrality by force of arms. The Germans’ indifference te Beigium’s neutrality procilama tlon and treaty rights produced a@ profoundly painful impree sion here and at Christiania. British cruiser and three French warships reported off Nantucket. AMUSEMENTS MOORE—Tonight #-. Balance of Week. Pop. Mat. Bat Night, § o'clock; Mat, 2 p.m Curtains . THE SEASON'S SUPREME SPECTACLE GUY BATES POST Omar »Tentmaker A Persian Romance, by Richard Walton Tully, Author of “The Bird of Wights, Bip to Sts Sak. Sats Boe to $1.50; KAISER HAS $120.000.000 FOR WAR, AND FOOD TO PROVISION ARMIES FOR 12 MONTHS The following are excerpts from,;drawbridge and these pieces are an article on “The German War | Stored away In the steel-plate sub- Machine,” appearing In the current issue of Collier's Weekly, written by Dr. Armegnard Karl Graves, former member of the German se cret service . Germany has 25 army corps, ali placed in etrategical positions. The strongest Is in Alsace-Lorraine and along the Rhine, the second In Im- portance garrisoning the Prussian- Russian border. The whole country ie subdivided into Bezirks commandos (district | } terranean chambers of the Julius Thurm, ready at an Inestant’s no- tice to furnish the sinews to the man wielding this fore: This is a treméndous power in Itself, for there are now close to 500,000,000 marke ($120,000,000) In| minted gold coinage in storage there, This provides the neces sary funds for the German army for 10 calendar months. The thorities have no necessity to ask the country, warring politiclane— In thie instance the Reichstag—for money to start a campaign. They posts), whose business it is to have | have got It ready to hand. Once a on rocerd not only every able-bodied ervis ut every motor,| |feree, het vehicle available; aiso food and coal supply—in fact, ev- lerything likely to be wanted or) | useful to the army. eee Last, but not least, under the heading of Organization comes the financial aspect. Out of the five | milliarde of france paid by France |to Germany in 1871, 200,000,000 _ marks in gold coins, mostly Frenoh, | were put away as the nucieue of ready war chest. In a@ little m dieval-looking watch tower, the Jullue Thurm, near Spandau, ties this ever-increasing, driving force of the mightiest war engine the world has ever It is ever inc ng, for quietly, and unobtrusively 6,000,000 in ly minted gold coins are ti en year by year and added to the store. On the first of October each year since 1871 three ammunition wagons full of bright and gilttering 20-mark pi cla over the OHIO METHOD IN DENTISTRY Missing teeth are replavec by The Ohio Method by artificial teeth that are natural as your original teeth. Examinations aro now be ing conducted without charge, and estimates are furnished In all We Stand Back of Our Work for 12 Years’ Guarantee. pe ied gE $15 Set of Teeth Guaranteed Solid Gold or Porcelain Crown. Gold or Porcelain $10 Bridge Work. Solid Gold Fillings. $1. 00 Up Other Fillings 50¢ Office hours, 8:30 to 6, Sundays, 9 to 12. OHIO Cut-Rate Dentists 207 UNIVERSITY STREET, CORNER SECOND AVENUE. war is dectared and started, they REPORTERS GO TO FIGHT; PAPERS QUIT PARIS, Aug. 12.—The women of Paris have risen to the emergency Treated by drafting the men of the elty for the army. Society women took the place of men clerks in stores to sell neces. sities. Young girls sold tickets in the underground stations, Others act ed as waiters in cafes, Grocery stores and meat shops were run by women. Small boys were put on as guards of the un- derground trains, The motormen are aged, gray-caired men, ineligi- | ble for service in the army. The fashionable stores on the Rue de la Paix are nearly all closed. Parisian “creations” can be bought almost for nothing, but the Americans here are not pur- chasing, first, because of the dif- ficulty in obtaining cash, and sec- ond, because ratiroads are refusing to take anything but hand baggage. Benett Is Reporter The war has leveled all classes. James Gordon Bennett, millionaire owner of the New York and Paris Herald, is acting as a reporter for his newspaper, going daily to the American embassy to collect “stories.” Nearly all Paris newspapers have nded, owing to lack of print paper and the answering of the call to the colors of their reporters, ed- {tors and printers. PLAN LEVY TO MEET REVENUE DEFICIT WASHINGTO! Aug. 12.—As soon as Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo returns tomorrow, Rep. Underwood will take up with him the plans for a war tax to meet the |loss of revenue through the falling off of imports, The ways and means committee has called for a | statement of the condttion of the | treasury. Legislation contemplat- ing a war tax of $100,000,000 is not unexpected, FASTENS BLAME OF WAR ON AUSTRIANS ST. PETERSBURG, Aug. 12.— That the national conscience Russia {s clear, and that Austria {s to blame for the war tn her effort to provoke internecine war be- tween the Slavs, was the statement made by M. Sazonoff, minister of foreign affairs, before the Russian duma, Germany, he sald, could have stopped Austria by a single word, and it failed. Wednesday Matiner, Hest Seats, $1.00. MARCUS LOEWS fEmpress ALWAYS 10 %0 20¢ NEW POLICY QUALITY VAUDEVILLE AND PHOTOPLAYS ous. 1:30 te 6:80 10 to 11:00 ‘10c and 150 10c, lbe and 200 ND sHOW PANTAGES Menlo Moore's Success “THE FAIR CO-EDs” and ide inp aia ee ec: it. The economic feeding of three | quarters of a million men in peace time is work enough. It becomes |@ serious problem tn the event of | war, especially to a country’ like Germany, which is somewhat de- Pendent on outside sources for the feeding of her millions. The authorities, quite aware of a possible blockading and consequent stopp: of imports, have made preparations with their usual Ger man completeness. At any given time there is euf- ficient foodstuff for man and beast stored in state storehouses and the larger private concerns to tire German army for Afternoons, conti! Nights, continuou: Afternoon Prices.... Night ‘fe 100 and 26. THE VIRGINUS HOTEL cy in we av. Virgin! SS \W. je storehouses 8 are overhauled, and perishable or deteriorating provisions replaced. Tens thousands tons of foodstuffs, especially fodder, are sold far be- low their usual market prices to jern, elegantly furnished outside rooms, with the, best accommodations i Jeanlinets, comfort and courtesy for the Germany is pleasani to the eyes of | jeas Transienta, ve to. $i. those who knew conditions in| W he Conventently located some other countries | could men. | {or Walking and street cars tion, pudgy-fingered psc contractors in GERMAN WARSHIP GIVEN A DRUBBING BOSTON, Aug. 12—Capt. Ter- Jessen of the Norwegian fruit steamer Loveland, which arrived yesterday, reports the defeat of a German cruiser in an engagement with a British cruiser about 250} miles porth of San Salvador. WOMEN DEFEND | TOWN WITH WATER} PARIS, Aug. 12. — Women workers In the Belgian nation- al arms factory at Horstal, just outside of Liege, defended the factory from the Germans by pouring hot water on the enemy, after their ammunition had given out. At last ac counts they were stil! holding the German soldiers at bay. BRITISH FREIGHTTER DOESN’T FEAR WAR The British freighter Colusa, of| the W. R. Grace & Co, fleet, is tak- ing on cargo at Sound ports tn prep- aration for an exciting voyage to the west coast of South America. | The big vessel was tied up here aft-| er the war started, but yesterday went to Tacoma. Her coat of white has been changed to a dull gray, A STAR WANT AD will | sell it quickly. BULL BROS. Just Printers) 1013 THIRD «AIN 1043 Can Be Seen at Navy Yard Bremerton S. S. H. B. Kennedy LEAVES COLMAN pock. 8. S. H. B. Kennedy leaves) Colman Dock 6:30, 10:30 a. m.; 1:30, 5:30 p.m. Other boats at 8 a. m, and 2 p. m. Far round trip, dren, 5 to 12, 25¢, 50c, Chil. McCarron’s Rapid Shoe Repairing BOOTS AND SHOES ¥%s 2 Measure, NEW AND REPAIR WORK IN ALL BRANCHES 104 CHERRY ST., AT 1ST AVE. 10 SECONDS’ WALK PIONEER 6QUARE SAVES TRANSFERS |