The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 4, 1914, Page 3

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

On Tuesday night, Auguet 18th, at 0 reeult In your gain. $5.00 Work Shoes cut to.. $3.50 Boys’ Shoes cut to. . $1.85 Men's Hats Sut tor ss BBC $4.00 Men's $1 48 $5.00 J. B. Stetson Hats Hats cut to $4.65 $6.85 $9.25 $1.39 Pants cut Pee s... ee Pane, ato. 91.89 ‘ SHOES |.fuustnes pant and $5.00 Dress|jcut to ei ae $1391 Sr Be RED FRONT CLOTHING 1510 FIRST AVENUE cut to .... PARIS, Avg. 25.—(By Mail toy to the story of the white-hatred old woman, long a resident in a little village in the outskirts of Paris, in a house whose shutters were always closed, are thrilled by one of the saddest little incidents of the great war. No one could remember when the shutters had been opened or when it had not appeared solitary and sad. On the day when the French troopa took the field, however, the shutters were suddenly thrown wide, and from each window fut- tered the tri-color, * That evening, walking through the village, the old woman made her way to the fort. “I have a request to make,” she OR. L. R. CLARK, D. OD. 8. LOOKING FOR A GOOD DENTIST CHIASSO, Switzerland, Sept. 4 Nothing but the fear of an antli- military revolt has kept Italy out of the war so long, according to word from many sources on the other side of the border. From the imperialistic standpoint even the! anti-milltarists agree Italy might) gain by joining forces with the al- Nes, assuming they won. Through’ Dr. L. R. Clark, D. D. 8. Manager. 1408 3rd Ave., N. W. Cor. Union St. Note: Bring this ad with you. as the Next Man’s Seattle’s Reliable Credit House is for the great masses of people who are not in a posi tion (or prefer to keep their cash for other purposes) to pay spot cash for their Fall and Winter Clothing. A few dollars down and the balance as you arrange, buys anything to wear from this great stock -f Men’s and Women’s Wearing Apparel. For Men--- We Recommend the Bradbury System Clothes Clothes that are tailored-to-the-minute in the season’s latest style. Blues, Blacks, Grays, Browns, Tartan Checks, Fancy Mixtures, etc. You can have your choice from 1332-34 Second Ave. ecourred on our premises. The Ineurance Company’ Sacrifice Prices Tomorrow---Look oO, RUSSIANS WILL JOIN ALLIES New York.)—-Those who have heard) Today’s Styles Today “Y our” Credit Is Just as Gone 211 Union St. | | | | | lowe will tn ft 75¢ Work Shirts r cut to 25c¢ Sox cut to 50c Underwear cut to $1.50 Dress Shirts cut to.. 15¢ Handker- chiefs cut to.. 75¢ Black Sateen Shirts $3.00 Suit Cases cut to.... 28c jh | tenons 01 | | Lo hm lw lw 87c dose okt . : new coating fabrics shown for F $14 98 bachelor a 6 not because eo « x u from 14 to 44 $2.00 Wool Underwear 9) in ti, St, not, breaunn he wear; sizes run from 14 t ' ut Neve BUT BECAUSE FOR ¥ ’s Si Mom 5/c YEARS HE HAS LOVED one Bi fi a * mma Silk seseceeee eed WOMAN MADLY Lord Hrtcheret. MISES 00. cee eececees 2 35¢ Wool Sox And she will not marry him, This new model has the high neck and long [4 This woman is Lady Naylor-Layand, born Chamberlain (Jennie), tleeves, fashioned of heavy messaline silk; cut to $1.00 Men’s Overalls cut to. . COMPANY bt oO o ™ {he a a told the commander: ‘T would like to have you send one of your men every evening to dine with me, He will be my guent. “Forty-four years ago my fiance, after he had had dinner with me,/a o o him back dead, with two German bullets in his breast. hi “Since then no man has ever en- tered my house, but this ts the hour lof revenge. | “In his place at my table I wonld Mke to see, each day, one of those | who are about to avenge him.” The commander granted the re- lqueat. Each day one of his men dines with the old woman tn her home. One of them, on returning to his command, sald he saw the old woman kneel before a portrait draped in crepe. ITALY HAS CHANCE TO GRAB such an alliance, with a favorable outcome, tt would be practically cer- tain to add to its territories all of Austria's Adriatic provinces, with the {mmensely imporant ports of Trieste and Pola, control, if not |actual possession of Albania, and a |position of such importance in the Mediterranean as to place it in the)" first rank of European nations. Hailed as Woman Hater, English War Hero Madly in Love With American Is, a8 such, the head of the British army fed the ho are always thinking of their Women’s Novelty ives and children,” he sald Black hatred, with dark gray Fall Coats .......... $14.98 eyes that suggest lowering war In the % length models A splendid represen clouds, six feet tall, and atill tation of the newest fads and fancies of the straight as an Exyptian obellak, he does not look Hike a man who is a [4 | friends of the late King Edward. ! Kitchener met the lovely American woman four years ago ri ‘airo, when her husband was stil! altve, and ft , Summoned to retrieve the military fortunes of hin country Roberts he took charge of the situation, and from that hour dated the British vietories which resulted in the downfall of the Dutch republics Kitchener his elevation to the peerage, Kipling’s poem, “You're a poor benighted heathen, but went away to fight. They brought] ing THECLOSED SHUTTER OF PARIS; STAR—FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. PAGE 3. O Kitchener of Khartoum, for war, war will England's new secretary of state Kitchener says the ant three years, ht it out Karl Kitchener ts now Id, Though born in Ir ounty Kerry, in 1860, nglish stock Everything that e has made himself A bachelor at 64, public opinion ax called bim a woman hater. As wirdar of Exypt—really ruler f Egypt, for he has always tgnor khedive-—bhe would have helors about him. and he's ready to to-Wear Underwear and Hosiery for Women and Children. he ts of Kitchener is Women’s New Fall Dresses Specially Priced..............000005 $8.50 niy be Thi tylieh Fall model has the fu tunte skirt, made from all-wool ma In the 13 years’ war he waged tn > ie ” - — : the Soudan, where he made his terials, trimmed with embroidered lace on neck and cuffs, with a wide wn military fame, he chose un frilled girdie of satin around walst, in sizes from 18 to 44. This is a narried men for leadership when splendid representation of what you have been paying $1 8 50 | ever he could. for; Saturday : ' “I don't want men around me Fall styles embodied In these Coats, in all the f Cleveland, ©., and known to her intimates as “Morning Glory,” and neck and collar made of embroi¢ ne of ® group of American women who were the intimate personal to match; sizes run from 44 to 46; exceptionally good value for red silk net $3.98 Fall Coste” 2-98 and $ 7.00 The newest Fall models for Autumn wear, in / a wide range of the season's best and most fashionable fabrics, including Zibeline, Chin- chilla and Astrakhan, in all colors and siz from § to 14 years, Just Arrived—A Big Shipment of Women’s and Misses’ Sweaters in medium and heavy weights, made up in the Norfolk and plain roll collar styles; all colors. Women’s Sweaters. .$4.98 to $9.50 Misses’ Sweaters... .$1.98 to $4.00 MEN’S NEEDS New Anrvals for Fall Wear, Union Made, at Prices Lower Than Ever $3.00 Men’s Wool Union Suit With the closed crotch; regular Fall weight, made by the Wright's Health Underwear Co. A splendid-wear- ing Union Suit, in izes from 34 to 48, THE ROCKWOOD UNDERWEAR FOR MEN has arrived, in white, gray and red. Priced $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 4 garment. This famous Underwear is known the full length and width of these United States for the good quality of yarns used in its manufacture and {ts nonshrinking qual- ities if properly used. MEN’S WOOL SOx, in said that from that noment no other woman has existed for him When the British forces under Gen. Buller had suffered three eartaickening reverses in the Boer war, Kitchener of Khartoum was With Karl It was his 13 years’ campaign in the African Soudan which won & money grant of a milton jollars and his supreme place tn the affections of the British public nd the British solders. The enemy he conquered was no easy foe Tommy Atkins’ respect for the Soudanese fighter wa “Furry Wuzry” expressed in © first-class fightin’ man! Though Kitchener's god is the god of battles, he secks tranquillity f gardens. Flowers are his delight When in Exypt, he bought an island in the Nile and made of it an asis of bloom | Even tn war he has been known to dismount from his horse to pick side blossom. fon the woman of his heart ts known as a lory.” When they made Kitchener war minister, the other day, he moved is bed into the war office! and others that they joined the French and English allies. Both giish and Russian military authorities exercised the utmost precaution in keep- Ing secret the movements of Russian soldiers in England, and while they were being car- ried acroga the isian th acd traffic on the east et th was entirely suspended for 7 hours, during the movement of troop trains. NEW YORK, Sept. 4.—The Hies opposing the German advance toward Par has been reinforced by a Rus sian army of 72,000 men from Archangel, Russia, landed in Aberdeen, Scotiand, August 27, rushed across England in special troop trains, transported from Dover to Ostend, deigium, and hurried to the front, according to officers and passengers of the Cunard liner Mauretania, 12'4¢ PAIR—Worth presen oe ne 20c; a medium heavy Fall weight, in "Tere | divergence of opin- black and natural; specially priced, 2 lon among the passengers as to P H oO 7 oO fOr ss eeeseee Stee eee werner ee eneens 25e the destination of the Russian THE CASTLE GATE SOX FOR MEN— In wool and cashmere, are ready for your inspection. Priced Zhe and 50¢ troops, some believing they were sent to Antwerp to co- operate with the Beigian army, PLAYS This well-known make of sox we es carry in ght weight cashmere and a gh ret WHILE @ Silk medium heavy wool, all colors to pughing in the mountains, Neck: D select from. wear 4] meets a young mountain lass, She 25c, 5c, 75¢ sy} MEN’S FLANNEL PAJAMAS, in falls in Jove with him, not knowing . 7 4 neat stripes and Seutes, cut full ‘that he is married. Newest colors and pat- size, terns, His wife is killed while joy-rid ing with an artist and later the husband finds love letters written to her by him. The mountain lass, | though realizing that she is hurt-| ing her own chances for his love, attempts to secure the letters be fore the husband finds them, in or der to keep his love for his wife! unshaken When he realizes the nobleness of her purpose he asks her to be- come his wife Julia Gordon is the star in me |two-part drama, “The Hidden Let |ters,” at the Class A today . ° MEN’S FLANNEL NIGHT ROBES, with the sattieae 4 or neon collar; priced --69¢, $1.00, $1.25 SHIRTS IN GOLF AND NEG- LIGEE STYLE—Some the Inundered cuffs and neck band, others the soft military collar and French cuffs, in all the new patterns and fabrics shown for Fall wear. Priced anon 98c, = 48 up “at 8 o'clock." ONLY ONE ‘MOVIE? |>s# ‘IS OPEN IN PARIS tion have ° STONEHOUSE, RUTH THE! x5. 108, |little Essanay star, is learning to| loperate a motion picture camera | So well has she progressed that topical; comedy, ant Hour Until Sunday At the Ple “A Ww she was allowed to take several cf pe re ; e's Deceit,” dram The} PARIS, Sept. 4—Paris, the city | but jacenes in “The Devil's Stgnature.”| niood Test,” two-part drama; “Tho | of gayety, the “live town” of the | Mus a ssan en femegg dla 9 za t 1 et leabeageects is beautiful, and Ruth|Cbicken Chaser,” comedy Se tk ee ,.What Americans | must come in for her share of the No theatre . east can credit. ( ; in si eee C m R One “movie” on the boulevards Clemmer Until Saturday Night | © plete eport jis the only entertainment house | | whose doors are not closed. “An Arcadian,” with Mary Pick SWAYNE of Market Today verry ” | The one reel that is being used | ‘ | Canenatne tt quick ord represents the great review at GORDON all, a Grand Old Game,” com-| | Spith and every one, remarks: | Prices Paid Producers for Vegetables and) “What a coincidence that the fleet IN jedies; “Pathe’s Daily News.” re \ s col the “THE HIDDEN Colonial Uneid ‘Saturday Nighe | SOTscsty tat OF 3. W. Gntwin evin. chi teas Serna % olonial Until! Saturday New ue Oly LETTERS” “In the Path of the Fast Ex weet potatoes, Ib Ke MARK MAKES ’EM Two Reel press,” current chapter of the “Mil-| 021008 90 ikea lion Dollar Mystery;” “The Regu-|}')\\ting onions 1.00 | COME OFF PERCH | lar Reanery and the Peachy bb: O1% a eweomer, a George Ade |Cu 35 © | Mark M, Litechman, attorney in| Baers, the T told 1 “Hearst-Selig News Pio-|; “Back to the Farm,” Lubin | carro rh, per wack angle building, Star today a socialist, that he had i 10 dow. } Class A Until Saturoay Night |_ "The Hidden Letter,” two-part |Vitagraph — dr: The Beast,’ with Alice Joyce Lost Cord,” comedy, with Lillan Walker; “The Wrong Fiat,” comedy * per dow. Grand Untll Saturday Night — | iiuratsupes @ 126 El “The Bank Burglar’s Fate,” two-| Cooking apples @ 1.00 | part Reliance drama; “Such a} ©a!. Gravensteins eae | Cook,” Keystone comedy; “The @ 2 ( Butterfly,” American drama, ov | 9 fo ee | @ 1.50 Melbourne Untii Saturday Night |r: for Butter, iN Amount tao small “The Great Mine Disaster,” four-| Cee | part Eclectic drama; “Cashmere,” | Pee ov ic, 10 scenic; “Whipple's Double,” com-|{{yg’orer 4 ibe ‘; as @ 46 || Accident Insurance edy. Rp [aeee, Saunier Core + —A SAVINGS ACCOUNT |bu oun: 10 @ liz Alaska Until Saturday Night ‘food wise, ozs: 200 @ 2.60 Success Insurance “The Last Volunteer,” five-part gee —A SAVINGS ACCOUNT Eclectic drama; “Making Wooden |9'\\\. ue 1s | Ks Shoes” and “Over Paris by Aero-)| veal, 3 3 13% | Business Insurance plane,” educationals, b io Spe pee gery fe aR —A SAVINGS ACCOUNT ne (Corrected daily vy the Bradner Cor |} Og A I Mission Until Saturday Night Fuse ge Insurance ° “Martin Eden,” a Jack London | *** a sot —A SAVINGS ACCOUNT AT PIKE lds Paar lallve Mhenteaton 4 Open An Account Here Now. ? RESIDENCE THEATRES dios cimery,"wolla. pack n |The Bank for Savings 1 At the Home Until Sunday | “Weights and Measures,” two-| wisconsin triple a Third Avenue at Pike. ar part drama; “Animated Weekly,”! Local peaches . 40 en Saturday Until 10 P. M. New Autumn Goods Prices Lower Than Ever—Complete Stocks of Ready- Closed Monday, Labor Day-—Get Your |done in compliance with the law, U.S. Navy Yard Bremerton ae Yard Open Dailyl S. S. H. B. Kennedy Colman Doek 6 Men and Boys, Needed Supplies Saturday 1226 fuct’’ teresiog a Children’s Stockings. Hop- Scotch and Betsy. Spe cial Saturday 12% 1 5 Burson Stockings C tor women, the name on the stockings— extra fi grade, very elastic, Saturday 1b6e. 25 Silk Stockings for © women—the silk just where you want it— our regular 35¢ quality— Saturday 25¢, 5 Pair—Burson Stock- C ing Fee —always 10¢ pair—only a few minutes work to make new stock- ings. Saturday 5e. 69c Knit Petticoats —} plain and fancy ecol- ors, close fitting. Stand ard value for $1.00, Sat urday 6%¢, ‘Some | boys wear this un- derwear all the time. You know what you pay—all sizes Saturday 19¢. Kid Gloves, all col- oc ors, also the well best made for cqunter Saturday 98c. 5 6 Beauty Pins—Per- C oxide, ‘Cude Pi Hair Nets, Toilet Paper, Fancy Soaps, Hair Clasps, 5 Penells. SHOES $1.79 Little Men's Gunmetal Shoes, made for wear; sizes 9 to 13. Boys’ Box Calf Shoes— can 2 $168 $1.88 Sizes 2% to a pair... Misses’. and Chil High- Gunamet Button Shoee— Sizes 8% to 11, a pair Sizes 11% to 2, a pair Boys’ Box Cait Genuine Leather Shoes, heavy for Fall wear— Sizes 13 to 2, a pair Sizes 2% to 5%, a pair .. Growing Girls’ gunmetal calf, dull kid patent leather, low hi and wide toe; the button} style. A splendid ‘aloed the county commission- into appointing him an official, as they should ha’ didn’t until he started manda- proceedings against them, embers of other parties, says, who have a right to the get them if they force the imilar manner. reatest Collier / AT ectrically Controlled, Onl. Vessel of Her Class on LEAVES COLMAN DOCK s. S. H. B. Kennedy leav 0, 10:30 a.m. 30, 6:30 p,m. Other boats aQ a. m, aud 2 p,m, Fare, round trip, 50c, ‘en, 5 to 12, 260, Chih)

Other pages from this issue: