The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 8, 1914, Page 3

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L The new “Redingote” is here. The material is all- wool poplin, bound in silk braid; the collar and belt trimming are of black vel- vet Skirt is plain with but- ton trimming, and a grace- ful flare; colors, black, brown, green and plum. We navy, also show this model in black and navy cheviot, without braid trimming. Your choice of these models, special for altera- No charge tions. A few dollars is all that is required at Se- attle’s Reliable Credit House. The balance can be paid in monthly, semi- monthly or weekly pay- ments. No trouble these garments, you buy or not. down to show whether 1332-34 Second Ave. Seattle’s Reliabl LOS ANGELES, Cal., Sept & —*I tell you this shadow of the past which is haunting me is Ie there no & passion of tragic foreboding rebellion these words were San man, on the plea of the “un- written law.” She had been arrested again, charged with disturbing the peace for screaming through the streets after a night of galety in which wine, women and song are said to have figured prominently. Men who had come to grin and gloat at this girl of shame and tragedy, shuffled uneasily under her terrible accusations, her tense story of what it means for a woman of her fate to try to beat back to a Fespected place in society. § “My life,” said Leah Alexander, “which I had hoped to rescue from the mire by work and honest effort, fs worth nothing to me because of &@ black shadow out of the past. “When I left that other court- Toom, a free woman, I meant to British American Relief Association Headquarters, Assembly Room, Chamber of Commerce, Seattle. Said to Be Due to Act A Physician's Advice on Cure. \ 4 eure of stomach and in ity. A famous physician whose suc- eour: all int tro many diseases of the Were dire: trac *s Fanged condition of tt ot which tn out of ten to ex monly termed sour ator burn, which not oniy trrit inflamed the delicate lining estinal we vital organs, rt and f th TODAY'S STYLES TODAY ADIES This Is Your Chance! — ACID STOMACHS ARE DANGEROUS Mine-tenthe of All Stomach Trouble | th, ‘use and} | ul Texearches into the cause and | 211 Union St. le Credit House™ work; I meant to wipe out the mis- “And I ha’ orked every day that I could get employment.” She looked out over the crowded courtroom withMistended eyes. 8) hivered pitifully, her black dress pinned high over the brulsed Leah Alexander |throat where she declared a man | with whom she had been compelled to struggle had left his mark. Her) red hair flamed above a face pale) jas death, as she told of her dread} nemesis. | “I am driven from one place to another,” she said. “I go to work.| |I make good. My work has always| been satisfactory—more so than) that of many other women who hold| their jobs. | “But they find out who I am, and en I am driven forth again into} BELGIANS PLAN “TO RAISE FUNDS Organization of Seattle's brancn of the National Belgian Kellef so- ciety, to provide funds for starving Belgians, was perfected yesterday, with Matt Brewer, president, and stomach, but also set up gastritis|\G. de Greef, secretary-treasurer, ond stomach vlcers. | It ts interesting | composing the executive commit:| patent medicines as well as of medi-| tee eal t ment for the st The response to an appeal for id, sounded throughout the United “9 tates, Is generous, not only by Bel , which, by neutralizing the acidity of |gians in this country, but by Amer | 3 the food, removes the source of the|icans, as well. | trouble. ' He contends foolish to treat the stomach as it would be for a man who stepped on @ tack to rub lintment on the t without first removing the tack Remove the tack and the foot wi heal jtself—neutralize the acid an the stomach troubles will dis Irritating medicines and mo treatments are useless, so long as contents of the stomach remain acid remove the acidity, and there will bi no need for medic the amed ning of the stomach will t bea. f{teelf. Sufferers from acid stomach or hear’ @mail bottle of bisurated magnesia from their druggist, and take a tea fiful in @ quarter of a glans o hot or cold water after meals peating in fifteen minutes, If neces t wary, doctor has found most au cases, Adv at it is as t|the Germans’ is being the done which the feactous in The people of Belgium are in a! precarious condition, as a result of invasion, which hae |reduced the country to ruins, and i forced many women and children i i to flee to Holland. Centifbutions in Seattle should il mittee. G. de Greef, 109% Second {| av. S., or to the vice consul of Be 1{ gium, Seattle. , sour thurn should get «| ‘| are was the theme of a lecture de t\livered by Rev. Frederick A. Mur -|phy, at St. James’ cathedr: Bun Gay night. Rev. Murphy has charge f Catholic missionary work in hu eh, Chine jor THE THREE be sent to the secretary of thé com. | Conditions in China as they ort STATE JUDGES MAKE A CAMPAIGN OF LIES ITH the knowledge and « \ MAJORITY OPINION, The first case cited is the claims to be a progressive judge! They cite the workmen's cc wrote a long dissenting opinior ain Judge Chadwick wrote a Think of it! While the Germans are kliling the French and English In the northe: sians are busy Invading German territory through Prussia, with Berlin, the kaiser’s capital, as their goal. The accompanying map of the territory in the Russian danger zone shows the relative distances of Im- The problem that is annoying the kalser is whether or not he can continue his victorious march to Paris and still defend hie ows capital PAST HAUNTS GIRL SAVED (CZAR | FROM PRISON BY UNWRITTEN | GALICIA FOR LAW WHEN SHE KILLS MAN) A PROVINCE portant cities from Bertin. TAKES PETROGRAD, Sept. &—The | Russians controlled Austrian Galicia today ae far River San, ofr considerably more than half the province. They are reported also to have crossed the San south of Przemysi and to be advancing on Przemys! and Jaroslav. Galicia has been prociaimed by the czar a Russian provinces. In Lablin province, Russian Poland, the war office announces Gen. Rousstky and his Rasstan foree had Generals von Auffenberg and Dankl, the Austrian command. ers, nearly surrounded and that the! Anstrians are being forced back ward toward the Galician frontier. Four hundred thousand Russians, with thousands of gu’ Second Ave. at James St. NTIRE stock JUDGES NOW UP FOR RE The eight-hour law for women is also cited. The supreme court sustained that law, but) q|law was constitutional because it allowed women to work more than eight hours in the can- neries, Don't be misled by these sham progressive claims. and Gose today. Vote for PEMBERTON, MILLS AND HOLCOMB, Go to the polls and vote. Don’t fail. are sald to tion. Vern CamuacnG Forced to Liquidate Store Closed by Order of Stockholders and Will Remain Closed Until Thursday, Sept. 10, at 9 A. M. STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 8, 1914. PAGE 3. onsent of Judges Crow, Chadwick and Gose of the supreme] ELECTION DISSENTED FROM THE factory act. The supreme court, in Hall vs. West & Slade| Mills Co,, 39 Wash., 447, sustained the law and allowed Hall to recover. The only judges of the present supreme court who were on the bench then were Judges Crow and Fullerton, And Judge Crow dissented from the majority opinion. He held that Hall, who was crippled be-| cause the owner of the mill failed to put in a guard required by law, should go crippled for} jlife and not recover, Crow and Judge Root, the judge who had his decision in one case writ-| ten at St. Paul by the Great Northern attorney, held against the factory act. And Crow now] ‘ : | mmpensation act. Yet Judge Chadwick wanted to kill it, and| a. dissenting opinion. Judge Chadwick finally concluded that the | Vote against Judges Crow, Chadwick | | | ern part of France, the Rus be pushing the attack from the| northward at the same time that another Russian force advanced from the southeast to flank the re | treating Austrians. | The Austrian troops, it is under-| stood, are being decimated by an} agate. epidemic. SAYS GERMANS’ | LOSS IS 400,000 | hele ery |. LONDON, Sept. 8.—Dinant, the LONDON, Sept. 8. — “German/| e lonses are no terrible the emperor | Namur, Bay tng Pa na sep tas forbidden their disclosure.” {#| Germans, following the execution of the statement attrivuted to a letter jseveral hundred male inhabitant ficer, according to a correspondent | mec ae’ tite foe 5 Pinel pore npr] of the London Post. The letter goes | vantage about the city on: “Our generals have been Wan-| ‘This information is conveyed tn tonly wasteful with our men, Who jan Ostend dispatch to the Reuter have been mowed down by thov- | Telegram Co. Several wealthy man- While it is impossible to | ufacturers and politicians were at the lonses are, I estimate | song those executed between 350,000 and) Advices from Antwerp, published lin the Telegraph, officially an- }nounce the German occupation of Every time you hear a follow) Termonde after a prolonged strug- crabbing about Senttle, you can bet| «le, with heavy losses. Being cut your sweet life he'd crab about |off from the main body of the Ger heaven if he ever got there, which|man army, the captors abandoned ts & more or less doubtful proposi-| the city, after destroying Its fortifi- cations and principal bulldings. CITIZENS ARE SHOT: DINANT IS DESTROYED of new Fall Suits, Overcoats, Raincoats, Knox and John B. Stetson Hats, Manhattan Shirts, Cooper, Lewis and Stuttgarter Underwear, Everwear and all other well known | | brands of hosiery, and finest Furnishings of all kinds—all to be converted into cash immediately. UST THINK what Veith-Cammack Co.’s | | Billy) appears in “The Vagabond” | the family he stole for. i court, who are up for re-election today, a campaign of lies'and deception is being made nes at the time of the year when the evening becoming longer. 1 their behalf by at least three Judas Iscariots in politics. At this belated day the false claim ee MiusLaTe IAL tite ootepatte nuke austen: cones nce is being made that their decisions have been progressive. Lies, plain, unadulterated lies, and you| learn all of the steps taught by the-foremost dance authorities, #4 know they are lies, Messrs. Crow, Chadwick and Gose! EVERY CASE CITED AS A PRO-| : |GRESSIVE DECISION BY THE SUPREME COURT SHOWS THAT ONE OR MORE One New 30 Dance 10 Hesitat 10 One-St 3 Maxixes (Or 20 Dane A Liberal The Instru This Complete Outfit Placed Your Home for With terms as low as $5 Monthly (Attend the-F Ev {PHOTO PLAYS G. M. ANDERSON (BRONCHO) looks fust as bad or as good, elther way you want it, eve Melbourne Until Tuesday Night at the Class A for the last time to- © night. He steals from « gamblers’ table to help a starving family, and| “Loyalty,” five-reel hand-colored when he is captured and about to|feature; “The |be hanged, is waved by the girl of |comedy; two mu A two-part mystery drama by the Selig com pany and a comedy complete the bill Alaskan Until! Saturday Night “Atop of the World,” Beverly Dobbs’ Alaskan pictures. eee oe FRANCIS X. BUSHMAN, THE | Alhambra Until Wednesday Night Exsanay hero, and Maurice Cos-| “Sunset Tide.” two-part drama; tello, of the Vitagraph company, | “Storm Bird,” Powers drama; “An- appear in the picture bill at the|imated Weekly,” and “The Baby Colonial for the‘ last times tonight. | Did It,” comedy. Bushman is tn a romantic two-part . drama of Europe, and Costello| Clemmer Until Tuesday Night leads in a single reeler. Three} When «a Woman's Forty,” comedies complete the bill }drama; “Sippe Sitm's. Tomb- eee stone,” comedy; ew York Police RUTH BOLAND, THE PRETTY Carnival,” and “Pathe's Daily News. Kalem star, when asked her re. cetpt for beauty, aad: outdoor exercise, and fore midnight’ meep Her exercise ming, walking, boxing. . Class A Until Tuesday Night “Lots of va much ‘be- possible. of swim- sf, and even “Who Killed George Graves?” two-part Selig drama; “The Vaga- bond,” With Broncho Billy; “The Winking Zulu,” Kalem comedy. cee Colonial Until Tuesday Night “Under Royal Patronage,” two- part drama, with Francis Bush- man; “Slippery Slim and the Claim Agent,” comedy, and “The Woes of a Waitress,” comedy. oe Grand Until Tuesday Night “The Trap,” two-reel American; “The Baggage Smasher,” Keystone comedy; “Mutual Weekly 88," world's news. . TOM SANTCHI AND BESSIE Eyton, of the Selig, are soon to be seen in “The Abyss,” a drama Mias Fyton, tn the character of a reckless girl, falls from a terrify- ingly high cliff. Santchi, who has made an effort to save her, follows. eee MARGARET COURNOT, THE dainty little 16-yearold actress of the Kalem company, who played the lead tn “The Barefoot Boy,” says that if she had her way she would adopt man’s attire as far as freedom of action fs concerned. cee THE SELIG JUNGLE 200 looks Itke the streets of Calro, now that “The Carpet of Bagdad” ts being staged. Many of the scenes for this prodnction were taken in a real desert. Not an Arabian desert—a California one, which . Odeon Wednesday “The Lover's Gift,” two-part Ma- jestic drama; “When Reuben Fooled the Bandit,” Keystone com- edy, and two dramas. Thousands of people go through STAR WANT ADS every night. They read them with profit. atch the Papers for Details of the Greatest of All Sales O do this requires drastic price-cutting. T an outlet in this manner. fine Clothing, Knox and Stetson Hats, mean to you—newest Fall 1914 merchandise—right in the beginning of the. season at less than end of season sale prices. Remember: Lease, Fixtures and Everything Must Be Sold Sale Begins Thursday Morning, Sept. 10, at 9 o’Clock. Watch the Papers for Details of the Greatest of All Sales. Our Special Home Dancing Outfit All the New Dances, With the Best Music in the World This Special Outfit Includes f 7 Tangoes. “How to Dance the Modern Dances,” Fully Iiustrated, Hepburn Wilson. Liters faushdim rd Ave O University St. « Concert Given in Eilers Music Hall - the inevitable loss, prices will be named so low on this entire stock that this sale will be memorable, and irresistible to you. Merchandise of this character and quality seldom finds 546" Type Hornless Grafonola. Selections. (Hugnentet as Follows) ion Waltzes. eps. % Records anf 19 other selections) Supply of Assorted Needles. ction Book: . written by G, BOY SOLDIER OF HOT FIGHT In hospital at Nancy gives @ fire in the Lorraine fighting. oat trenches when the shells et oe heads. “Though many were woun was hit tn the arms, legs, or for my dreams are full of customed to it. You can PARIS, Sept. 8—A French vivid picture of his experience “It was just breakfast time,” They broke with mathematical ac’ “This was the fire we ‘end few were killed. My broth 1 got two pieces of shell. & shot. shells coming ever so long, thanks'* to the peculfiir scream they make. After half an hour of thfs musio. you probably catch shrill voices shouting ‘Look out on the left; its coming to you.’ Yes, we actually j laughed as we issued these mutual warnings.” ery Saturday Evening) a youngster now lying wounded under the hottest kind of shell |says. “We were resting in curacy about 40 feet above o for 30 hours. self, and every comrade in 4 thigh. I can talk, but I can’ “On the battlefield you get ac. hears Golden Opportunities are of- fered in Star Want Ads, ODEON ‘Tuesday and Wednesday “THE LOVER’S GIFT? Two parte. Second Ave. at = James St. Notwithstanding

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