The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 22, 1914, Page 2

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Me ee pee gitsyy hw lige tc eh En I thd EAS CB DBE same STAR—TUESDAY, SEPT. 22, 1914. PAGE 2. U.S. Cutter Tahoma Fast Upon a Reef Far out of the usual course of ships, the United States rev- enue outter Tahoma Is hung on Belgian Is a Cool-Headed Fighting Mian By Wm. G. Shepherd | ANTWERP, Sept, 1.—(By Cour All the Joys of Dancing’ ~ Without Inconvenience or Extra Expense We place this Special Home Dancing Outfit right into your home—along, with it comes all the correct music Dances. You pick out a Tango, a Hesitation, a Maxixe or a One Step—turn a small switch by the Noted Band or Orchestra, does all the work and the folks at home have all the fun. The for the Latest and your selection exactly as played ice co fer to Ostend and Mall to New| eee, comayete te @ dangerous uncharted reef 90 | y 1.) | miles weet of Kiska leland, tn The little Belgian soldier | the far western Aleutian group of islands off the Alaskan coast, Lives of 72 members of the crew are imperiied. For hundreds of miles around, who climbed Into our compart: ment In the railroad oar was dead tired, He trailed his rifle behind him, threw himself Into | Sh’) gw seat, and fell sound p. |distress messages from the Taho-| E ma have been reported to ships at| AN hour later he awoke to taik- | sae, Now Fras Mernlens Gres wea, but tt will be days before re-| ativenes. | lenty of needles, and the dance Hef can be brought | “Yes,” he said, “I was up all book) or you may have 20 dance selections and 10 oth ere of your own choosing. The price Setnptets (with "GA OG terms natruction Hight days out of Seattle, on her way to Yokohama, the Japanese | liner, Tacoma Maru, reported that) it will take her two days to reach | the Tahoma, | Senator Three Days Away Jon ten Senntor cna qetenmablP | them, put half a carload at one end | Seattle on her way to Nome, re-| and the other half carload at the ported {t will take her three days| other end of each car, then four of jo get to the distressed vessel us stood guard with our rifles at These will be the first ves the doorways in the middle. |probably, to reach the scene. “Do the Best We Can” Others rushing to her reseue| “We rode five hours that way, are the Alaska Steamship Co.'s lin-| and we expected every minute that er Cordova, which left Nome Sun-|all those Germans would jump on day night; the United States co |the four of us and kill us. It was and geodetic survey steamer Pat-| heavy odds, but we had to do it terson, and the United States rev fou see, there aren't enough enue cutter Rear, night with German prisoners, There were only 16 of us to handle 600 Germans. | @ had four box cars, so we divided up the prisoners among! This Step? The girl who can dance THE CASTLE POLKA will not be a wall flower Don't forget our free concert Satur- day evening, at 8:15, in Eilers Music Hall AMUSEMENTS. Cat Sticks —_—— —_ old | in Belgt do lt the . METROPOLITAN|MOORE “4%, 2:30 The Tabouia otradk the test Sun-| work, and We bate to make cut the The Castle Polka is Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle’s latest oday és day. News of her plight did not t, » can,” is ore : , 5 pars Twice Dally, All Week, 2:80 and #130, roach Seattle until late Monday, |" That's the Uttle Belgian soldier |f| creation ; and it will Sweep the country this fall and winter, MATINEE DATLY PAUL "RI INEY when the United States revenue|all over. In the first place he is just as the “ Hesitation’’ did last season. cutter Manning arrived from HBer- ing sea. Call for Assistance The Tahoma's “8, O. 8." signal was recelved Sunday night by the) In the second place, he has plen United States crulser Buffalo,|ty of common sense, He fights cool @ | while the latter was lying at Sitka. /iy and with no biind hatred in his The message said: “Struck a reef | heart, causing him to waste any ef at 9:30, Send assistance.” | fort. The Buffalo, equipped with the} Feels Sorry for Prisone |most powerful wireless system on| “I really felt for thi | sorry willing to fight when he knows he must lose. “We have to make out the best | we cal is his motto CABIRIA Monster Photo Speetacte ings, Reserved, 25¢ and 30. MATINER—ALL SEATS 250 SEATTLE THEATRE ‘The Seattle Players in “A Woman's Way’ Brenings, 25 to TSc; Mate, 26 AFRICAN HUNT Mats, 1c and Bc; Nights 100, 20¢, 306.) All Seats Reserved. Let Mr. and Mrs. Castle teach you—in your own home —how to dance it. They give you personal lessons in two pages of pictures and text The Big Laughing Whe “The Dope Fiend and September Morn” In the October Issue of unfortified towns practically with out reaistanc The Russians are defending their and, one of the principal islands tn the Rat group of the Aleutians. and means the Tahoma struck a “You ace,” added the logical little | Belgian, “it was not their fault, so | we could not be angry at them.” ' sek. ii as ed Sis’ Chdhden rem, |the North Pacific, wirelossed the | prisoners,” sald a comrade of the Bargains, Mon. Eve, Wed Mat, 80 Nights, 7:15 amd 9:00, Ibe and 50, Tahoma's message to the Kovern-| first soldier hey were decent e 9 aout Sept. oe ge ment station at Tatoosh tsland.|fellows, They told me thelr offi e a 1eS ome ourna : “ROAD SHOW NO, forte to compel the czars |The Manning recetved the message |cers fooled them. They said the a PANTAGES I || forces to turn thelr attention | from Tatoosh officers gave them French money . || Marcus from Qallcia to the defense of In communication with the gov-/on the German frontier and then . s Greater 1 deeb | S-PMOTOFLAYS—s Ite own territories In the north | rnment wireless at St. Paul island, | yelled: “On to France!’ | rar A Book || Empress | ‘Mars’ tooo snare || Op pun lerrite jthe Tahoma reports: “Ship is 0.) “They went on for three days! | You can learn it in an hour or two in your own home, just iy Hawaiians ll Theatre | Ssdare snd Motidays|| Of Russian oland «are net (Kk unless rough seas Jam her. and were at Liege be oy knew P : . | | tueen dee meeting with euseses, accord Aground in Open Sea they were in Belgium instead of as if you were in Castle House, where all fashionable New eh 1 eer y Nights lee, ise, den.|| ing to advices received here to- The exact position gt France ; : § - 10¢ AND 20¢ Sighie tee. se, ee || day from Austrian sources. Tahoma ts longitude 175 degrees | We did not want to hurt Bel York society will dance it a The German invaders are active,|? minutes east, latitude 61 degrees|gians,’ they told us, "because we LR Indeed, tn Suwalki provinces. 57 minutes north. . are from Alsace-Lorraine our 7 Fifteen Cents the Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered (Continued From Page 1.) { * fortresses, but elsewhere the kal®-| root in the open ocean. “Why did you fight the Ger “hi bscription Age: Direct I" rou; cording to Information from authoritative sources. The war office mere cate sn a the een The Tahoma is in command of| mans?” I asked a high government | 7 eh Ourdy “ = iy bald there had “no bi nt changes in the rf . Capt. Richard O. Crisp. Ghe was| official view is that this section must take caro of itself until Galicia has been subdued, when military ox perts here took it for granted they would themselves undertake to cre ate a diversion from Russian Po. land by invading Germany from the southeast and moving on Ber Ma. Before doing this they will have to defeat the AustroGerman al at Cracow Danki’s Army Cut Off? News of the fate of Gen. Dank!'s Austrian army waa eagerly await | bound for Seattle on a homeward | trip from the most remote posses- | ston of the United Sta The Tahoma called at Buldir island, where the government seal rookery is located. Shortly after she struck, apparently in a heavy fog. The Tahoma left Seattle May 1 for Bering sea ANOTHER CLUE! WASHINGTON, Sept The Cool-Headed Busin: “Because civilization can't exist) without treaties, and it is a duty a) nation owes to civilization to fight to the death when a written treaty The capture by the Germans was claimed of the French positions on Craonne heights, and Verdun, it was stated, had been isolated and wae being. heavily bombarded. The attempt to wrest Rheims from the French was reported as continuing. Our Sales Agent is E. E. PELZ conti tiag. Seattle THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square, Philadelphia Penasytvacia German j “How could we? We knew that hundreds of thousands would fol low the first Invaders, but we had/ no right to worry about who would be beaten. Our business was fight, and we've done it the best (0 | ee “< ae rr is In the battle of the Aisne wae thought | ed. Forced out of Russian Poland, he was retreating toward Cracow at latest accounts, but Russian ac-| counts received by way of England | here today to be approaching rapidly. Indications were that a situation was developing similar to the one! which characterized the battle of the Marne, just before the German cen. | withdrawal from entry of the town site of Nenana, at the confluence of the Nanana and Tanana rivers, by President Wilson, is considered we could.” business wi start. It had been a cool-headed, logical ith the Belgians from the} TRY TOK IDNAP POPE AMAZED TELLS STORY ter abandoned its attempt to penetrate the allies’ line at Vitry, and be-| gan to retire. Indeed, French aviators reported that the signs of a German retrograde movement. Military men here deciared themselves convinced that the Germans would not attempt to form fresh lines on French sail if dri don their present positions. The weather had improved today. The ground is stil! soggy. The allies are bringing tremendous pressure to bear on Gen. von | Drina, which marked the latest un portion of the German line northeast of Paris. The forces successful Austrian attempts at under Gen. von Kiuck, at Von Buelow’s right, were strengthened at the another invasion of Servia from latter’s expense, and the allies sought to break this weak link in the those two directions. ma HOLD UP SALOON were to the effect that he had been | cut off in this attempt If this story was true, It 1s con sidered certain that his situation | must be desperate. | ven to aban-| Delayed advices from Nish told lof heavy Austrian losses in the fighting along the rivers Save and Treaties are made with ink; are broken with blood And just as naturally and coolly as the Belgian diplomats used ink in signing their treaties with Ger- |many, so the Belgian soldiers have| | shed their blood in trying to main | tain them. ‘MOSLEMS SLIP | | BULL TO TURKEY LONDON, Sept jlems have telegraphed to the sul-| significant as indicating the prob. they able route of the Al: railway. | y already had discerned | BELGIAN KING AT VANDALISM PARIS, Sept. 22.—The story | ROME Sept. 22, via Paris.—Pope of a thrilling escape by King | Benedict XV. has requested Cardin- Albert of Belgium from kid- | al Amette, archbishop of Paris, to naping by his own chauffeur | provide him with full particulars re- 4 surrender to the Germans | garding the destruction by the Ger- was circulated here today on (mans of the famous cathedral at the authority of the Progress | Kheims, declaring he will not ac- du Nord, a Lille publication. |cept the messages from Rheims The king was inspecting the Bel-| concerning vandalism on the part sian front recently, according to the | of Germans as authoritative. OF SLAUGHTER THE HAGUE, Sept. 3 (by Mail to New York) —A of rman operations in Prussia, telling of part of the fighting In which German of- ficial reports declare 30,000 Russians were annihilated and 30,000 captured, appe: In a copy of the Berliner Tagebiatt, received here today. Poynor Will Save You 30 Per Cent and More Furniture and Ranges They aim road from especially at the German defenses controlling the rail-| aon to Rethel. —~Bengal Mos | | » newspaper, when he not! thathis| The pope is quoted as saying: ‘“T The article was by Paul Lt | |tan, their religious head, congratu| chauffeur was approaching near to| cannot believe it possible in such|perg the ‘Tacebintcs special com | a ee nat ae hevalty ca the | the German lines and ordered him] a clvilized epoch as the 20th cen-| respondent. Shorty Randolph should have been out at Renton with his movie machine last night. There was a regular Wild West saloon holdup. to stop. tury, to be plunged back to the time of Attila.” “As we rode on we saw streets full of corpses, lying among dead horses and cattle and poultry. Everything had been destroyed. Nothing was left of the village of Hohenstein after the troops had fin- ished with it. Everything was ruined and in flames.” Linderberg declared that in front jof one house he saw a Russian | lance sticking in the ground, with a poster in German attached to it, on which was written: “Here we buried 25 Rusi August 28, 1914." | British crown {s their paramount duty, they would greatly deplore an| jestrangement between Great Brit alo and Turkey |BACK DOOR FOR NEWSPAPERMEN LONDON, Sept Newspaper men, like garbage men or hucksters, are required to apply at the back |door of the official press bureau here. This has resulted in a strike jof the newspaper men. A commit tee interviewed the official in charge, who said the order would not be revoked, LONDON REPORT OF AISNE BATTLE LONDON, Sept. 22—The allies’ hammering was believed by mill-| tary experts here today to be threatening the German lines in France Tt was the Panama saloon. Time, gee }10:45, White-faced bartender, Al The experts were also of the opinion that his reinforcements’ fail- bert Bertelero. Amount taken, $60. ure to enable Gen. von Kiuck to resume the offensive proved the kaiser, The bad man was a regular mel “near the end of his string,” as one report puts it. |lerdrammer villain, and he flourish Another and better authenticated report was that the German gov- | ed a very long-barreled revolver ernment had prohibited Dutch shipping to ascend the Rhein beyond | Having received the money, he turn the frontier. This was interpreted that the German Rhein defenses ed and walked out leisurely, paue were being strengthened, presumably for a defensive fight along that |ing to help himself to a packet of line. | cigarettes. RUSS REPORT OF GALICIA CAMPAIGN ““ATERTCSESP FIGHT FOR OLE) PETROGRAD, Sept. 22,—Russia's main force In Austrian Galicia nan Ia State Chairman L. Roy Slater of ad advancing again today, after enveloping the Austrians’ Przemysi-| Spokane will take personal charge iv line of di | of the Ole Hanson campaign in resistance is expected when the czar’s army reaches Cracow,| Eastern Washington, he declared today. “Ole Hanson has made such a wonderful campaign east of the| mountains,” he sald, “that his suc cess {8 aseured, With a united pro- gressive party behind him and The military authorities admitted that they had crossed the San| with progressives from the demo- and that their cavalry was ravaging the country west of the Jarosiav-|cratic and republican parties as Przemysi defenses. | well supporting him loyally, with The city was being prepared for a desperate resistance. a clean, thorough campaign to be It was being strongly Intrenched, and ali available were concentrat-| made in his behalf in every coun- 2° Ing to meet the invaders. ty, we shall cross the mountains Instead the man threw on full | speed and steered directly in the| enemy's direction. Albert shot him |through the head and hilled him DETERMINED On his person, said the Progress | |du Nord, were found papers show ing that the Germans had promised $200,000 to the chauffeur if he would deliver the king to them. LONDON, Sept. That the kaiser’s commanders were deter- mined to raze Rhelms was consid- ered evident A dispatch from there to the Daily P Telegraph said hardly a house was}, When you lose on au standing in the cathedral’s vicinity, |leave it to STAR WANT AD: “The masonry of the cathedral|/to find it pceindhn {has been chipped,” continued the | message, “and carved figures and | gargoyles broken. Fifty-four shells have lodged in the building’s in- Fe ee MEAT PRICES |terior, but the stonework has with. | Stood the concussion of the explo- sions | “The cathedral itself can probably | be restored, but its priceless decor- ations are ruined.” | enka MAN HURT, WONT TOMORROW (WEDNESDAY) AT | TELL WHO HE Is JUST A Frew Pi From © 1CKS TAKEN s STOCK ‘ire $10.50 oak Rocker, leather $10.00 50 Combination Buftet and hina $22.50 $13.00 $20 quartered oak See the Dig Savings on Used Din rr | umed ‘CANADA TO SEND | “19,000 MORE MEN MONTREAL, Sept Nineteen thousand more Canadian troops will be ready to sail for Europe Novem-| |ber 1, This will bring the total | number of troops Canada has sent |to England's aid up to 50,000. 20 China Closet STEWART HOUSE 56 Stewart at | | Re Be where the Austrian reserves and German Landwehr are massed. S. H. Poynor 1 AVE. Retween Pike and Pine. The defenders of Przemysi, which has been invested, asked a five- hour armistice, to permit non-combatants to and this was granted. CRACOW (via Rome), Sept. 22.—The Russians were approaching Cracow today. Stomach Troubles Due to Acidity SO SAYS EMINENT SPICIA — — es Jon November & with nt least 10,000! ,arecution "iit nt tiotnwehvarite, FRYE & C0 § ahaa votes in 0 favor ovel Y\are, in proba out 0 y rnton, 7 | HEADACHE, COLD OR SOUR STOMACH, “= suisiir EE asa a +O | cer ene epee | REGULATE YOUR BOWELS—10 CENTS woman JUMPS —_[igtrmiton' ot gaara’ actin. Mwing result, apparently GF peice eee a > | tends the stomach and causes a OR, L. R. CLARK, D. D. 8 Ask Any One Who Has Been Here Ask them what they think of the work that our graduate registered dentists turn out. Ask them about by a street car early this morning on § ond av., near Yesler way, is fighting efforts by the hospital authorities to find who and where | his relatives are, } 1 don’t want my relatives to know anything about me,” he mum- oppressive feeling known as heartburn, while the acid trritates and Inflames the delicate ining of the stomach, The trouble Hes entirely tn the fermenting food. Such fermentation is unnatural, and | actd formation is not only unnatural, involve 1 sometimes MARKETS AS FOLLOWS: Choice Lamb 15¢c Chops Sick headaches! Always trace; Cascarets will remove the cause | TO DODGE TRAIN them to lazy liver; delayed, fer-|by stimulating the liver, making - menting food in the bowels or a|the bile and constipation potson EVERETT, Sept. 22.—Forced to sick stomach. Polsonous, consti-;move on and out of the bowels.) jump from the bridge by an Dated matter, gases and bile gener-|One taken tonight straightens you| Hroaching trolley car, Mrs. Lizzie ated in the bowels, instead of be-|out by morning—a 10-cent box Will| Gavie, 44, was found lying uncon.| i es RAISED THE QUALITY ing carried out of the system, is|keep your head clear, stomacty| he yee B trontie | quences, 1 bles. the methods we practice, that save Feabsorbed into the blood. | When|sweet, liver and bowels regular, |at Lowell. She had ain there 12| contsrta of" Ag dB 8 a a oe even 18c f),,2rerter, has two broken arms,] you much pain and trouble, ASK this poison reaches the delicate|and make you feel bright and| pours with a broken hip. tralize the acid, an ‘and|made by human hands, and without Pai eRX jbad body brutses and probably althem about our low cut rates, that brain tissue it causes congestion |cheerful for months. Children ‘e and harmless, ontul of bl; Choice Shoulder | fractured skull enable you to save half on your and that dull, sickening headache.! need Cascarets, ‘oo. ey Vig rrector of acid then come| Pork Roast .. ..15¢ dental bills, We'll leave it to th BUGLER KILLED? SAS net Secor ys ectmpoter ef Acid lio me for am examination and conssie |GERMANS SWEEP ‘ ‘They know, And seven out of e and thus ach to do its work pre Look for U. S, Purple Stamp. It signifies purity and quality. Shops open until shipping ahead of them to the Ger man frontier, according to a report of Gaston Thomson, minister of commerce, after a visit to Lille, 4 | pS si Guarter of cu Of hot or cold | Home without char and I will show! Choice Spare | ten new patients come to us on CANDY CATHARTIC | Indications that J. H. Hutchinson, | water immediately after eating, or realtor and I make| ping . Ate COUNTRY CLEAN recommendation of these frien | bugler on the cruiser South Dakota, This stop Bl of east ~ _ you who have been here and recel) h opa the fermentation, anc — jwho was found dead in bed at the| neutralizes the acidity in a few mo mata ae cea > jg Pann Cholce Leg of 15 PARIS, Sept. 22, — Retreating| ®b8olute satisfaction. Remember, home of Mrs. Bessle Maley, 3047) ments, Fermentation, wind and acid-| nana Gr MY NAMM AND MANE Toe | LAMB eeeceeseeeess OC Pil Germans are sweeping the countrs| We back all our work up with & Colby av., Sunday, was pothoned. | ' ; |NEXT DOOR TO MY OFFICRS a |through which they are passing|SUarantee that protects you. were apparent yesterday when an, * , clean of all food, and what they are WE GIVE GAS 10 GENT BOXES -ANY DRUG STORE autopsy conducted by Coroner J./ magnesia, which ‘can. bet EDWIN J, BROWN, 0. D.§,| 2 Pounds tor... 10c unable to eat at the time they are 0 25 & SO CENT BOXES - Tate Mason and members of the | from any drugmiat Ul Oe t Regal Dental Offices Dr, L. R. Clark, D. D. S., M 1405 3rd Ave., N. W. Cor. Uni Note—Bring this a# with the ste navy board of inquest discovered what seemed to be bichloride of mercury in the body, Seattle's Leading Dent 705 713 First Avenu Open evertoes until & and until ¢ for people who work. with ng hindered by pol gan and dangerous acide. . Advertisement. Sunday arn Sa en eT

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