The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 28, 1914, Page 2

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STA’ -MONDAY SEPTEMBER 28, 1914 PAGE # THE RETAIL DEPARTMENT OF AowaRD D.Taomas Co. Largest Wholesale Carpet and Rug House in the Northwest Everything For Tuesday OF Carpets, Rugs, was in sight in the western | fighting zone, but the general Carpet Draperies, a . trend of events was declared to The fiercest fighting was said to . y td be between the German right and] § J | the Iles’ left | frantic ffort few had fale To Choose | German center was reported From $30.00 Seamiess Velvet Rugs, size | gaining Qx12 feet, These Rugs come | | From Clermont to St. Me Take advantage amall ree and Orte hould, it Was foe the F i s. in brown 1 Kreen and had been repu J Tt was claimed hades he Germans maintained thelr ad-| from 25 to 50 per a $21.75 | on the helghts of the) artillery Was improving | We sell at retail in Seattic only and deliver anywhere in the city Rustian. aetounte of &. Veter? THVETH AVE no NWRGINIA ST, fio Seis Two Blocks East of Moore Theatre; Two cks North of ORT TOWNSEND CHEERS FOR OLE CZAR SAYS HE ‘WILL OCCUPY Favors Us, ' Says Berlin | 4 — ] 000 Linoleum BERLIN, via The Hague, PARIS, Sept. 28.~-The allies’ , Sept. 28.—The German general 9 staff was optimistic today j [ot wing wae gelning today 1. wae Maule We Gan against the Germans’ right in BERLIN JAN.1 Allies Gain at Left; Lose the Oise and Alsne regions That the Germans, on the oth er hand, had gained ground on the Meu and were on the stream's west bank, near St Mibiel, was rumored, Fierce fighting was reported in| In the Olse and Alsne fone the} Franco-lritiah forces, despite thetr nuccesses, had not Won a foothold in St. Quentin This they were determined to do, and (ghting| in ‘hat vietnity waa extraordinart-| : rocious, raging uninterrupted:| ly night and da | Barbed Wire Before Trenches The Germans’ St. Quentin de enne of tremendous strength nehes there ta an| tangle of barb-| ft Kefore their t snab almost impre: ed wire, bristling ngs and tron} bars This area is swept murderously | by the Kaiser's field guns In spite of all thelr preparations, it was declared that the German losses had been enormous At other points, with aviators di m, the Teutonic forces seaulting the weak Near Center Nothing to do wash day afternoon but sew Anty Drudge Enjoys Lecturing a or read, or go visiting. Wouldn’t that seem good to you? That’s what Fel h —gets your work done up in the morn- ings and leaves your afternoon: Clothes washed with Fels -Naptha Soap do not need hard rubbing nor ing, and it works best in cool or luke- warm water stains Disagreeable Man Mr, Findfault—"Maria, Just look at Anty Drudge. She's a good example for you women who She and cheerful all the time and is well and strong, even though she does her own work.” are always complaining. Anty Drudge—“See here, Mr. Findfault, if your wife only had « chance, she'd be as happy I use Fels-Naptha Soap. and bright as I am. Follow the directions on the Red and Green Wrapper. looks bright That's the secret. You get some for your wife and she will be bright and cheerful, too.” « At hb declared they | had been uniformly repulsed h at Allies’ Left The French Colontal infantry, the miments, and most of| an act at the Orpheum theatre this VEILS @ CO. both Manks Fels-Naptha Soap does all kinds of cleaning in the easiest way —the cool- on po freshens up paint and does all other kinds of housework just as well. PHILADELPHIA -Naptha Soap does free. il- water. -no-hard - scrubbing way. Takes from clothing, dissolves grease ts and pans, whitens woodwork, Bn ress TENT Th gee ee this, the allies, strongly rein! | -_—--—— " a $ | we had had for four days ! "SPORT—IST ED (r-h bnecr ythe right of th people to voice} of ve As soon cs they came within PORT TOWNSEND, Wash., Sept. | thelr own opinions | Siadlen babe the aire were also reaching the German Soldiers Tell How range we poured a deadly volley | | —In the home of Ed Sims, spe 1 favor making all remedial so front into them, emptying saddles right | I privilexe boss of the last leg-|cial industrial jaws national,” said yas A mp ng bo ‘The French center wan admitted It Feels to Shoot and left, and they scattered in all lature, Ole Hanson, progressive| Hanson, “in order that standpat| § active army wae 1. gustaining tremendous pressure directions | @eandidate for United States|states might not have onomile a wae. tree. Somepeean Ronnen.| vat east of Rheims Men Battlefield nwhile their artillery kept Geenate, Saturday night expounded | advantage over pre ive states| | “the East} A new war office rule concerr on | working up closer on the front ahd | doctrines of equal justice and|by sweating their wor : mm air from the front forbids the right, and a dark ud of in ne legislation designed to| Speaking of Senator We nope sete d neni Mamag tne to exact locations of (Continued From Page 1.) fantry showed out against the sky Ive the people “more food, better | LORIMER Jones, his opponen ER akon: SESS Fete | line on our front, advancing in a pthing, better homes, and more|the senatorship, Hanson 4 , P cart, but there were other chaps ; ficient training for the young.” |he had lost “the Washington is mooniratiog heme te Ww rta | <A Cas elt teamt cna. ears pe gg ation rather loose for the Ger. | ol rege Phar agin 7 Me river to the eastward vonen and | | Soe aya . b vans j i; “vai bere wore a oe Pudtnasei Ta Geshe: of | Breatan jmeo bring! ~ Fore comrades on their We opened on them, and they : it Sar ilo Pay Sout at the | View.” ° od In this region, their headquar | rtm ; ore 4 Js « carrying ie a fine target for ir rifie fire,| ry ox oq ; . . ters was Kalisz, a Russian Polish | j them ato @ rose hich was very well supported by nto | a Meets wit ee ton es “peas | ana Pes Ang Ba ge. hglape avery fr Cer tees which they canteen | | As to the spirit ot the British | our artillery. war eventually was entertained here LONDON, Sept. 28—With d to as indorsin an rit “ jhe speaks at Hngham. jearlier in the war and strongly en on — taint he The fire trom our Guns was very ore the| ihe, battle: of She Ae & special privilege \ t leven You would have thought they | etrective, the range being found,, There t* no question that the! 15, day, it ndidates | | were at a football match. They | vith ease, and we could see the| Austrians are concentrating on the| |) oe ace janson took up the subject of } were lying in the trenches with} . Italian frontier | the war office here today tha’ “ 1 . : ell dropp! t to t 1 evelopment of Washington| CRUISER IS LOST} German shells flying all around, |*helle dropping right Into” the)“ h) services in this country, Slav| the allies had as yet gained n@ Do sated iOubaus péstiocs the LONDON, Sept. 28.—The Russian| ey liad Coe reat mautd kit |. “tere and there their lines began regiments were being brought from| decisive advantage over the given the closest attention. |CTuiser Oleg ts ashore on the Fin land had. killed during the day.| ‘2 Waver and give way, and finally} 5 0Me; os teatian provin Germans, it was sesortamiis Quoting directly from the rec-|D/8h coats, and is a total lows ac I They were laughing and joking ali |*%07, disappeared dy = pages 1 — Hi abi ast gee" however, that there were be Hanson showed there was |C°Tding to a news agency message BAISEENS Serge et ’ Half an hour later more infant sat ge ve pon en ey ae ginning to be evidences of a mental difference between |Fecelved here from Stockholm Vouall: m acts are, to a| “There were craps, too, coming d. This time they were welll nrmstion was received of reports| weaxening of the: kaleshaaamm iG progressives and the standpat-| !t was said the crew was saved aoa goer, stupid. Butlin and having thelr | wounds by aritilery, machine! inst the Roumanian-army has been| | treme right. =| a orris Cron n ily * ne and | $e s 3 be at “ of ¥ question involving’ No other details were given Morris Cronin and ils Mn AVY dressed and going off again to have | £28* and strong forces of cavalry on) OO iitha and is within ceriking dic fone mined. to make the most ae AMUSEMENTS SEATTLE THEATRE || MOORE The Seattle Payers in z “THE MASTER MIND” Twlee Dauy THE TAHOMA “The Patterson and the Cor « havi ched Aggattu island, and are picking up the 2:30 &8:30 ‘7 | NEW SPRIES, fore PAUL J. RAINEY | Today survivors of the Tahoma es. mem toutant Ma AFRICAN HUNT About 60 persons In all have a crewing pelea nee, toe tse” || Mate 180 and 200; Nights 16, 20, 300.) been picked up. | The above wireless message has! been recefved by Senior Capt. F. M.} | Dunwoodie, Seattle, of the revenue| jcutter service. The message docs All Seats Reserved. | "PANTAGES TIVOLI The ‘Mt | a _Potfical sit - “ [not say whether any of the Ta MCNAMARA & C0. “WET OR DRY?” hoist cow has doen ios AND vunigun ‘ae eek | The Tahoma was belleved to have inki: : 1 LET GINL had nine officers and members Sinking of the Titanic \..,,.."! a lor the ood 406, AND 200 _ 4 : a jon it was reported she |had aboard eight or ten men who jihad been picked off a small schoon lier that had been wrecked GO actress "| sruotoriare-s || The Tahoma {s not believed by MATS. 1900 SEATS § || Dunwoodle be a total wreck. Sunday A Holidays| REAL CHOLERA LONDON ment bacte HATS CLEANED AND || Marcus REBLOCKED , Ladies’ and Gentlemen's ||| Loew's | Quality Vaudeville or Special All This Week Gold Filled Spectacles and Eye Glasses, Fitted With Sept. 28.—Govern- | t fologists announce | BINYON OPTICAL CO. mn. J. R. BINYON, an 1116 FIRST AVE., NEAR SENECA GERMAN BOMB KILLS O10 MAN BINYON OPTICAL CO—1116 FIRST AVENUE, NEAR SENECA SAYS AKOZ PRACTICALLY CURED PARIS, Sept 8.—While hun-| vantag of th warm autumn sun |shine to promenade along the | |banks of the yesterda a| |German aviator flew over the city [ra dropped | Seine J. W. Brock of Astoria, four bombs. One Out With Big Boost oo for Great Mineral east dorigr . with. kia danghter, and | Remedy. erippled the The others did| small damage | Crippled up with rheumatism, J. W. Brock of Astoria, Ore, a well-known carpenter, was hard ly able to foliow his trade until he took Akoz, the wonderful 1: T1 11 | Fer California medicinal mineral Cc 0 Three weeks of the treatment SUBALTERN—Holding the rank| ¥ Stopped the pains and enabled of a junior officer, bel the rank of him to resume his work He of captain. In England optilarly | | / Gays in a letter to the Natura used ing the Indian and South company of San Franeisco African camt ns, referring espe-| “1 had muscular rheumatism clally to a second lieutenant A for ten years. My legs and Heutenant Is a commisstoned offi arms were affected, as well as cer, next in rank below a captain the chest. | endured at pains, and commanding a company in his especially when | breathed. 1 absence. Oberlieutenant, in the ed other medicines, but never J. W. BROCK German army, is a first Meuten-| fot the resulia | have obtained ant from Akoz. My rheumatism was so\take the internal treatment a little] CHASSEURS-A-PIED — A body bad that it was hardiy possible for | longer, as advised, to get the cause|of Nght infantry, ving for eape me to work. 1 took Akoz three |of the trouble out of my system, I\cially rapid movements, particul Weeks. The pains left me in a few |am with Akoz at every swing of the|ly useful in pursuing a retreating days. 1 now breathe freely with-| hammer.” |foe. The word chasseur is nch out suffering. 1 go to my work| Akoz has given similar relief to|for “hunter. The German and] with zest, can swing a hammer and | thousands of cases of rheumatiam,| Austrian “Jager is used in the} Ciimb about as nimbly as I could) stomach trouble, diabetes, Bright’s| same way for a body of Hight troops,| when I was a young fellow. Not | disease, ulcers, piles, eczema, skin\elther cavalry or foot j Only has my rheumatiem practical-| diseases and other ailments. For| PRIVATEER—An ty been gured by the three weeks {hale at all leading druggists, where| owned and officered by private per have en. Akoz, but my whole|further information may be had sons, but acting under a commis ‘Menstitution has been helped, I will! garding this advertisement, wlou from the state, e , armed vessel pwr week which is so swift in its action, | *20tber so oddly staged, and so genuinely) “No grotesque and finny, that tt ensily| tops the Orpheum bill, though it ts) not advertised as the headliner The act opens weird and myetif tects, which are follow ning clubewitnging family are two clever dwarte put on a boxing match whic last night's audience. The headline act Frank North has returned after two/ by light years with bis “Back ton,” a delightful rural vehicle. Walter Dickinson In a “rube monologue, Good Ide Divinoff, Russian violinist Good, but should play more muatc with a series of | Bromfield ing olectrical ef-; British Royal Engineers In the Cronin|not worrying, who | they come. h tickled | stores, cinemas, casinos, dock sheds jand for a time had the stars as @ ts also good.|counterpane to Welling: | and close; as one pal sald the Germans Quarter From ob,” He Says is the statement of Otto of the signal section, Our This ne and going as I'm told but taking things as I've slept in barns, wool Vm “The fighting has been very flerce ‘Oh, ain't it ‘ot!’ We are outnumbered, some times 10,000 to 2,000, but our boys | atick to them, and have played hay oc with their ‘masse formations.’ “The Maxims have cut them down of the kind his audiences can un-!Iike corn, and when we charge with derstand [fixed bayonets, see ‘om run like rates. Fredreka Slemofis and company| They will get no quarter from our in a comedy playlet, “Liz.” Good ‘mob. Their dead were so thick Hert Kalmar and Bessie Brown,|that their reinforcements couldn't dancers. Good song. Not good at all Les Saivaggis, Parisienne danc-| ers, open the bill. ir ° THE SEATTLE + The Seattie pl with two audiences yesterday Daniel Carter's crime drama, Master Mind ‘The story, well done Se se THE MOORE ° nA Broderick O'Farrell]. Kalmar «ings a/ advance over the top; of course, we Jost, too Private Charles Dudley Moore of \the Yorkshire Light Infantry, who |was at Mona, had the misfortune to —@|\be wounded half an hour after he went into his first battle. vers made goot|First Man “ith He Ever Killed “The shrapne) shells of the Ger- ans were bursting over the \ : is the true Asiatic cholera which] was cast in the role of Andrew Wat Spherical Lenses— has made its a rance in the | kins, the arch criminal, and never erent ben gly ge Te igo gy hospitals and concentration camps| allowed himself for a moment tol iiece of shell, which took the sole for wounded soldiers about Vienna,|step outside the character of that|S¢ my boot clean off,” he aald necordl ) © dispatch to the Ex:|wicked man who has some good|” pve minutes later, when I was change Telegraph Co. It ts said] in him, after all. For, when the mo-lrrying to help a fellow near me who more than 70,000 wounded mon |ent of his vengeance, comes, he, be-|}oa teen hit in the shoulder 1 wae are exposed to the disease and | cause of hia love for a woman, holds! geruck in the right thigh by a pollet that an epidemic i» imminent |bis destroying hand. It is strong |from a shrapnel shell 1 fired one shot after that. I aimed at the driver of a German machine gun and killed him This was my firet experience of | The Ratnier African hunt pictures actual fighting, and I can tell you} for 1914 are continued at the Moore |!t is a funny sensation at first to see | theatre until Wednesday, inclusive JAPS DRIVING | the shells bursting near and around you, to hear the bulleta whistling by you, and to see men being killed and wounded near you, but you soon get ysed to it all it tries your nerves a bit at first, jbut you soon get in the way of It.” GERMAN BACK “Get Out and Get Under” Private J. R. Tait of the Second Essex regiment, who was wounded Sin TOKIO, t. 28.—The Germans were defeated in Saturday's and |%t Mons, also speaks with respect of Sunday's battle on their first line | the man artillery of Kiaochau defenses, it was an We had several charges with | nounced today The German defense to ave en paralyzed vy bombardment, The Japanese were tated to have used aeroplanes effectively in their attack also Japanese losses were placed at only three killed and 12 wounded. | The number of German casualties | was not given WIFE OF DEXTER HORTON IS DEAD, their infantry. We find they do not like the bayonets. Their rifle shoot ing is rotten. Their field artillery is good “1 heard our men singing that famous song, ‘Get Out and Get Under,’ and know that for an hour in-our trench it would make any one keep under, what with the shells and ma- chine guns. | have been in three battles in four days A guardsman wounded near Com | plegne has given a vivid account of the fighting there and of the cap- ture of 10 German guns by the Brit Stricken with paralysis two years/|ish troops », Mra. Arabella C. Horton, widow of the late Dexter Horton, neer Seattle banker, died Sunday at the family home, 627 14th ay. N. She is survived by three sigp-children, Charles 1. Horton, Mrs, WV. G, Jones and Miss Caroline EB. Seattle. Mra, Horton was 87. She came to Seattle In 1881, shartly after her marriage to Mr, Horton, Some time Horton, all of ago Mra, Horton willed $33,000 to the Ladies’ Relief society tn trust for the orphans’ home on Queen Anne bill, “We wel in a field,” he says, ‘when the Germans dropped on us all of a sudden as though from the sky The first hint we had of their presence was when a battery of guns on the right sang out, drop. ping shells into a mob of us who were waiting for our turn at the washtub-—the river. “There was no panic as far as 1 saw, only some of our fellows who hadn't had a wash for a long time said strong things about the Ger mans for spoiling the best chance % Irish Guards Stand Cc ry lt “All came on at a smart pace, with the apparent pian of seizing a hil! on our right. “At the same moment our cavalry came Into view, and them the whole Guards brigade advanced “It was really a race between the two parties to reach the hill first, but the Germans won easily, owing to their being nearer by half a mile. “As soon as thelr guns and infantry had taken up a posi- tion, the cavalry came along in ® uge mass with the intention of riding down the Irish Guards, who were nearest to them “When the shock came it seemed terrific to us in the distance for the Irishmen did mot recoil in the least, but flung themselves right across the path of the German horse- men, “We could hear the crack of the rifles and see the German horses impaled on the bayonets of the front ranks of the guardsmen. Then the whole force of in fantry and cavalry were mixed up in one confused heap, like so many pleces from a jig saw puzzle. “Shells from the British and German batteries kept dropping close to the tangled mass of fight ing men, and then we saw the Ger- We heard later that the Germans man horsemen get clear and take to fight as fast as their horses would carry them Some had no horses, and they were bayoneted where they stood. We heard later that the Germans were in very great force, and had attacked in the hope of driving us | back and so uncovering the French left, but they got more bargained for.” Germans Annihilate the “Dirty Shirts” A wounded private of the Royal Munster Fusiliers (the Dirty Shirts”) tells a story of the fight ing when, for some reason or oth er, he says, “we were left in the lurch, and had to bear the brunt of the whole German attack, while the rest of the brigade fell back “They came at us from all points—horse, foot, artillery, and all, and the air was thick with screaming, shouting men waving swords and blazing away at us like blue murder. “Our lads stood up to them without the least taste of fear, and when their cavairy came down on us we received them with fixed bayonets In front, the rear ranks firing away as steadily as you please. “All round us we them collecting until there was hard- ly a hole fit for a wee mouse to get through, and then it was that the hardest fight of all took place, for we wouldn't surrender, and tried our hard- est to cut through the stone wall of the Germans, “It was hell's own work, can say that we never hoisted the white flag, and if the battalion was wiped out, as they say, it fought to the last gasp. “First of all, | got a punch in the ribs with a sword, and then I got a bullet in me, but when T was able to see what was going on, the men were cutting their way through the Germans. “lL was floored, for I can't tell you how long, but when I got back my senses the Germans had gone, leaving only heaps of the dying and the dead.” than they but 1} tance of the Austrian frontier, ARMORED AUTO SLAUGHTERS ’EM were bringing tremendous pressure to bear at this point, it was sald. The public was much excited hy ja report from Ostend that Mons, Belgium, a highly important point” — to the Germans, was burning, bat LONDON, Sept —A powertul| the war office has received no con armored automobile driven by Bel-| firmation of the story. , gian soldiers is proving a modern] Circumstantial accounts were Pe” Juggernaut, according to the Ghent| ceived concerning the ala correspondent of the London Chron-| prevalence of typhoid among fele, who says that the land | Germans at the front cruiser,” as the deadly machine is| In the Dendre river valley, suddenly rounded a corner| Termonde, Belgium, it was and came upon a party of | 700 had died of the fever. German cyclists Many pneumonia cases also Most of them were killed by the| reported in the kalser’s ranks. |) machine gun before they could re The German wounded, too, were) mount, and the auto followed and| understood to be suffering fright killed six of those who did remount. | fully Lieut. Dethaix, commander of the} ear, returned to headquarters with! German helmets, overcoats, saddles | and other trophies GERMANS HAVE LOST 104,589 — MEN IN WAR BERLIN, Sept. 28.—An_ official bulletin published here yesterday gives the total number of German | dead, wounded and missing so far during the war as 104,589. Of these 15,674 are reported dead, wounded and 23,007 missing BOER GENERAL JOINS ALLIES) Bargain Sale Now Stationery and Office Morey Stationery Co. TIS First Ave. Near Columbia: | Children’s Photos — JACOBS fic ALBERT HANSEN si Jeweler and Silveremith Sept. BORDEAUX, 28,—Gen. Is Now Located at His Francois Joubert-Pienaar, the fa New Store mous Boer leader, who fought | , against Gen. French in the Boer |f] 1 Se0end Ave. Near Meginam war, has arrived in this city and = —— = has offered his services to the| army of the allies. Tell your needs to — BULL BROS. 4 200,000 people in Seattle SUS # Printers through a STAR WANT AD. 1013 THIRD sAIN 1043 THE TRADE CIRCULAR that escapes the wastebasket is the exception. Soliciting letters largely go the same way. No one disregards a telegram. The manufacturer, jobber or merchant who uses WESTERN UNION Day and Night Letters for circularizing his trade and soliciting orders employs the most effective and economical sales method yet devised. They compel attention; They bring the orders. THE WESTERN UNION TELEGRAPH CO. Full information gladly given at any office.

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