The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 9, 1914, Page 9

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g342098 Fi our the bie ad- have ry $3 $16 For street, 5 Broadcloth Tailleur Suits “SIXTEEN $16 carriage and afternoon wear—models after those from the fashion studios | of Europe's famed designers. Colors wistaria, midnight blue, amethyst, hunter's green, Afrique brown, navy and black. MARVELS—ALL OF ’EM COATS Little Frocks THAT HAVE THAT SWAGGER AIR At $12.75 IN DAINTY SILKS AND SERGE—DRESSES PUT TO- GETHER IN FAIRY-LIKE DAINTINESS AT | $16 SWEET SIXTEEN $16 SATURDAY BARGAINS! 65 Coats; 47 Suits, New and Stylish, to go at $8.85 -}j Don’t Miss This Bargain. Open Saturday Evening to 9:30. +The Greater Seattle Cloak and Suit Co. 1418 Second Ave. Bon Marche is Opposite Our Store. We solicit applications for residence loans in sums from $300.00 to $15,000.00—either on im- proved property or for building purposes—up to 50 per cent of a consery- ative valuation, anywhere in Greater Seattle. We have not raised our rates on account of the war in Eyrope. We allow loans to be repaid in monthly in- stallments to suit the borrower. All our loans are or before.” We give borrowers the privilege of paying as much each month as de- sired. We charge no commis- sions whatever. Loans Closed Promptly Washington Savings & Loan Association 810 Second Avenue on Bargain Sale Now On. Stationery and Office Supplies Morey Stationery Co. 71K First Ave. Near Columbia St. ODDITIES In the WAR NEWS |@ A French private named Baba Couli-Baly has been men- tioned in orders for courage and accurate rifle fire. While guarding a train of automobiles he put 15 German cavalry }men out of business. " ia A British captain who captured a German-manned trawler jlaying mines in the North sea could not make the captives |tel where they had placed the mines. He put one of the |Germans on the bow of the ship, so if they hit a mine the |German would be the first to die. The search proved a suc- \cess. Almost 300 mines were found. | A woman writing from Germany says among the reports | published there to cheer the populace are that the French have lost 890,000 men, 170 generals, 1,200 flags and 12,000 guns, | which is more than could have been mobilized since the cam |paign started. As to the British army, it has been annihilated ltwice, according to these same reports. iT The United States diplomatic service, now a sort of handy man for all nations in Europe, has been asked by a circus jagency to find “Teddy Bobs,” a Briton, in Germany. If the | fact he is eight feet tall |him, it is expected his appetite will, for he is one of the most | prodigious eaters in Europe, and if not found will aid his coun jtry by reducing Germany's food sup ply BIG AUDIENCE HISSES WHEN OLE MENTIONS JONES’ NAME KELSO, Wash. Oct. 9- W. LORIMER Jones’ hissed by a monster audience here last night which broke all records for size in any political | on ae towards the close of}, made no comments rs speech or cn Jones c when the/ Olo Manega's speech, when the! nerely read Jones’ os Senator) progressive candidate for U. & name was|senator read extracts from |speech in defense of William Lerimer, the crooked senator of |Il!inots, who was expelled fror the senate. Hanson Jones on pitt ‘ Made New By Magic y knowledge, skill able to! jes Into value Things As i we a objects of y and 8q loc throw your bureau for old rings, lockets, bracelets and chain ng them to us and how we can make up-to-date at smafl silver, old figures, rings us polish your 1 beauty. There is nothing we can’t in the way of repairing. charges are nominal. M. BENNETT Jeweler nod Stone 5a6 W reby adding to Hanson [name was hissed when TAILORING ntene came to this sentence “If former President |had been standing on |when Pilate delivered |the Jews after having examined |Into the charges and found no |fault In him, but at the demand fof the people turned him over to |them for crucifixion, he would |have clapped his “hands and ex lolaime: ‘Most righteous, most honorable, most Just judge.’ ’ It was at this point in Jone speech in congress that Senate Poindexter of Washington asked the following question | "1 do not k Jactly clear as to Please Come in | which the senator and See laghlordboeeres Hundreds of men stop daily 1 Tee Christ to admire the beautiful fabric 7 Hanson and lish fashions which} when he arrived are on disp ylay in our windows. |tleally all the people itn > lturned out to hear him. Mayor come in to examine the! Hubbell presided. ae ta ning his for state Hanson read a lis user holdings showing and burned-ove was held for specula refused at Roosevelt one side Jesus to illustration is now making mean to paral with Senato: band was met bya here and In ex | developme of Weyerh |how |land |aale price “Hanson will for fear y of because you think « 0 high In price No Such Thing jgated ¢ any r carry this county |bigger than’ Roosevelt did two years @go,” declared J. L. Spar irg, manager of the Granger Tele |phone and Telegraph Co. “The |people are down the fine for him O’NEIL’S TAILORS [and his vote here will be an eye 1419 Third Ay. opener to Jones. Going for the men of this Hut don't walt till you pass our | store. Come in today. You'll be ty gind you did id lame in the left leg does aut find| I am ex-|* STAR 1914, PAGE 9. King Albert Under Fire in Heavens ANTWERP, Albert, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9, Oct, 9—King Belgium's soldier sov Is dally adding to hie and hie Intest experience was to be un: ereign, honors for bravery, der fire in # balloon, according to reliable reports. He ascended tn a balloon to sur vey the operations tn the vicinity of Antwerp, and the Germans be gan a dangerous on the air} craft | Shells passed all around tt, but most of them fell short, He took {s time and the balloon was not on gra | King Albert 1s to be constantly | soon in the danger zone | at German “Beant! 6 siege guns are |i bombardment of ante among » women and children as shells} the city | ng appeared the bal-| cony of his palace and appealed to} Relgians to be worthy of the tra] tions of their glorious little army, | ald them to be calm, that he | hoped'to set them an example. He aid | lis continued to burst as he} but in a short time all fear dissipated and cheered his tnapir aa his subjects sang anthem, he left for front along the first Jine of nses is on duty, much of the time hes, night and day an t at ove The on GERMAN TROOPS | ARE CRITICISED LONDON, Oct. 9.—Tho offictal war news bureau {nsued a summary today of itary ations on the} continent in which British troops have been engaged up to October 2.] A British battalion commander | |was quoted as criticising the Ger| 5 an follows | rman off! thetr ‘The Gi jin leading under cover and {n clo once the troor dep der, depriving th direct personal lea will not face a hoary fire. "Their supporta elther waver |when thelr front line fs checked, or Jelse crowd forward, huddling to jxother and losing the openness of| thelr for x ng & mag ra are skilled troops forward| » bodies, but loy in open c of thelr officers’ ership, the men| “At the etart, fighting behind en trenchments, the Germans endeay. lored to gain ground by advancing at dusk and at dawn, and digging themselves {n, hoping eventually to} get near enough to carry our |trenches at one rush.” Eilers Building Big German Liner I am busine Your che made to Your cl cy OVERCOAT TO ORDER 1301 Third Avenue going to cel in the brat rate suit fr measure vice of a ¢ of yur > Brady's First Anniversary Sale versary tailoring high- The Original Brady 1 always did and I always will take the 6 lead when it comes to high- rade tailoring. I am proud of my record as a first-class tailor, ang you'll be good and proud of any sult or overcoat that you wear from my store. Sale Begins SATURDAY Every 6ult or Overcoat Tried on In the bast- Ing. Fit guar- anteed. Corner University St 1301 Third Avenue Fears Winter Ice| NEW YORK, German liner driven the fi Oot. 9.—The great | Kronprinzessin © {nto Bar harbor dur st fow. days of the war by Britian abifted to New harbor the winter to void damage by fce on the coast of Matno. SICK CHILDREN LOVE CASCARETS FOR THE BOWELS, Get a 10cent box now Most of the ills of childhood are caused by a sour, disordered stom By Wm. G. Shepherd ON THE BATTLEFIELD NEAR SOISSONS, Sept. 19. (By courier to Paris and by mall to New York.)—For five days we—Jimmy Hare, Master Photographer, and myself— have sat in this little town waiting. We are at the battle front be cause we stumbled onto it. I did ot know I was at the front until a French officer to “We'll go back,” we explained. “We don't want to go to the front.” “But re at the front now,” luggish liver and constisated|>ack. You'll have to stay here until is. They catch cold eaxily,|bck. You'll have to stay here until become cross, listless, irritable, | the tactical situation has changed erish, restless, tongue ooated, | Can't Tell Where He Is jon't eat or sleep wall and need a] And hore we must stay, pl aged eansing of the bowels—|not to reveal the town’s name or but don’t try to force a nauseating | any detail of the fighting. of oll into the ttle one’s al-| Hour after hour, day after day, sick stomach—tt itomobiles have been passing our lens and old-fashioned }house on their way from one part Any child will gladly take Casca-|of the battlefield to another. Théy rets Candy Oathartie which act|carry soldiers to the fighting lines gently — never gripe or produce|and bring back dead and woun the ‘slightest uneasi —- me 80, althy | liver and bowels in a pure, h ndition Ky Pal divctons tor ebitron ane] WAS JUST DYIN grown-ups in each package. Mothers can rest easy afte: giv-| NEW YORK, Oct. 9—Wm. Cur tng this gentle, thorough laxative|ley, a 7-year-old pupil of public |which costs only 10 cents a box school No. 61, living at 544 W. 42nd at any drug store. jet., was 1 to the Polyclinic hos weed |. oy with what an ambalance sur. geon described as a fractured skull A Message to o Thin, jand died tn the night In school the boy's teacher notlo Weak, Scrawny Folks .0'32°030 nn.” bae'ie sald bo |was ° tt After question An Easy Way to Gain 10 to 30 Ibe. | ing, ho recalled having fallen in the of Solid, Healthy, Permanent street while playing baseball last} Flesh Saturday. The teacher caused an | ambulance to be called, Dr, Tobin sald it was re had not collapse :/ TAX! CHAUFFEUR DISCOVERS JEWELS NEW YORK, Oct. 9. several hours after she ples, Mrs. G. lL Montreal, who is stopping at a local hotel, had the pleasure of having them returned to h@r Returning from a taxteab trip to say good-bye to a friend sailing for Ewrope, Mrs. Ogilvie missed a chamois bag, containing $107 in cash, a $300 brooch and a $200 ¢ mond pin. The missing articles were found in the cab by the chauf. feur, Harry Brauer, Mrs, Ogilvie sent Brauer $50 as a reward. | long before. Within missed her Ogilvie of ble that the boy | They transport food and ammunt-) tion Above all traction, eannon mission, “When the facts about this bat- tle are known,” said an officer to} me, “it will go down in history as| the most terrific and costly artil-| lery duel that human beings’ have ever fought.” | Led Away to Be Shot } The scenes about here almost! other noise and dis-| the persistent roar of the continues without inter }the French lines as a spy because defy description. A priest has just led four men, caught robbing dead bodies on the battlefield, to the place where they are to be shot A huge German,.a magnificent specimen of a man, who entered his officers were desperately in need of information concerning the Gallic troops’ position, has just been arrested. How he ever ex- pected to get any information back to his chiefs I can’t imagine. As I looked at him, I realized how much Contractor Gets. | a Term in Jai } For Toting a Gat! V. T. Bresste, contractor, 901 | Rainter av., was fined $25 and sen tenced to one day in fail yesterday by Police Judge Gordon because he had a loaded gun in his pocket. | Bressio appealed, He said he was| taking the gun home from his of-| fice to practice on burglars. Sunnyside © Chartes Colson . Spokane Grain & J. & McMullen & J. A. Carstens West Seattle Fue: Em!) Cart . Valley Fuel Co. Beacon Hil! Woo Frank Zikmund Ontrom Coal & W WAR COMES HIGH) 1| LONDON x|the political Oct, 9.—Sidney Webb, | economist, has just completed the compilation of ‘sta th howing that the war at Pig ~ - ag ine-| Present is costing England at the| soent. rate of $55 a second, 1. W. Bullock Sawyer & Dann, Interlake Fuel Co. Milligan & Nesbit .- G. 8. Dudley & Sons’... Newell Fuel & Feed Co. South Park Lumber Co. 4-& Cont Monks & Miller . Jap Women Diver: Offer Is Refused TOKIO, Oct. 9.—A number of ex- pert Japanese women divers who make their living diving for pearls have offered their services to the government to clear the harbor of Kiaochau of German mines. The navy refused the offer, as Japanese women are not permtited to take rt in war operations. Oo, . Stuart Fuel & Feed Co, PHINNEY RIDGH DISTRICT FP. BR. Holmes Lumber & Fuel Cassth and Greenwood ... QUEEN ANNE DISTR n Second N, and Boston Fifth and Roy wo 1 & Feed G RAINIDR Fairmont Fuel Co. Jolumbia § ‘Columbia § TOWN DISTRICT § Duwan ARK. DI Cloverdale st... LL DISTRICT Garon sourn BEACON BILL SHEPHERD AND JIMMY HARE SEE FIGHTING AT BATTLE FRONT braver a spy must be than an dinary soldier. I think he must have resij himself to a spy'’s death before hi eos the German lines, for, as ed, he looked over the bi er his captors as if he were o. an onlooker. It's No Fun at the Front “He'll cuddle up at the foot of stone wall pretty soon,” said soldier. : I suppose he did. » eansscecad onto the front is nq You see nothing and yet the of ficers tell you they are afraid yor will run away and tell the Ger mans what you have seen. I have been movement was troops moving. But if I did get hold of a Get man who would listen to me, only information I could giv would be that I had soldiers—and I'm sure mans already know that there a‘ _French and British soldiers about Se RE as LIST OF DEALERS WHERE YOU CAN BUY RENTON COAL Brooklyn Buel Co, al é@ v North 428 ‘Kenwood 3090 Ballard 1965 Kenwood 151 se+- North 208 Ballard 841 »Ballard 507 West 19 Rainier t Rainier 68 Rainier 20 Sidney 187 Sidney 180 Beacon 82 - Main 1218 Elitott 2 Elltott 500 achusetts Main 976 RICT : and Madison La6th and Deorh : Eighth and Ma 609 Tenth ay ood

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