The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 14, 1914, Page 2

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And remember, The following departments are being closed out now and everything marked down 4, Notions, Buttons, Fancy Goods, cles, Crockery. Gla Yarns, Hair Goods, ware, Hardware, Traveling Bags and Suit ing to closing time. STOVE BOARDS Economy Basement ° hat yo 1 at the t winte We have abo of them es made of wood, zine cove c Worth up 98c. All go at one Se Sa a namely 25c BP ay spc bk 4 o'clock INGRAIN CARPET Fourth Floor. Extra heavy, half woo! and 36 inches wide. Regu lar price 65c. For Thursday the price will be, yard 39c Twenty- Five _ Pretiily Trimmed -Crex Grass Rugs Haig, values. te Fourth Floor. last $12.00 Values for $7.49 Crex Grass Rugs, size 9x12, sold Seattle from $12.00 ¢ down to $1950. Our price Thursday $7 49. 50c Window Shades 25c 500 of them, worth 50c each, but we have onl two colors left, namely Terra Cotta and L) ight Gray. These are trimmed with heavy lace {nser tion and are complete, all ready to hang 25 c 75c Women’s Rubber Goods 25c The kinds you pay and 49¢ for go at clos ing price, namely $1.00 FIFTY Smartly Trimmed Hats, while they last— $1.98 20¢ Cups and. Sencers 10c Gold band Cups and 20. Austrian make, medium weight 49 Tea Pots 25 English Tea Pots, plain brown or decorated, three sizes; worth up to 49c¢. All go at 250. To the first} or 8% Lim Bung Big Saving to Take small packages with you. various departments, shop on a transfer NOTIONS Colgate’s Soaps neh Sar rae WATCH FOR OUR ADVERTISEMENTS. BARGAINS FOR THURSDAY Picked at random, that will fill this store with buyers from early in the morn- READ THEM—DON’T MISS THEM. second floor Ready-to- W: tomorrow, Thursday ow Apron for 0 @ customer. Stationary, Druggists’ Carpets, 3 and \/2 Sundri Rugs, Etc IT PAYS. ou! If you cannot get waited on tomorrow, come again Friday. save you time and el erereoes, Shop ons transier._ 1¢ will save you ime and eliminate misteses LITTLE THINGS AT LITTLE PRICES! ART GOODS Se Goff Angora Col-| 19¢ Wilson Dress | 39¢ and 25c fancy Pin | ored Braids, S-yard | Hooks, card 7¢ | Cushions de bolts 5¢ | 10¢ dozen Mother's | 15¢ and 10¢ Stamped | 1c Goff Mercerized | Ironing Wax 5¢ | Dotiles be Braid, black and navy. | g¢ Mourning and Berry | 36c and Stamped bolt 7¢ | Pins, box 2¢ | Napkin Handker- Se O. N. T. Lustre and | 5 paper Pins, 260) Chiefs, Collars, Bags, | Crochet Cottons ~ | count ..sdcc-su ses sg | Ot. cholee 15¢ | iia % for 5¢ | 0c, 7c, be Cube Pins, | Sic and 60c Stamped Basting Thread, black all go vse | Towels, Scarfs and and white, dozen spools | oo Hair Pin Cable | Centerpieces ze for ... 10¢ | vets Be | $125 Stamped Scarts 1c and 8c Stewart | 5. wnerong” Hair Pine | **°** -- 50¢ | Duplex Safe’ Ping, | “an sizes, pkg.....3¢ | 10° Zephyr, German sizes up to card | 25e “West” Electric | town Imperial brand “ *S€ | Hair Curlers, set of § Yarns, skein ze ie and S0c fancy | tive 12¢ Fletsher’s German. round and pin top| ioe Queen town Yarns, skein 10¢ “gag 35¢ | Pins, dozen 15e Fleisher's Eider. 35c fancy pin top Sup- | 0c Hair Ce dows Weel Taxes, porters 20¢ | 5c German make Yarn skein 10¢ Ladies’ and Children’s Darners 2¢ | i0c Fleisher's Shetland 25e Hickory Support- | 5c Crowley's or Mil Yarns, skein ve ers, pair ... 15¢ | ward's Needles, pack as Ladies’ and Children's | age of 35c Flelsher’s Knitting 15c Hose Supporters, | 5c Tape Worsted Zhe pair . inches 45c Pin Cushion Forms 50c Foster and ibe and i0c a dozen] . 30¢ Gees Chic Hose Black Tubular Shoe | 365¢ Pin Cushion Forms porters, pair ces, dozen 2he 1c Dress Shields Laces a dk Wanien Seen $1.00 Triton Gar a pai * a ’ Shie Bags A 50e e Bigs a tee fe = ya High Point 25c Riekrack « Tango bolt of 6 yards Shields 10¢ Macey's sard ‘ahit ieee Mutual Hook and Eyes, tube Se | ing, % inch wide, yard Tape, yard Atlas Hooks and Qe | be Clark's O. N. T Eyes, 2 cards Se | 20¢ and 15e Omo| Spool Cotton 1¢ 10¢ DeLong Hooks and | Bias Tape, 12 yards for | 10c Barbour’s Linen Eyes, card We). 10¢ | Thread, spool Ve of Fountain Kleinert’s Wash | tose . 15¢ ri at 19¢ | Clot n 19¢ | Colgate’s Cashmere | Another 6%e | All Bristle Brushes up Bouquet Soap 18¢ | Rubber 4 at to $5.00 Exactly Half Ed Pinaud’s 35¢ Soap 19¢ Price. Bg eae 19¢ Se Court Plasters..1¢ | Bristle Hair Brushes . se:4M¢ | Atomizer Bulbs...15¢ | up to $1.25 for. O9¢ Toilet Soaps, 7 | F d's Vegetal. .54¢ | 29¢ ibe Rub ke 25 Pinaud’s Lil 54¢ | Der { z5¢ All 10¢ Totlet Soap $¢ | 25c Danderine ...46¢ | lic Whisk Brooms.s¢ Se Petroleum Jelly B¢ | 50c¢ Danderine 16¢ | 5c, 45¢ and 4c. Whisk 10¢ and 15¢ Petroleum | $1.00 Seven Sutherland | Brooms 25e Vaseline S¢ | Sisters Halr Ton cy Fuller's Barth © cans Petroleum . 13¢ | 50c Seven Sutherland | 15.¢ and 10¢ 10e tube Vaseline J¢ | Sisters Hair Tonic esti | A lot of Taleum Pow se ders, 20¢ and 25c cans | §1 Powder Azurea | 20¢_ and = 16e 10¢ ane | Brushes 10¢ ie Violet Talcum Pow- | $1.15 Powder Le Trefie | 10¢ Manicure Sets.5¢ der 8¢ Be | 2h dlitz Powders, | Up to 50 Pearson | 26¢ Graves’ Tooth Pow papers 1 Rubber Cushion | de 12¢ | 10¢ Tooth Brushes. 5é Brushes Crown and Lav 25e¢ Tooth Brushes Up to $1.75 Ide ender Salts 15e 10¢ ber Cushion Brushes Hundreds of othe Up to Xe Hair Combs 696 | ba 10¢ | wew dep nothing give a 4) EVERY THURSDAY IS BARGAIN DAY AT PANTON’S —FOR STAR READERS— » Tol Extraordinary Sale of Trimmed Hats We cannot deliver them at these prices. this store is closing out a number of departments preparatory to mak ing this into a specialty store for Ready-to-Wear Apparel for men, women and children. Positively reserved let Arti Bungalow Aprons! Read This! 00 customers vi Thousands of Little Things Here at a When shopping at be Carlson © urri ter Co.'s Embroidery Silks, skein Be be Glossilia Rope Silk | skoin Be Half Price on all Fiber Letter Foundations, Stars, Emblems and Scallops One-Third Off on | Soclety Roy age Goods. 40c spools Carlson Cur ah Pack rier Co.'s Knitting | Silks, half oz, at 25¢ © spools Carlson Cur rier Co.'s Silks, % o« ut 15¢ © balls Royal Soole Crochet at ise 10¢ Barbour's« Linen Crochet Thread at..3¢ 26e bolt Coronation Cords at 10¢ balis Pletsher'’s Ice at, ball 10¢ Pillow Tops and arts 9c, 59 and b0e Pil low * and Scarts : Embri Pa er Topa and Cen’ Laundry Bhe nd §&e Pillow re 50¢ Bage the 59c Laundry Bags 85¢ Stamped Children's Dresses 50¢ $1.48 and $1.19 Pin Cushions ing, Embroidery bolt of 9 fancy yards _ DRUGS, SUNDRIES, ETC. 200 Half Price for any of our made-up Pillows, Leather Scarfs, Pillow Cords and Bath Robe Cords Half Off on all Hatr Goods, Switches, etc Up to 50e Hair Comt 2 10¢ Pumice Stone lhe and 10¢ Shaving Brush 7 Up to 48e Shaving B * 256 © Shaving 8 All 26¢ Shaving ders 18¢ Wiillama’ Shaving Soav cake ze 25¢ Chamois Sking 15¢ jo Chamois Skins B%¢ Orange Sticks, a dozen 10¢ Ihe Kleinert's Wasa Cloths, in bags...10¢ JOHN PANTON COMPANY| STAR—WEDNE SAVAGE LUST SATISFIED ON BY KARL H. VON WIEGAND KONISBERG, East Prussia, | Oct. 13.—(By Wire to Bertin, | Thence by Wirel via Say. ville.) —The oza' Cossacks left a tral! of desolation against the fertile fields of East Prussia as they swept backward Into their amarting under own country, the defeat suffered by them at German hands. 1 have reached here.after a 600.) automobile trip through this/ following a path of blasted tured men, women aad and devastated homes almost imporsible to jarea, lives, to children, such as it ts believe My Journey of a spectal German general staff Tell Awful Stories of Crusity virtue the was made b permit issued by The battlefields of Tannenberg and Niedenburg w bad enough, but the countryside told the most ap palling stories of rapine, murder and inhuman cruelt nbure the Russians ir lust by the violation ot seless peasant und Ni 4 th satintt aged terribty The czars troops took full re ve for their defeat on the wome Catholic sisters and young girls bore cruelties worse than the tor tures of the battlefield, then were left dying as the Muscovite bears strode on The Russians killed every male of military age they encountered A Riot of Lust The Russian investment of Konis-| burg was accompanied by the same riot of lust as occurred at Nieden | bore. i | At Absachwagen,’ 10 mileq from |nere, 67 men and women wore shot, |ineluding eight boys between the| of 14 and 19 | am One father sald: “The Cossacks! shot the people, one by one, My wife and I fell on our knees and 4 God to spare our boy of 14 bound ue and forced lore their bul The Russian 4 to nee him fall be lots At Abachwagen I went to the sick bed of a young widow, who raved| of the horrors she had seen. Man's Eyes Gouged Out | Three Cossacks compelled her to |etand at a window and look on at the murder of her husband of a month, of her father, aged 73, and lof her father-in-law, 62 Pastor Rockel, at Griesdenen, told | how the Cossacks gored his brother to death, prodding him with a bayo- net and gouging his eyes out. | At Ortelsburg witnenses of the} Russian retreat said the Cossacks locked four defenseless persons, to lelnding a deaf mute and a child of 12, tn a houe, then set the building lon fire. I saw the blackened ruins.| Young Girie Not Spared At Gerdaun at least 100 persons were shot and more than 20 are missing. Here again there were| stories of atrocities prepetrated on women. Reputable men sald girls of 14 and 15 were not spared. Moth ers and daughters suffered the same fate At Christiankehmen 12 men were shot and their bodies were mut! lated. Scores of villages ere devastated and the homes in many of them were unspeakably defiled froth gar ret to cellar. His Majesty, Young Chief Seattle, Pays Visit to Star Office (Continued From Page 1.) | T took you from your dead mother's | arms. You are the oldest son of the | oldest son of Chief Seattle. You are the head man of the Snohomish peo-| ple.” Why didn’t you tell me this be fore?” asked his majesty, bitterly Your people are scattered.” “They can be brought together. sald the king. They are poor.” They can be taught to work and save,” said his masenty ‘The white men rule the which was ours.” ‘The time for bitterness ts past,” said the king. “The land is large; there is room enough for all. “They die of tuberculosis,” They can be cure¢ Chief David Seattle, now that he he was a king, thought to 6 a royal progress among his pople Sometimes he bought railroad tickets. At other times he atole rides on freight trains, And often he walked. He journeyed in Oregon. He wandered east of the Cascade: He visited the remotest corne: of the Olympic peninsula. Finally he traveled to the north: ern end of British Columbia, Wherever he heard of Sno. homish Indians, there he went. “There are,” he sald, “2,300 of my people. OF THESE | HAVE VISITED 2,000. They were glad to see me.” His majesty found his pe The fishing has game is scarce uberculosis and white man's whisky have taken toll of the tribe, He gave them good ad vice. He told them to leave whisky alone. He told them ff they would sleep with the windows and doors of their houses open they would } less likely to die of tuberlosia (This he had nearned at school.) He told them to keep their bodies clean He told them to work and save and land learn trades Only the uppers of his rusty shoes were intact when the royal progress ended in Seattle yesterday But he held his h high, and, on leaving, permitted us to shake his hand. He walked aawy With a kingly tread, SDAY, OCT, GIRL VICTIMS: |to take PAGE 2 14, 1914. PACK STREET TO HEAR OLE jponpate cry. FOR WALKERS IN ABERDEEN ABERDEEN, Oct the 14.—With treet black with people to r Ole Hanson, progressive candidate for United States nator, the biggest political ing in Aberdeen for yea wae held last night. For two hours the immense crowd listened to Hanson ex pound the doctrines of the pro Gressives on social and indus trial juatioe, and he was given frequent applause ox plained hia plan of devel opment, and discussed rivers and harbors development Aberdeen, the scene of the biegest political theft tn Washington's his he tory two years ago, last night re deemed itself. The rank and file of the pe plainly demonstrated that they were jnot controlled by the croked poll ticlans, They applauded Hanson when he declared himself in favor of postmasters winning their post tions by merit tn the service, Instead of by political favoritiem. He de clared himself & non-partisan commission to fix the tariff sched ules. Hanson then paid his reapects to the Aberdeen dpat paper which » statewent that “only and common people are members of the progressive party The crowd thundered its applaun« when he declared that the standpat editor who uttered such an un ‘LOOK AT CHILD'S TONGUE IF SICK, ‘CROSS, FEVERISH It} Look at the tongue, mother! |coated, it Is a sure sign that your Iittle one's stomach, liver and bow els need a gentle, thorough cleans Cossacks Visit Awful Cruelties On Helpless Women | American statement was “unworthy to tle the shoes of the poorest pro- | gressive, because they own jown minds, while be was at | the toc rtain special inte 0 pate.” SWEPT BY FIRE; | | HOTEL BURNED, | PORT TOWNSEND, Fire swept over the . business nec Uon of the formerly prosperous and busy elty of Irondale yesterday Oct. 14 afternoon, causing a lows of approx imately $90,000 before the flamen | were checked Spontaneous combustion in the store room of C. H arrel started |the flames, which soon spread to | adjoining property and for a time were beyond control, destroying the Washington hotel and other business blocks Irondale wan formerly the man- ufacturing center of the defunc | Western Stee! Corporation SHELL KILLS CONSUL! | LONDON, Oct. 14.—An Antwerp report says M, Lenatre, the Argen tine consul to that city, was killed by a shell while sleeping in his basement during the siege of the olty ! Wed., Thur., Fri., Sat. ALICE JOYCE ‘SIGNAL CODE “The Cit MEETS DELAY| ad the | wag” amendment to the trattio 2-Part Kalem Special ordinance, providing that pe destrians on street intersec tlons must stop, reverse or go | ahead on low gear, all accord tr the traffic cop signals, was referred back to commit tee yesterday by the city coun cll, which felt the signal code was not yet complete council approved Counctt “ 99 man Hesketh's bill Hoensing sec ond-hand dealers, and making them ayes aft ore selling od-hand go or trade bi hold secc er purchase them. spies IN A PANIC ; Vitagraph Comedy. | ene ed invasion of Ostend t e Germans, the people of that | city. are. beopasing pastoatziches Kalem Drama. an¢ every boat crossing the chan ne! is carrying hun 8 of refugees to the English ec Two bombs were dro ed into the city nelther Piano Selections nan aviators, bu (Continued (Continued From Yesterday) 1 saw it float there. As soon as it became wet through and the air made the reaction of the chemicals, It would flare up @ red signal. 1 grumblingly placed the to- bacco in my pocket and had al- most reached the road when the sudden red haze in the air told me the worst had happened. | was unable to run. ing at once. The troopers had leaped to When peovish, crons, Mations,| thelr feet. Sudenly one cried pale, doesn't sleep, doesn't eat or, out to me. act naturally, or ie feve », stom. 1 wae eelzed violently and ach sour, breath bad; has stomach ragged back into the yard ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of jer told of finding the cold, give @ teaxpoonful of “Callfor- | aiip cc my tobacco. nia Syrup of Figs,” and in a few} | was searched roughly hours all the foul, constipated The tobacco box was torn wante, undigested food and sour| Spart—end other silpe found. bile gently moves out of ite itttle bowels without griping have a well, playfol child again. You needn't cor sick children this harmless “ they love Its delicious tast ative;* land {t always makes them fee! I was bound; my arms tied be splendid. | 4 tenced to di t Ask Your druggist for a s0-cont | MEd cc Lhe fling wt pane; Daca bottle “Callfornia Syrup of] te was a beautiful day, August 27, | Figs,” which has directions f0F| ciear, with a light breese blowing bables, children of all ag and for and the sun shining grown-ups plainly on the bottle. |" “Tne world looked very fair and Beware of counterfeits sold here.| -o4 sede To be sure you get the genuine ask to see that it ts made by “Call fornia Fig Syrup Company ft other kind with contem od A $2 TICKET To a Broadway Succes for 10c Gentleman From Mississippi Tom Wise Himself The fourth of the Shubert attractions, with the original William A. Brady cast Also 8 big, acte—3 new vaudeville Today and all week at the OPERA (i HOUSE 1984 Seats 10c Positively No Higher. and you! fruit lax | Re! | hoot the spy I heard. I cried that I was an honest man; |that I had found the tobacco by a| ead German soldier by the road. ide. “Ho ts a spy.” . In spite of my protestations | w told I had 10 minutes to prepare for j the end, and advised to tell if other aples were in the district | 1 was thinking hard. To protest was usel | the glowing signals, and already | had caught one of our service with them. It was near ‘Mons, they said, and }they had sbot him T argued well when ® peasant wan brought tn. | He lived not far away, and he ex | posed me an an {mpostor, denying that I ever had lived In the district My 10 minutes had been dragged jout to 15 when they led me to the wall of the little cottage. They asked me if I would be blind folded, and told me shooting w: too good; that they should hang me | if there was a rope near by. For that I w grateful. But for a slight doubt I think |they would have hanged me. | wae marched to the wall. Three men were detailed to shoot me, when suddenly there wae an uproar, shouting and shots from the roadway. Troopers sprang for thelr horses, others ran from the roadway. A group of hard-pressed ones came galloping down the road, hotly pursued by a German squadron. In the excitement | leaped into the open cabbage cellar, arme still bound behind m One shot was fired at m Five minutes later the French were gone. The Germans were breathing their horses at the crossroads, shells were screaming overhead I crept out of the celler and shout ed in German to be released. My arms were untied, I explained the situation I ran for shelter at a cottage part ly destroyed, and climbed down the well At dusk that evening a party of French, reconnoitering, stopped drink at the well, and drew me up almost dead from cramps from standing waist deep in cold water. They laughed at me and ordered me to the rear. There was desultory fighting on the following day and fortunately (as ft proved) I received a sovere flesh wound in the shoulder from a plece of shell. It was fortunate, else I never would have been per mitted to reach Parts In my guise of a wounded pens ant, I received treatment ear Semlis. The French and British ter reinforced by great numbers, were moving forward. It was said the Germans had retired after four |days of desperate fighting. | I found the country Mttered with | eviden es of a terrific combat | My pose as a wounded peasant Jenabled me to move freely, now | that the troops were going forward | again | Instead of retiring to Paris, or to | the rear, as ordered, 1 moved east | ward, intent upon | observing the movements and numbers of the | French and allied troops. I crossed the Oise, following a detachment of British troops, the lat From Page 1.) The French had been warned of I think I had half convinced them by Ballard. The Sixty-second of French were co-operating in the advance with the British and the Algerians were at their right 1 passed near Caudry | There was terrific fighting go-| ing on to the northeastward. Fina’ lly, exhausted, I reached the yicin-| ity of Clermont, although several | miles from that place. } My wound was giving me much | trouble and It wae evident I could | be of little use as I suffered high fever, and was worn out from lack | of rest and sleep, and exposure in| the well | The wound in the upper shoul yder had become inflamed i I reported to a British ambu lance patrol and the surgeon, a young man named Hunter, was ex-| tremely kind He ‘© me treatment, gauzed | the wound and advised me to get to the rear and directed me to a | field hospital | 1 thanked him in French, al- |though with no intention of going | reserve corps Bargain Sale Now On. Stationery and Office Supplies. to the hospital, lorey ionery Co. The papers I carried were in- M Station side the shoulder lining of the || 718 First Ave. Near Columbia St. | Jacket I wore, and I had no idea of permitting any closer examination or making another accidental dis- covery I managed, on pretext of desiring » reach relatives, to secure an or- der for transportation and reached Paris late in the morning of August 29. | (Continued Tomorrow) NUFF SED ? 2? TH DANCER Featuring MLLE. VERNA-MERSEREAU The Famous Danseuse IN THE DANCE OF PYRAMIDS | RAMESES HEEZAN U T HUNTS WILD GAME Another Funny Cartoon Comedy Jola’s Promise An Indian Story With MARY PICKFORD The Peacemaker A Delightful Comedy Drama FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE Just for Fun YOUNG MAN Send for G SCHOOL 108 West Roy Street DANCE OF THE

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