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TODAY'S STYLES TODAY ng SEATTLE’S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE A Few Words About Fur Buying 4 1 buy FURS you should take time tn select Sling, 80 as to be sure that you are getting just what you want and what you should have. Moat people walt until they feel the sting of the cold Weather, and then they rash tato the first store they #ee and buy furs on the Impulte of the moment, and often regret it a short time after. Begin now to look around and come in and see us. We will be pleased to «ive you our time and advise you honestly tn the selection of your needs, We can do so now better than later, In the cold weather, when everybody is in a hurry and rush. Furthermore, you can buy now at lower able to in a month from The present market conditions will, with out a doubt, continue, and the prices are bound to go up. A large variety of sete in all the new fashion able FURS such as Fitch, Kollnsky, Chinchilla Squirrel, Monkey, Hudson Seal and Moleskin at most attractive prices 1332-34 SECOND AVE. ew: wy4,5 PAY US IN SMALL WEEKLY OR MONTHLY PAYMENTS The Great Efficiency in Our Clothing Organization Is Reflected in Our Men’s Bradbury System Clothes $20 and Up Other Reliable Makes $15.00 to $25.00 Business men, both young and old, of keen diecern- ment, will see in BRADBURY Clothes values impos sible elsewhere in this city. The BRADBURY System ie the pacemaker for higher standards in popular-priced ready-for-service clothes. They eo far outdistance com petition that comparison seems ludicrous. Bradbury models have been di ined especially to our INDIVIDUAL ORDER. BRADBURY Suits are hand-taliored by highly skilled workmen. The materials have been personally selected because of their attractive patterns and true worth. We show &@ wide range, including blue and brown shadow stripe worsteds, piain gray mixtures, all-wool cheviots and casaimeres to sult the individual taste. A critical examination and comparison will show the BRADBURY SYSTEM to be superior in STYLE, TAILORING, FIT AND GENERAL GOOD LOOKS, and unapproachable in other stores at our prices. Credit Be well dressed: a small initial payment will procure any article you desire to purchase. rr pees STAR—FRIDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1914. PAGE 10. How England Is Forming an Army of Half Million Fighting Men in 6 Months | Staff Spectal By Harry Payne Burton LONDON, England, Oct. 28.--Richard Henry Murrant and 1 down on the gra The billowing hillsides were just vast waves of youths, all entangled tm a great, milky mist of dust thrown up by their own feet Squads of them, to the left, were marching Squads of them, to the right banks Squads of them, far down the valley, were flac on their stomachs pointing countless rifles at some imaginary mark Over our shoulder other squads were dragging heavy cannon up Inclines glossy with seed-grans. And, high above ua, in the blue and white breezo-blown sky, aero: planes and dirigibles were sketching wetrd figures across the clouds. I had come down from London to Aldershot to roe what the world has never seen before: THE CREATION OF A PULL-FLEDGED ARMY OF HALF A MILLION TRAINED SOLDIERS COMPLETED IN A SPACE OF SIX MONTHS—-the gigantic task England has set nat or marching. furze-clad ad cow were charging up stec | for herself, I'm a Socialist Soldier And I it ts, as sald, not more'n atx weeks ago, that I was not one ever to be ‘cannon fodder’ for the likes of the bloomin’ English swells,” spoke up Dickie presently to me, “And, all the same, ‘ere | am, trainin’ with the best o' them—and Ikin’ {t, for all that, too What d'ye make of it, American?” “Patriotism, Dickie, patriotiam!” T an whether he knows it or not Dickie Durrant gave me a long, calculating look out of hia choco late brown oye, the sort of eye that has no white to relieve tts opaque ne Then he spoke. Patriotism—hoell!" he all that long ago out in "Yde I'm & socialist soldier!” “You know I'm what they call a ‘cockney’ over ‘ere,” Dickte took up the thread, “That in to say—explaining to you, as a stranger that I was born within ‘earing of Bow Be! Bow Bella, that's the old church way down on Cheapside, gettin’ well over to Whitechapel way And us folks down there, we hain't got much Deed there is few as ts in this world has got so little as us has, And down there we hain't crazy to give ‘elp to the swells, I tell you “I was e socialiat at 15, and | was always against war, | was, I was one of those an said, ‘Let them as make the war, fight {t- Let the bally boys up in My-fair (Mayfair) do tt. They owns all the property in this ‘ere land. Let ‘EM fight for it. God knows I hain't got nothin’ to fight for!’ wered, “It's In everybody ald park. “I hatn't got no patriotism. I lost I'm & socialist, that's what I am! \Now He Loves Old England “But you know I got this thing all of a sndden, 1 see all the boys marchin’ along the street hevery day, and I says to myself ‘THEY are going to see something; THEY are going to do something’—and first thing you know, they see me down there to the recruiting offic And | was the most surprised one tn that tent, I can swear to that! “But I ‘ave never loved old England ‘alf so much as I do now, be added, ruminatively You ain't got no idea how well they treat us ‘ere. Why, they treats us ‘uman, they doe We get three good meals and our tea. And we gets exercise and rest and piay—and they treats us GENTLE! “They don't hit us when we do {t wrong, or they don't yell as jus itke the factory boas when we argue a point with They say hat's right, me Ask all the que you want. You fotto une your head when you are in the Brit That's what bead for—-to use it!’” The world knows the German army to be a magnificent fighting you got a | MACHINE, a thing in which the parte are not simply highly 4 Dea Before breakfast at England’s biggest training camp—a regiment of Lord Kitchener's new army going through Swedish drill to toughen them up for the campaign. SHE'S RED CROSS |HORRORG OF WAR DESCRIBED IN - LETTER TO SEATTLE MAN ipo AN AMERICAN GIRL IN BELG tlefield "They to many An intimate view of the horrors of the European war are given in a letter to T. C. Elwell. engineer, 114% First av. S., just received from his sister, Mre. Loiza Elwell Johnston, a graduate of Rush Med. {cal college, and now a practicing physician in Ghent, Belgium. The letter is dated September 19 |and was written before the German occupation of the city. | The letter says in part: "Ghent is the only large city in Belgium that has escaped the maniacal bar. }barity of the Albroches. Their aeroplanes, the wings of which are shaped like those of a dove, flew over the city and dropped bombs Oat, almed at the clty norpttat, | GLASS IS GRAS fell on the cement works. “Had it fallen six feet in another| NEW YORK, Oct. 22. direction it would have killed 60\glass has been brokea workmen European war, even the “When the Germans came within | States manufacturers cannot 2 miles of Ghent onr mayor re cetved a demand from the com mander for army supplies amount ing tO about $16,000,000, for whies | A Easy Way to he would spare Ghent | The mayor thought tt best toac| Fat and Be St the mand, but did not give ne promised have been most in women and it is to be hoped th reap as they have sown.” killed In battle by pinning over black, | BROOKLYN, N. Y., Oct. 23.—Dr. Mary Crawford will no longer ride fn an ambulance through the streets | of New York. The woman who be-| 1 came famous as an ambulance surgeon has gone to France to serve as surgeon in the French Red Cross. “When he went out to meet the ie cnae mosaeae ‘eos German General Von Boehm he y foods: rubbing sald: ‘I come not into your pres |"tiesh creams, wine T0 END D \ ence in my shirt with a rope |i — a reg around my neck as did the Belgian | cause of ihene . ‘i : jeannot get fat unt Stop Falling Hair and Itching people tn the epoch of Charles V.,| assimilates tee send you eat. Scalp. | but as a citizen who ts loyal to his| Thanks to @ remarkable new king and loves his country.’ | eeovery, % te ‘new Secatine te | “I took a trip to the battlefield |i", simple form | the of Melle, where 2,000 Belgian re- | ter i remere Aan crults defeated and drove back tor |» tirely nix miles a German force of 8,000. | ounces of pinin. ord) “We saw deod men, horses and Spply it cows as yet unburied im gently with "The horses had been ripped By morning of your open with bayonet thrusts Aendrutt will be gone, and three or tour) “To one side of the field mere applications will comp! |found the grave of a German offt- andruff you may have “One of my neighbors tells me that she has been in the English hospitals and talked with the Brit-| apy. ish soldiers who have been nent | pounds of solid, healthy feat back from the firing line taut. Muriel Drop’ Ce. aeirte “Some have their eves gouged |i" 4 Mitel! Drv wb debe out, others have both hands cut off,! tls and «! and others have both feet cut off, ;ovr ™ also. e A “Thin was not the result of gun-|"*¢ 1 arvon| shot wounds or shrapnel, but bru Hee eres WoTs, Li le inexpenslve, ood) talities committed by the Germans ‘imple remedy has never been known to| before the wounded English pol. fall Advertisement |store could be carried from the bat- Phere te one sure way that never fait edb ugh ite regen |constructive powers to and intentir fattening ele | them into th We | ried to very And tissue of yor pleture the res transformation [notices how your ut your neok, shoulders and rand you take on from plac aoe fit out, & bundred tim: If you want rich, do by rowel a every Kusrantee found 4 ation: —While Sargol cellent results in dyspepsia and it should not humane It makes one very bloodthirsty ney will MOURN IN 3 COLORS: PARIS, Oct. 23.—Paris women go Into mourning for relatives a tri. color rosette to their corsages | So much in the} United t fill all | the orders they are receiving. Get rong| bie with moat thin folke who ney inatat tufting It n use yme tool. | while the real! chea your digestive tract You sotentitic| combine | elements hollows uat Al 10 to 20 | bearers and the first-aid men are sent out after them | smashed , but are mere cogs molded into a uniform exterior, the actual soul of the cogs crushed ruthlessly hy the officers’ commands.| Britons Must Think for Themselves This British army is to be just the opposite. it is to be a vast group of men whose individuality Is zealously guarded even strengthened, and who are trained only enough that they may move with a harmony that aprings from the interior. The trainers at Aldershot do not try to stamp out Dickle's indi vidualistic views, nor even question his right to ask questions, They imply teach him how best to defend himself personally, and when he is fighting with othere—and they feed and clothe him. After that he is to use his brain; they try to make him proud of the po sion of a brain—and so Dickie finds he really wants to fight for England now He is the Germans don't let THEIR soldiers do their own thinking. They're just ‘cannon fodder,’ Yankee. he added to me—"those Germans! When Lord Kitchener called for his hatf-million men, he didn't want “knute’ mollycoddles. He was looking for recruits from “the masses.” And he has got them, I found, lots of them miners from the Lancashire pit factory hands from the mills of Yorkshire, tron workers from Bi ngham and Sheffield, section hands from all the rallroade—and cockneys from Whitechapel sure |Men Are Not “Beaten” Into Form Now, starting this way, with all raw material and {n an unorgan ized camp, just HOW ts Lord Kitchener proceeding to bulld his army not in three years, the usual time—but in SIX MONTHS? Well, first, watch Kitchener's army at drill. Then you will get 4 clew to that absorbing mystery—"From a Cockney to a Tommy’ better than any explaining I may give you. You will notice that the men are not BEATEN Into form. Theyefall into form. Every man is his own officer. Every man ie eager to carry out the order before It Is given. There are no kere” on the job at Aldershot. The unfit were kicked out the first week—the very moment they were spotted. “Why, the only hard job we bave had,” said an officer to me, “was simply to get these fellows used to military terms, Once under stood, they are carried out as well as officers with ten years’ experience could do. “It's funny, too, getting these fellows used to the terms, ‘W hat company do you belong to?’ a Lancashire miner was asked by a cor poral. ‘The Wigan Iron and Coal company,’ came the brisk response! That's the sort of thing we contended with the first week, until we thought we were going crazy!" Medical Corps Interests Recruits The work of the recruits of the Royal Army Medical corps has a sort of morbid interest for the rest of the army. A number of R. A M. C. men are told off to act as wounded. They go and hide behind bushes and in the dried-up ditches on the heath. Then the stretcher A doctor decides whether the fallen man a fractured skull, or a severe body are bandaged and thelr borne back to the receiving tents The sight of 50 or more make-belleve wounded m. across the heath on str veriousness of has a broken leg, a wound, The wounded limbs set in splints and they are then carefully bein rried chers must bring home to the recruits the grim their undertaking. a ‘les with a tomato can in tow?’ Er-yes. You see, I'm a vegetarian.” | Haha. I knew that—but I never thought you'd carry the fad so Most Beautiful Dance We Know Say Mr. and Mrs. Castle Of the Newest Modern Dance That All Will Dance This Winter ate Now for the first time adapted for the home. Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Castle explain it, in pictures, step by step, the same as they will teach it at Castle House, New York, this winter to the most fashionable society. It is IN THE NOVEMBBR ISSUE OP The Ladies Home Journal Fifteen Cents a Copy, of All News Agents Or, $1.50 a Year (12 issues) by Mail, Ordered Through Our Subscription Agents or Direct Boys Wanted to Deliver on Routes, Our Sales Agent Apply to E. E. PELZ 237-238 CENTRAL BLDG. + THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Independence Square: Philadelphia Pennsylvania IN DEBATE OF FIRST AID BILL HIGDAY SAYS EMPLOYES PAY OUT MORE THAN THEY GET BACK | | + First aid,” of Initiative Bill No. 9, was Cebated Tnu-sday noon at | the Seattle Commercial Club, between Hamilton Higday, former sta’ | industrial insurance commissioner, and author of the present initative bill, and B. W. Sawyer, a prominent lumberman, The following are the chief points scored by each Gov. Lister, C. man of the BY B. W. SAWYER | The proposed measure allows unlimited opportunity for un scrupulous physicians and em-} ployes to gouge the employer. | ia Of the dollar collected for hos-| BY HAMILTON HIGDAY pital fees by emp from} Workmen paid their employers workingmen, only 2 goes|hospital fees of $1 a month, to pay for medical attendance due|amounting to $1,631,712 for the to accidents, The remaining 75|year of 1918. Employers paid to jcents pays for sickness the state industrial tnsurance fund The employers are willing to|for the killing, maiming and other leupport a measure that will place| wise injuring workingmen at work. the burden equally upon the em-|the sum of only $1,604,093, or less ploye and the employer, such as|than the workingmen paid to keep the bill proposed in the legisla-|their jobs ture in 1911, While it is true,| The burden of industrial that measure was defeated by the|dents should not be lumbermen in 1911, {t was a wise | the least able to thing then to do, t the|It should he borne by first ald” idea was ployer and not The present bill is opposed by|Employes are - as much fn A. Pratt, chair- industrial insurance and Clarence Parker, insurance commissioner. yers cents acct upon bear ft the em the workingman now paying twice lost wages and medi cal bills as the employers are. The present initiative bill ts ’ |Practically the same law is in force in 23 states in the Union. Washington and Nevada are the VE only two states, having an indus- | trial insurance Inw, which do not ulso provide “first aid.” | Employers themselves | mit that “first aid” ts | | prineipte NOW HE’S IN JAIL |child, See if tongue is coated; this is a sure sign {ts little stomach, liver and bowels are clogged with PITTSBURG, Pa. Oct. 23 Charles Clarke of Cleveland, with ;| Pencils and other articlés to sell, cause new now ad just in sour waste | When listless, pale, feverish, full of cold, breath bad, throat sore, | |doesn't eat, sleep or act naturally, | |has stomach ache, Indigestion a few hours all the foul waste, the| lciting ald from pedestrians by }sour bile and ferment'ng food| means of an “I am blind” sign. One ages out of the bowels and you| man he asked to lead him to a jiave a well and playful child again, | restaurant and, after getting there Children love this harmless “fruit| the waiters found {t necessary to laxative,” and mothers can rest| feed him. easy after giving it, because it] After partaking of the food the never fails to make thelr little “in-| “blind man" was given a Dill for 80 sides” clean and sweet. cents, Clarke opened his eyes and Keep it handy, Mother! A little| shouted, “Thirty pump handles!” given today saves a sick child to-| and then proceeded to create a dis morrow, but get the genuine, Ask| turbance, with the result that he your druggist for a 50-cent bottle) was arrested. At a hearing before of “California Syrup of Figs,”| Magistrate W. H. Robertson in the which has directions for bables,! Allegheny police station Clarke was children of all ages and for grown-| sentenced to pay a fine of $50 or ups plainly on the bottle. Remem 90 days in the workhouse ber, there are h », #0 surely loc yours made by Fig Syrup Company with contempt any syrup. t “California| PARIS, Oct. 23.—Mary Garden Hand back|says she will become a Red Cross other fig!nurse, with the French troops, and may never sing again, HE HAD NATIVE LAND VENICE, Oct. 23.—After the bat tle of Krasnik a wounded Hi hussar was found to have @ qui of earth wrapped carefullly piece of cloth. His mother given it to him so if ms ed he could “die on Hungarian LONDON, Oct. 23.—8idney Webb, British political econ omist, figures that the war ie — costing England $55 a second, _ day and night. HEADACHE STOPS, NEURALGIA GONE: y Nerve-racking, splittt ie throbbing headaches yield to $ . a few moments to Dr, Ji Head. ache Powders, which cost only 1 cents a package at any drug sto It's the quickest, surest headacher |relief in the whole world. Don’ suffer! Relieve the agony and di tress now! You can. Milli * men and women have found : headache or neuralgia mi needless. Get what you ask for, HOW TO GET RID OF DYSPEPSIA Don't Rely on Medicine—Doa't G on Freak Diet—Common Sense dan Antacid Usually A! ‘That Are Need “If you have dyspepai tion, sour stomach, belouine, ay after eating, hearth yd stomach trouble di (the usual bles), you witively not the ay to cure ouble. Again, you should not half starve yourself by going without t nutritious food that you need to res) bulld waste tissues, Some foods are’ od for people, even when ft health—very rich, aw seasoned dishes, Avold th at fairly substantial meals off Eat slowly, Even tf yo drink nothing but water, you shouldl t drink with meals. Drink betopel and after eating, Do not take pepatial ther artifictal digestants, If youl low the foregoing simple instruc ns it 1s possible that you twill nel need any medicine at all except, you want to call it medicine, e iikth antacid after meals. The best ts which can be purchased at any di ung store, This is not to act upon the stomach, but on the contents of the stomach. The antactd, as you can! learn by consulting your dfetion clopedia, 1s merely to neutral ize or counteract the excess acid, Ba the stomach can digest the food na mally, ‘Take a teaspoonful of Mi surated magnesia in a little o hot water after each meal. » ¥o) cate relief, even ere. Careful, mod d the use of ble magnesia should put your stomach normal condition In a short time, you have not allowed 4: advance te » the extreme veloping stomach ulcers -Adverne? ment