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ADA RA RADAR ARPA ADA PRADA ADP SEEING THE GREAT WAR IN EUROPE THROUGH a ‘Trench, at Metle, Near Ghent, Protected by Tons of Iron Wire Colla, The Effect Is to Deaden the! Ret Fi the Fores of the Bursting Shell Is Deadened and the Fragments Are Kept From Flying | alted rank | tng automobiles rs Digging Hole for Concrete | Fotindation for Big Gun | LONDON, Oct. 24.—Heinrich _ Heine applied for enlistment in LONDON, Oct. 24.—The sup- ply of glass eyes is exhausted in _ HE WANTS TO FIGHT OUT OF GLASS EYES’ COMPETITION OF | vscocmes yy DENT IN PROFITS nnese musical composer, is nurse {n the Austrian army, and has as one of his charges his own broth er, a major of infantry, who is badly wounded amazement If he wanted to fight the Germans. e “Sure,” he replied. don't ‘sare who | fight, as long as | The auto bus competition ha made a large dent in the focal terurban business of the Puget Sound Electric Co. operating to points between Seattle and Tacoma The tric company so declar-| ed In its report, filed with the pub} lic service commissioner at Olym- pla yesterday Since the higher rates went {nto effect, the auto bus bust is took | a lot of the traffic from the elec trie company To such an extent has this com petition hurt the electric company that {t claims to have lost $8,000 in revenues in the month of August as compared with the revenues in August, 1913, although the cost of! operation had slightly Increased. | In August, 1913, the interurban| carried 226.471 passengers, In Av! gust, 1914, this dropped to 199,484.) He explained he was born In " Canada of German parents, and all his people were dead. —_—— via the | “MILWAUKEE” HORT LINE SERVICE TEEL TRAINS IAL SLEEPER on evening trains to and from Spokane. Can occupied on arrival at Spokane until 8:30 A. M. Leaving Spo- | kane, the sleeper is ready for occupancy at 9:00 P. M. Qssexvation Car and Daylight Service on famous train*‘Olympian.”” TELL HOW GIRLS | CITY TICKET OFFICE SECOND AND CHERRY, SEATTLE DIRECTO RY AT UNIVERSITY G. & J. ‘TIRES—-NOBBY TREAD {i cp" nie,“ a coe and BALLOU & WRIGHT MOTORCYCLES of Washington manage to/ MOTORCYCLES SG in part or completely the| fome of t taken in expense of acquiring an education. BALLOU & WRIGHT 5,000 MIL® GUARBANT Mt. near Broedway || versity defray solve the problem of the cost of living in the untversity community constitute 64 per cent of the 2,849} olled, according to figures com piled by Recorder EF. N. Stone. The recorder 1s autharity for the! statement that 769 students are Hi} self-supporting, and that doing a part in making] through the university 184 have means of their own DIDN’T SURRENDER | PETROGRAD, Oct. 24 Smirnoff's Russian battery flanked on one «ide by fantry and on the other by m: guns, with Mazur lake behied er than surrender he galloped with his battery into the lake, and every man and horse was drowned. NEW AND SECOND. HAND, ALL MA new Indian Motor The men and women who thus| ai near Brom, are ir way IMPERIAL BAR AND READING ROOM At 206 Occidental Service Bar and Pool Tables in Connection CHOICE LIQUORS AND CIGARS Lieut. | Own your own home. It’ feasy. Read the offerings in |STAR WANT ADS —then ‘choose, } man general wh | ton jon | {ETAR—SATURDAY, OCTOBER 24, Row of field aking ovens RUSS CAVALRY GIVE KAISER AN AWFUL FRIGHT PETROGRAD, Oct. 24.—How narrowly the kalser escaped capture in the fighting near Warsaw was described today by wounded Russian soldiers re- turned from the front. Th told in much permitted their! ! ir st th The war rs were igh the {foe without y lac rma tion publication guaranteeing thelr accuracy Among the captured was a Ger-| ose name was with who was @aid to be at the kalser's personal held, but tached staff According to the current version of the affair compar v nied his troops vance to observe lery's effect While the German forces were en gaged with the Russians before Warsaw, one of the czars aviators reported the presence of German officers, appare: very cio n their eastern ad his heavy artil y of the most ex-| 1914. PAGES OFFICER TELLS OW HIS BLUFF SAVED BATTLE PARIS, Oct ntenant-col es thin stor men A French wounded. whom the officer showed restlessness punishment, ap to refuse to ad When the order came he seized 6 arm of the man nearest him and bade him link himself si a with the next. The who! thus united, and n a daring charge and captured th hostile position When the officer finished the story his hearer praised t age and quick Wit, but plied Why than an example, so 6 cour he re I was more frightened any one else, but had to give t Dluffed tt AYBANY PalnLes® ’ (38060082 ‘Special Discount, For 90 days the Albany Dentists! to the front. | Fill give & special discount of 10 A Russian cavalry division was | Der cent on prices quot ordered to charge toward the point Gesignated by the airman. The hor nm broil first German line tmpetuously, but were momentarily delayed by the| second one, giving the members of | what was supposed to be the tm pertdl party time to jump Into walt nd eacapa There was one exception, the gen eral already referred to, who fell into the Russians’ hands The wounded soldic counted the story declared | kaiser was seen pipiniy. CHASE COYOTES Ole Hanson, the progressive can | @idate for senator, was returning from Snohomish {n hia machine late last night, when he spied ahead of him two coyotes. Ole turned on the Juice and gave chase who re the Perhaps the coyotes were playful Perhaps the rays of the headlight dazed and fascinated them. At any rate, they kept {n front of the car | and ran and ran. Ole couldn't catch them, though he tried to. Today Ole was telling a friend | about {t when the latter interrupted “What did you want to catch Coyotes can't vote.” with em for? FISH FOR TOBACCO LONDON, Oct. 24—Head doctors found that soldiers would keep quiet If they hada pipe or cigarette to smoke while wounds were being dressed, and the townspeople almost tobacco shops to provide the “smokes.” Slightly wounded men went to windows of hos- pitals and let down strings, and the crowds tied tobacco and cigarettes to them—a novel kind of fishing party. NIX ON SLAVE IDEA LONDON, Oct. 24.--In {nangurat ling the spelling of Servia as Serbia |the Times explains that the change is in deference to Servian senti ment, which objects to the “v" as suggesting servus, a slave (WE'LL STICK TO OLD LONDON, Oct, 24.—English sport ing terms formerly fn general use in Austria are now prohibited Bteeplechase has become “jagdren- nen” handicap, nen,” and spring meeting, lingsrennen.” TAKES LID WITH IT PARIS, Oct, 24.—A French soldier refused to let co the Uhlan heimet he had captured, while his arm was being ampu- tated, and the doctors removed it with the helmet still clasped In hie hand. “fruh. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE LECTURES William F. Gross, member of the board of lectureship of the First Church of Christ, Sctentist, of Bos will be heard in two lectures Christian Science,” at the Hip- podrome, Sunday, at 2:30 and 8 p m. Both addresses will be free, “anggleichsren. | We do honest ke through the |048. Which are entirely harmless, we guarantee the painless extrac tion, filling and crowning of teeth. No students ree onty ski! ed gradu of years of NO HIGH ICES FOR EFFECT. NO IMPOSSIBLE LOW PRICES TO DRAW A CROWD. Good Red Rubber Pia’ Best Maroon Rubbi Gold Oust Rubber Whalebone Rubber P: the world) Gold Crowns (extra h 4 Bridge Work (extra heavy), tooth . Gold Filings Amaigam Fillings Our ALBANY DENTISTS FROPLE'S BANK BUILDING Ay. and Pike St Open Munday 43% (0 12:20. Bventngs % Phone Pillott 4088 Asthma! Bronchial Asthma! If you are a sufferer from asthma in any form, ft will pay you to investigate. I have cured asthma of 30 years’ standing, not in Boston and New York, but here in Seattle and towns around Seatt I have not failed them. Now, if you are a suf. ferer from this disease and can't sleep nights, J will give relief at once and a cure in time. The following diseases I will absolutely cure: Asth ma, Bronchitis, Catarrh in all its forms, such as Tonsilitis, Adenolds, Gastric Ulcer of the Stomach and Bowels, Catarrh of the Bladder, Prostatitis in men, all Bowel Diseases {n women; Rheumatism of all forms; all Nervous Diseases, Epilepsy, Heart and Eczema, and many others too numer. ous to mention. If you are tn doubt, write apd I will give you names and addresses of people I have cured, Olymple View Sanitarium, 14-16 W. Harrison DR. G. J. NUERNBERG Phone Queen Anne 3127 Every day that THE STAR bargains on October Arnold Vibrat 6th, 10 years ago, rin Seattle 6 our business birthday we extend Model of the of charge Monday, jels are now on display ARNOLD’S CATARRH & VIBRATOR C' this machine 918 or 19 #076 ARCAD) which are kept going day and | South American ports, ‘ork Is Guarnateed for 15 tnd THE STAR| we started to guarantee the! ‘THE STAR PHOTOGRAPHER’S CAMERA night, supplying bread to the German army at Couflaus, France. FRENCH VESSEL WOMAN TAKES CHARGE OF TOWN WITH WOUNDED OF SOISSONS; NEGOTIATES WITH GOES AGROUND %4.—The .French ( Marie Henriette LONDON, Oct steamship crowded, with wounded soldiers, 1s ashore o ff Cape Barflour, east of Cherbourg 6, according to & message 4 today from Lloyd's station on the Isle of Wight It was understood the were on their way from the fields of Northern France to the of Wight It was not known Marle Henrtette’s dangerous COMBING SEAS FOR | GERMAN CRUISERS LONDON, Oct. 24.—Ldvely inter: ost is expressed today in the news that fully 76 British, French and Japanese warships are engaged in a hunt for the commerce-destroying | German cruisers, which have been roaming the seas ever since the war broke out, An accounting {s especially de- sired with the cruisers Emden, which has been tn the Indian ocean, and the Karisrube, which has done immense damage along the princl- pal trade route between British and Isto whe position thee was WILL PROBE DEATH| NEW YORK, Oct. Oct. 24.—An autop | sy on the boty of Beach Thompson of Menlo Park, Cal. who died sud-| denly at the Hotel Biltmore last night, was ordered today It was reported Thompson had been {ll for| & long time and had been under treatment by @ Christian Science healer IS QUIET ON BORDER “Oct. 24.—Quiet prevails today along the interns tional border, Gens. Hill and May-| torena, leaders of the Carranza and Villa troops having agreed upon al truce, pending the outsome of the peace conference. NACO, Artz, BOHEMIANS TO MEET Cooperating with the national movement to aid the widows and orphans of the mother country, the| Seattle Czechs (Bohemians) and al lied tongues, will hold a mass meet ing Sunday afternoon, in the Labor| temple, at 8 o'clock co 5c San., Mon., Tues. 6—BIG MUTUAL FEATURES—6/ The Wireless Voice (Two-part Drama) CONDUCTOR 786 (Drama) BILL SPOILS A VACATION (Comedy) A DOG'S LOVE (Comedy-Drama) Mutual Girl No. 40 (The Latest) Lizards of the Desert (Educational) Our Show makes a Nickel look like a Dime. and to show our con. this offer: Any person Arnold Vibrator, can have; oto! NG, SEATTLE GERMANS; RU BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMS PARIS, Oct. 3.—(By Mall to New York.)—In Solssons, the other day, with shells criss-cross. ing above the rooftops, whistling singularly like the airbrakes of a train, | had an Interview with Mme. Jeanne Watteau Macherez, the heroine of the war. Mme. Macherez is president of t Dames Francaise, an organt- zation resembling our Colonial Dames. was she who, in the absence of all civil authority in Soissons, went out to meet the Germans, out-negotiated them when they demanded tribute, took charge of the city’s civil business, managed the hospitals, superintended mu- | nicipal sanitation, did every. thing, tm fact, to maintain a sem- blance of administration and or- der | A military avistor wes flying | over Sotseons as we talked. Germans were approaching, the French had gone out to meet them, rapid-fire guns were mak- ing & noise tn the distance like a busy threshing machine, and the crackle of rifles could be heard, less than a mile away. Tn the midst of all this, Mme. Macheres stood in an exposed Place in the street and talked as coolly as if she had been in her own beautiful home, across the Alsne, and the time had been one of profound peace. Occasionally the crash of an ex- ploding shell drowned her voice, | but she continued to speak as if she were upeenscious of any- thing unusual. I obtained my interview front of the city hall. In a tiny park 50 feet away, where bright flowers had smiled but a short time before, half a dozen men were burying the car casses of seven horses killed an hour before by a German shell. The streets were deserted, ex- cept by soldiers and a few men wearing brass cards which show- ed them to be military clerks or | other assistants of the civil or army authorities. “T e Germans get back into 1 asked, “shall this time,” you stay? I shall be all the more need- ed {f they return,” answered Mme. Macherez. When they came the first time, how did they behave?” They wanted an indemnity, but I induced the commander to accompany me about tne city and convinced him that he was ask- ing too much—that we could not give more than we had.” This was Mme. Macheres’ mod. est way of putting it. | I had previously been told that, by infinite tact, she had success- fully resisted a German demand for tons of foodstuffs, tobacco and quantities of wine, finally secur- ing excellent terms. “I understand your own house has been destroyed?” I said. mine, but my son-in- " corrected madame. “I am house has not been mo- lested. I have not visited it in two weeks. I sleep in the hos- pital, over there.” She pointed to a neighboring buflding, through one wing of which a shell had torn a jagged hole large enough for a two-horse wagon to pass through There was no Red Cross flag flying, though I knew that hos pital contained hundreds of French and German wounded We don't use the Red Cross flag any more,” explained ma- dame. “It seems to draw the ene. my’'s fire.” ‘As we talked a man, a woman and a child came down the street. Madame stopped them and ask- ed who they were, and where they were going. She recognized them Instant! as strangers, and as Soissons was filled with spies, she could run no risks “Here, corporal,” soldier near b: people to the city hall tain them unttl I come.” MESSENGERS RICH LONDON, Oct. 24.—The British corps of dispatch riders, who have done fine work keeping up com- munications between the various corps along the line, consists mostly of volunteers from British univer. sities, many of them wealthy youths and members of the nobility, law's, told my she sald to a go with these and de- land write you « | vantage of this NS CIVIC AFFAIRS I talked with the woman “boss”? of Soissons altogether for about 15 minutes. They told me it was the long est time she had stood in one place since the shelling of Sols sons began All Nationalities Treated Fair and Square People of all to the Brendel Drug Co., nationalities come 117 Yesler | way, and recetve medical treatment from our Physician, who ts a gradu- ate of American and Euro) echools, ‘He will examine, advise ye guy! abso- lutely FREE OF GE, Our prescription mens will com- ound same at @ small cost to housande of people have taken ade most itberal propgs sition, If you are not satisfied, it will cost you nothing. Just tell you have not been benefited, and will refund your money. Our stands ing in the business Community” high, and we aim to treat ev Pair and Square. Doctors office hours are from ® am to?p m. Ladies and children, 2to4¢p. m, Brendel Drug Co, 117 YESLER WAY Bet. Féret Ave. and Occidental Ave, Sa Visit thé Manufacturers’ AND. Land Products Show PORTLAND GO VIA THE OW. R & 0 Excursion Fares $7.5 vn Tickets on sale = 27, Pe Nov. 3, 6, 10, 18, 1914. Final return limit first Monday after ticket is purchased. FOUR FINE TRAINS DAILY Steel Flyer Leaves Seattle 7:30 a m. Arrives Portland 2 p, m. Shasta Limited Leaves Seattle 9:30 a. m. Arrives Portland 3:30 p. m, Portiand-Puget Sound Express Leaves Seattle 11:30 a. m. Arrives Portland 6:15 p, m. Ow! (Portland and Grays Har bor) Leaves Seattle 11:15 p. m, Arrives Portland 6:45 a. m. Arrives Hoquiam 7:15 a. m. (Sleeping Cars Ready at 9:30 p.m.) The O-W. R. & N, offers steel coaches, an unexcelled service and courteous, effi- cient employes. For further details, tickets ané reservations, call on J. H. O’NEILL Dist. Pass. Agt. 716 SECOND AV. MAIN 932. UNION PACIFIC SYSTEM