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STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOV. 18, 1914, PAGE 2. The Best Place in the City to Shop Is PANTON’S Prices 1-4, 1-3 and 1-2 off on the “Being Dropped” departments. And our being- continued departments—always popular prices! Are there any women in town who do not know that they can buy linens and cotton goods, drug sundries and notions, silks and velvets, fancy goods, china and hardware and house furnishings at John Panton Co.'s at prices less than any place in town? If you are not availing yourselves of this opportunity to save pennies and dollars in these troublous times, it not our fault, for we offer bargains that you won't find any other place in Seattle Cluny Lace Luncheon Sets is Scotch Flannels in ever blues, @rays, black stripes, ete, Value ut price, yd. ate blue, figur and white Mc. Closing yonge Bags, as ng Screens of fine qual p with tapestry pangie quartered oak | three on, red or nbina tions. Chenille Rope t Tape & the thing Red oni #2. Portleres a P 0 value LinenBathTowels Rest quality Turkish Towels, A good towel for brisk rubbing. Regular TSc value, now... .4e Regular $$c value, now 39c Reversible Ingrain Carpet. Full yard wide, in goc rtm of patterns, Re sing out price, ar 6 yard We | Ide VELVETS—COoLoORED BB 0 ote our Popular Priced Drees Geode 26 Inches wide, such as Panne Velvets, plain | : Seead Werte an en 39c Nun's Velling, assorted ushes, go at one price. al- | mixtures, stripes and serges. regularly up to $1.80 | For quick selling, only 3. a Ste ALL-WOOL CREPES 69c conpu Worth ors Bo—All col- A splendid range of co! 69c gi ted wee eel ore: 40 Inches wide. Bold everywh for $1.00. Now DRESS VELVETEEN priced at. . 490 39c 22 inches wide, in bisck | or colors. Reduced to ate BLACK DRESS GOODS COLORED DRESS GooDs Black Wool Votles, 44 75c inches wide. Only 6 or T pleces, Regular prices 51.50 $1.25, $1.25 and $1.00. All go at The $1.19 X37. 20" “ESS - Plaids, etc. Were $1.75. Most of these have not been tn the store two w but out they go at ALL-WOOL SUITING BLACK SERGES Gray and mannish 3 $1.25 wintlaren sc inches | BBq 80 AAAS inches wide wide. Although regularly hes prices she. tax 28 all go BROADCLOTHS $1.50, $1.25 of them at $1 3 So much wanted just BLACK BROADCLOTHS . now, The ue inches wide, evening and regu- $1.39 'inches wi4e-three . qualities go In at one lar shades. Regular #2. 35 soede 1. Now price—up to $2.60, for oe JOHN PANTON CO. AMUSEMENTS MOORE 33 301 28:30 LAST TIMES THIS i. THE SPOILERS ory Ever Filmed. 100 and 200 METROPOLITAN THEATRE All This Week—-Matines Dally, Two Performances Each Evening, TAS and 9:00 The Educational Film MILLIONS THAT WORK Showing “Made tn Enterpr PRICES ~ Seattle Theatre The Seattle Players in Officer 666 TONIGHT—250, S00, 15 Greatest St Washington HM. FRAZER ‘The Laughing Hit “A PAIR OF SIXES” WITH AN ALL-STAR CAST Nights, 260, 0c, 750, $1.00, $1.60. All Matiness, Best Seats, $1.00 SEATS NOW SELLING. LOEW’s =e ANT Henry B. Toomer & ’ PANTAGES —AND— Pisano and Bingham " DANCING NEREIDS Other Act reamiar! LAURIE ORDWAY |__"* “* SPR bery 4 1h Os OCEETS | Zee raayy KING COUNTY GRAND JURY HPD we Elliott 320 ~ NAVY YARD ROUTE wi sad Nv Vuckare Day te 0 Exit grand jury stop for hours. | between the dusty |On the army | was sp LONDON, Nov, 18. — Eng The tax reaches all incomes land's middie class gave aheavy xCeeding the British equivalent groan today at the morning t about $200 & year, so that, hough working class Incomes newspapers’ ann ementof@ are relatively low in England, prospective doubling of the tn only the pretty poor escape. come tax. News that the tn On the new basis the average case Was Necessary Was ce man with what is known as an by Chancellor of the Excheq $1,000 yearly will be muleted David Lioyd-Geor ast night approximately one month's #al but It did not reach the public ary out of every twelve. until today Those with incomes from tn BOY OF 11, SHOT IN BATTLE, IS GIVEN A MEDAL FOR BRAVERY (Continued From Page One.) three years you've seen a circus parade by this time, a million circus parades rolled into one. stanny tells me that lly didn’t think of going with the re until a band came along. Great, big, dusty mon with red faces and that was the finish for Stanny Weill, this he re 1d re tooting horns, the band. You know very well, Mr. and Mra. Stanisiaws, that boys tn what ev you are in follow bands and parades, and follow them untt! the and the par es to the end and must “bust up. It wasn't Stanny’s fault ms to me, that this band played on for hours and th nde t Dust up until way after dark By that t 1 got acquainted with some of the Austrian selare te had 1 and when they built one of the 10,000 campfires, they « ys to eat and some hot coffee. After that they rolled up { ts and went to sleep on the ground. One big soldier h ‘Stanny In undeg his blanket 4 juet Stanny was wishing that he could stay up longer and look at all the campfires and the men sleeping around them as they do In the war pictures, he fell asleep A horn aroused Stanny in the morning. There was a terrific rushing about. There was more coffee with some bread. ¢ bands men } 4 up their horns and things and began tooting like Barnum Balley’s band as everyone started to march. Stanny Sticks to the Great Parade but Stanny stuck to the band that these bandamen didn’t stop me to thelr wives and children as There were 600,000 men can’t see that it was Stann playing and b other bandsmen do There's a censor who has to read what I'm writing, and if 1 tell oak up and too much he'll tear up the whole ng, #0 I can't tell you at what place it happened; but there was shooting far up ahead Men began to yell; offi ders 6 got out thelr shovels and nm to dig trenc Stanny found hin a big field near a good-sized pond. The men lay down in the trenches and waited. Stanny crawled into a trench beside the big soldier whose blanket he had shared. The! firing grew nearer and nearer. Pretty soon some men in a nearby trench began to shoot, Stanny liked {t. It sounded like a million firecrackers going off; It didn’t ‘That waa the beauty of It Stanny and the soldiers had lain in the ditches eight hours, when suddenly the big soldier turned to Stanny and said: Say kid! you take my canteen over to that pond and get me some water? I'll die if | don’t get a drink pretty soon.” Would Stanny carry real dead and dying men around ming? The answer was a canteen full of water which Stanny shortly handed to the big soldier, Then the canteens of the desperately thirsty soldiers began to come down Stanny's way When the soldiers found Stanny insisted on “tending wounded un der fire,” they loaded him with canteens. He made a dozen trips trenches and the pond. The water fairly sizzled down t parebed throats of the soldiers. records it says that Stanny “watered” 600 men that water to real soldiers in a real battle, with and real bullets flying and afternoon. Find Stanny Wounded on Battlefield In the evening ordérs ran down the lines of thetr trenches, Many of |, but others dashed on soon the Russian firing Austrians had won All through the woo pr the fields and along lanterns of the Red Cross flitted that night. There were hundreds of dead and wounded About midnight an officer trying to sleep on & shack near the pond heard a moan Ho got a lantern and went out. Now the cry was plainer. It that of a little boy. Following the sound the officer soon found! a little hunched up pile of crying boy on the edge of the pond. It was Stanny The men jumped out Pretty Almost all the “soldier feeling” had gone out of Yor the pain of a gaping wound tn his chest had turned him into a little boy agals just as severe is Hable to turn any big soldier into a whimpering, moaning, help ‘soldier f ng” had left Stanny. There keep his grip on the canteen Th enough left which he had been filling. While the officer wrapped the boy about with his military coat and carried him to the shack, the spark of “soldier feeling” wouldn't let Stanny drop that canteen of water. “Here's that man’s can,” said Stanny, when finally he land- ed on a cot. “That man” had been in eternity six hours. The officer wormed Stanny’s story out of him (just as I had to do) after the doctor had ust washed and dre d the wo 1 don't have to go away from here plead. Stanny, as he finished |Now Stanny’s Going to Have a Brown Horse I should say ot replied the er ve must rest in the hospital for a while, but you're our mascot hereafter, What color IS DISMISSED Steamers H. B, Kennedy a : ¥ P | Loses Colman Dock, Beattie Judge Tallman discharged the| funday), 10 "g! grand jury from further servi ‘eopt Su! Saturday, Time table subject to change without noties. Phone Main 4101. Tuesday afternoon. He declared| the supreme court ruling in the| Whatcom county case applied with Price 500 Round Trip| dual effect here, and that the grand ——— | Jury was drawn illegally SAVEYOURMONEY :"s0: 9i".05 °° = | | hor do you want? You have to be & boy son felt when he answere They had to bring Stanny 400 mi! life, but they succeeded. The fact that he was able to stand all the explosion-like of his heart as Emperor Joseph's messenger fastened the ‘0 his nightgown, shows that he’s getting well. Be- sides that, all the excitement of shaking hands with ladies from the court, and sniffing flowers they bring to him, and talking to newspaper reporters, and being photographed by the court pho- tographer—all this excitement doesn’t hurt him, so he ought to be well enough soon to return to the front. Mr. and Mrs, Stanisia®s, to know how y A brown horse les back to Vienna to save his/| BIG BATTLE ON | PETROGRAD, Nov. 18.—A gigantic battle was developing today In Russian Poland be tween the Slav and German forces. It was admitted the Germans were on the offensive, advancing along the Vistula and Warthe rivers. Fighting was already in progress on the banks of both streams. it Increased rapidly in fury as time passed. Opposing the Germans, the Russiane were in enormous strength | Both sides were pushing for- ward reinforcements and Indl | Boyers were In full flight today Before the British loyallet forces, ‘Wise Precaution will prevent the little fllness of today from becoming the big sickness o! tomorrow and after, For troubles of the tive organs you can rely on BEECHAM’S | WORKERS T0 PAY WAR TAX He followed | 1 atitl | the roads the) PAY EVERY YEAR vested capital will pay some thing like a tenth of thetr divi- dends to 6 government. Indications today were that the $1,750,000,000 war loan an nounced by Lioyd- George Tues day would be over-subsertbed A long line of people was waiting at the entrance when to the Hank of England oper put In their applications The bonds are redeemable March 1, 1928, CZAR TO | | DESERT ALLIES?, COPENHAGEN, Nov. 18.— For the first time since the | war began there were Indica- tlons at Petrograd today of r] ‘action on the Russians’ part with their allies’ handling of the western campaign. The Slay leaders were reported | to be complaining openly that al-| though the czars forces have tn-| vaded both Bast Prussia and Ga Hela, the Franco-British army has| not © suc ed in driving the Germans out of France. The Russian view was sald to be that it was quite right to expect action by the Slavs on Germany's eastern frontier, as a diversion of the Teutonic pressure in the weat but that it was hardly fair to ex pect the czar to continue aeting tr definitely, in the meantime per mitting the Turks to overrun the Caucasus, unless they accomplish Jed something for themselves, Turkish victories along the trans caucasian border were arousing an dispatches increasing demand, from the Slav capital annihilation of the M the prediction was made that un less the alifes had succeeded tn the meantime tn expelling the Ger-| |mans from France, the New Year Almost Every Player Piano New, but the tration {natead against the Otto- Are in Perfect man troops, DESTROY TRAIN — | LONDON, Nov. 18—A Ger- man troop train rushing rein- forcements along the Beigian and Guaranteed Condition Cash down payment not nec- coast to the fighting front on Sta a 4 Sue Yelp hea bien eeotvored te essary . st art _your payments shots from the British warships Xmas. We will store and de- lying off shore, It was learned today from the offictal war bu- reau here. ‘The flotilla had been hampered tn {ita bombardment by a fog, it was stated, but resumed shelling the TMANS AS BOON as the weather cleared, doing much damage to bul dings at Zebru and Lnocke liver free Xmas day. All you need to do is to make your weekly or monthly payments as best suits you, or, if you prefer, we will deliver at once, without a Zouaves had finally succeeded in|) cash down payment, taking your clearing the Germans from patches nai ry oahetaae of woods between Dixmude andjf| old piano in exchange at its fair Ypres, according to the Bordeaux war office's daily report. In this woods a series of terrible | encounters has been in progress for the past three days. | The Germans held them, and as they furnished convenient cover for | the kalser's operations, it was high. ly tmportant to the allies to get them Into thelr own hands | RUSS SHIP HERE The steamship Novgorod, first of |the Russian Volunteer fleet in this| |port, arrived Tuesday night from| Viadivostok, via Vancouver, B. C.| Besides c@rgo and passengers she carried nine stowaways, They will| orted OUCH! | BACKACHE! “ RUB LUMBAGO OR STIFFNESS AWAY When your back is sore and| last? or lumbago, sclatica or rheu- matism has you stiffened up, don't Get a smal! trial bottle of value. We want to confine our ef- forts to four of the World’s Best | Player Pianos, therefore we are selling off, at whatever they will bring, every other make. Many of them have the latest improve- ments. Metal Tube, Five Point Motor, Flexible Finger Player Pianos with perfect music roll tracking device, although we have a few equipped with rubber tubing and a lot of claptrap pointers, buttons, levers, etc., that are obsolete, that are really dear at any price, but during this clearance sale we must sell them off, but are willing to tell the truth about them, and we are going to make the price so low that some one will buy them. Read these prices, but remem- ber this is positively the last call. old, honest Jacobs Ol” at any! drog store, pour a little in your |hand and rub {t right on your ach $1050 Weber $467 ing back, and by the time you jcount fifty, the soreness and lame This is the largest and by far ness are gone. i i | Don't stay crippled! This sooth Laine maid a ing, penetrating oll needs to be|f| Weber's. |used only once. It takes the pain |right out and ends the misery. It is magical, yet absolutely harm and doesn't burn the skin, Nothing else stops lumbago, scl atica, backache or rheumatism so | promptly, It never a disappoints! ELECTRO PAINLESS} DENTISTS $550 “sc $266 $350 Emerson $196 In addition to the above pianos we have a few Grand Pianos of equally well known makes that will also be sold within the next two days at equally low prices, Here’s Your Last Chance at | the Clearance Sale Prices Sale Positively Closes Day After Tomorrow Player Pianos Never Such Prices | Now $6 Per Mo. Never Such Terms Prices That Are Almost Unbelievable Bring This Advertisement With You— We Will Show You Every One ALL NEW PLAYER PIANOS $550 "Now... $188 $750 "Now... $237 MR. PIANO BUYER: We would publish the names of these Player Pianos now on sale, and we did in one or two cases, but the manufacturers made us quit, but you will be surprised to know that all of these are old, reliable makes. The manu- | facturers forced us to stop using the names | and makers’ names on account of the small dealers, who must obtain the regular prices | here advertised. | $875 "enemys $415 | $650 seimoniny."-, $245 $800 Pst roony .... $390 | $775 so monmy.-... $285 $975 siz monty... $416 $775 iii monnly.. $390 $1000 Psi0 sromniy, $415 $1250 51 monty $485 $85 WHEELOCK PIANOLA PI- montily........ S488 monthly Used but could not be told from new. $750 scmonniy.. $345 | $80 Venn PIANO, $35 down, monthly $390 $105 WEBER PIANOLAS i monthly STECK PIANOLA PIANO, Abad ee Used but could not be told from new. $9 monthly $950 Psi2s0 monn... $430 $825 Proms # rm .-. $365 $650 Somontny..-.... $260 $395 $1 1 5 DE LUXE PLAYER PIANO, monthly PIANOLA, another $40, another $77, $4 down, $5 month. Used conde ss... SOO Open $60 PLAYER PIANO, $295 $1000 3228"? $395 a... $885 $25 ° jury drawn this year. cations are that it will not be E the grand jury should be drawn Iike| men engaged along the whole “= ordinary juries, entirely by lo in it run in he million \ 1 save you from nary Ju oa; ents aly by ot. line will run into the * Until Moe Wo n an: ae ot wivaneay waite evious grand juries ’ + require. bitrarily selected 17 members out ae a “sro to # venire of 76. Oo OC. | The grand jury had been in ses sion one week. No indictments were| _. CONDON, Nov 18-—-Contirm FREE jroouvens Berries Saale tapas ara EXAMINATION Hesketh and Lundy will ¢ Nandi fi jorts th or CG, esketh and Lundy will try and es | cians" | FOUNTAIN PENS | [ii TRY TO FRAME —oxssts"=c3{esiticc"ss2 si)B. G, PUBLISHER DIES ‘a1 will «ua |ANNA GORDON NEW guese African possession of An. Bridgework ..... “get by” with everybody. They| VICTORIA, B. C. Nov. 18— ee Seiieats | gola. A skirmish was gia to can #t your has Full Set of Teeth.... hope to draw up a document that| Funeral services for Hon. Will am upiteate/ have occurred between German : 6 nC will cover conditions for years in ° Fillings to October 17, and October 31 A’ Th ANTA € No Seattle's rates compare favorably | w. , | at Gord on onl it was stated that the Germans THE PEN STORE ver Fillings. . - late all other Aserionn cities az vec nad today. in BEST 1! IN THE elected president the attacked Ouanger fe We do exactly oe) #4 Councilmen Hesketh and Lundy|cepting New York and Chicago. Lady Attendant uit sat down in a deserted corner of the | says Hesketh. r WORLD rome Quinine. {lor sanature f EW! Grove'on bo. tbe 7) batare en's Christian Tempe E Taees than 816. 1 OPricaL Union today to succeed Mrs 1 All work guaranteed 15 years. ff council chambers Wednesday, open-| - - ALBERT #ANSEN itmicn DEPARTMENT |}ian Stovens of Portland Maine, ELECTRO [alia Gust-covered package of docu | Los Angeles stock ellunae will Jeweler and Silversmith ( ned thelreopen fe a DOr \ 106 Viewt Ave. Washington ide | Only One “BROMO QUININE ask aarti PAINLESS DENinte — [iimatter cf taxicab charges, which| pn oe cer ts Now Located at His » Dr. Edwin J. Brown | wrenprer von too s cota coming on mine ‘| ean Adca Nee thon, {J tates. Moae at ome fe tet and Pike, Opp. matter came to a stop with the veto| Fivefoot hair captured at | New Store a Bremérton after it collides with steamer Kenedy, and is stunned, by Mayor Cotterill of the ordinan drawn to cover it in his regime, Laboring People's ventiste. 4 Main 06 hundred Boer rebels under Gen, i i 1010 Second Ave. Near Madison. | pene