The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 20, 1914, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Wherever You Shop, Shop Early Cheasty’s The Home of Smart Clothes You who like to dress right up-to-the-minute. Here’s everything you want—Smart Balmacaans, top coats, great coats, semi-dress and dress coats; business suits with right _ lines. Tuxedo and Dress Suits of perfect fit and faultless finish, made by Ben- New York; Alfred & Cohen, “Society Chicago. jamin, Decker Brand,” Prices $15 to $40 Cheasty’s Special Feature Suit $16.50 Never More Never Less Hats | Luggage Dunlap, Heath (Lon- Of Quality don), Stetson, $2 to Wardrobe Trunks $5. Traveling Bags Suit Cases Cross (London) Leather Goods eature Hat— $3 The Big F Cheasty’s Special Hat. Sure! “Values Tell” VILLA TO DOMINATE ALL OF MEXICO SOON 20— 1 WASHINGTON, Nov. State department officials were confident that Gen. Villa soon will dominate Mexico. Reports received from Amer- jean Agent Silliman said Car | ranza forces were fleeing from Mexico City, and that the cap- ital was restless because of disquieting rumors. Carranzistas here denied this CELEBRATE IN CAPITAL afternoon reports from George o 20.— Carothers, an agent of the state), MEXICO CITY, Nov. 20—The department in Mexico, that Car-|fourth anniversary of the opening! fanza’s troops were flockingg to Gen. Villa, or that the latter would not be seriously opposed in his ad vance on Mexico City Carranza’s agents here predicted that Villa would be overwhelming- ly defeated. Carothers said sentiment fn fa vor of Carranza’s overthrow was {n- creasing. | He expected a short but dectatve| battle when Villa's and Obregon’s forces met. Villa, he predicted, would be victorious, olution against Porfirio Dias was celebrated today, The city was decorated with fiags and bunting: soldiers and civilia joined pa a monster parade, and numero’ |certs were held. NAVY YARD ROUTE iH Gen. Obregon, commander of the ave Colman Dock. Keattia, €:20 Cexeapt |CAFranza forces, expected to start day), $:00, 19:30 am. 1:20, 2.99, ex. | Villa's troops. wt Sunday (Sunday 2:30), 6:30 > m At the request of the diplomatic a colony he agreed to leave a suffi bie subject to change without | cient force here to prevent an at a Price 506 Round Trip tack by atistas. 10-Foot Electric Extensi ‘ ension *. Ready for Use, Special Westinghouse Mazda Lamps Are Economy — (U sed on the Seattle street cars.) You your light bill by using the new, strong filament Mazda save exactly one-third in Westinghouse Lamp 10, Clear A-watt, 100-watt, 15, 25, 40-Watt. . 30¢ clear....40¢ clear...70¢ | 10, 15, 25, 40-Watt. Half frosted O)-watt, half frosted. 100-watt, half frosted. -33¢ - 44¢ 77¢ We Will Deliver Your Lamps. SPALDING’S ATHLETIC JERSEY $1.85 $2.75 and $3.00 value Jersey for boys. Spalding make. No. 10-P and 10-PX Finest quality worsted. Navy, black, navy and gold, black and orange Sizes 28 to 36 only. Saturday. .$1.85 Phone Main 512. New Shipment Wright & Ditson Jerseys. Pip per & Taft 1117 Second Ave. AGENTS EDISON DIAMOND J. A, HENCKEL’S FINEST IN THE WORLD Disc PHONOGRAPH. CUTLERY Soe RTT EET EEE EE ee eTSePEERES oe mon ES ere RUE RRR rayne’? | grave. of the Inte President Madero’s rev-| STAR-FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1914. Here's a photograph of one of the packages—actual size—which every German soldier carries In his pocket, He carries half a dozen of them. When he's hungry and there's nothing else in the vicinity to eat, he Jerks the wrapper open at one end, pours the powdery stuff inside into a dish of hot water, and at once ha’ two bowls of good soup —a whole, satisfying, nourishing meal. It's the famous German army pea-bacon soup you have read about. The scientists says man needs 3% pounds of food a day. Thie Uttle package, weighing a trifle over two ounces, including waterproof sas t and a half pounds of wrapper, contains the same food val table food! Twenty per cent of the whole {s bacon; the remainder Is peas, The! cooked peas and bacon are diced and reduced to powder. It makes| a perfect food for the man who does the amount of labor a soldier is called upon to perform. In the above diagram, the proteids and oh | build up the body and nourish it; the bacon furnishes the energy and heat. The bacon also makes the dish palatable, LONDON, Nov. 20.—In Ber. In addition to this, it w lin military circles the Ger stated that there were 500,000 | mans’ killed, wounded and sick missing thus far are estimated The actual casualty lists, In at 1,250,000, according to a cluding those of the §&: non, Copenhagen dispatch received Wurtemburg = and v here today. greene, comprise 980,000 sabestyrn TYPHUS IN THE GERMAN ARMY the French, British or Belgium sof ‘hed here today| ‘ers, but medical men said they enanppeemads: renans 7 | would be surprisingly fortunate if from Berlin of the death from heart | Ty rte now that it has disease of Gen. Volgbte-Rhets, who) made tts appearance. succeeded Gen. Von Stein as Ger-) It was understood the allies were man quartermaster general Oct. 18,| 4elaying occupying Lille, though the Though German accounts mini mans have evacuated it, until a| mized the seriousness of the typhus page detail ~ siven the city outbreak reported among the & thorough overhauling kaiser’s troops in the Lille district, | advices from other sources indicat ed that the epidemic was very AMSTERDAM, Nov. 20.—Offictal AMSTERDAM, Nov, 20.—Unofft cial but reliable confirmation was| received of reports that the Aus-| trian steamship Josephine had been blown up by a mine on {ts w from Assad to Trieste, with the loss of all but six of the crew, and that \the French cruiser Waldock had sunk another Austrian submarine Five thousand men were sald to have been stricken in two days. Doctors have been predicting that | the conditions under which the | armies have been fighting lately in Northern France and Helgiym | would result in some terrible out-| in the Adriatic break of disease. Details are lacking of the reported So far as could be learned, there sinking of the Hamburg-American has been no typhus as yet among) liner Ekbatana in the Persian gulf, i | s: TURK BOAT DISABLED IN FIGHT LONDON, Nov. 20.- crutser Sultan Selim de Grim, for merly the German cruiser Goeben, {s believed to be at least temporar }{ly out of commission as a result of damage {t sustained in its sea clash with Russian warships. There were co letory reports concerning the engagement, the! SNOWSTORMS HAMPER GERMANS The Turkish; Turks, according to Berlin advices, refusing to admit the Russian ver-| sion, which insisted that the Goeben was struck amidships by a 12-(nch shell, and that an explosion fol lowed on board So far ns could be cruiser Breslau, which was with the! Goeben, got awn unhurt by virtue ot its superior speed. i learned, the| |By A UNITED PRESS STAFF French captured part of the village CORRESPONDENT Jonly to suffer frightfully from the PARIS, Nov. 20.—German in-|€xplosion of mines which the Ger-| fantry operations were much ham-|™&ns left behind. the katser’s esc tens . troops had followed up thelr ad- pered in Northwestern Belgium to- day by a heavy snowstorm, So vantage by reoccupying the entire town. | M. E. Gottstein, secretary |not a friendly feeling. serious was this handicap that the Teutonic attacks in this region had practically ceased The fury of the kaiser’s bom- bardment had also slackened some} what and the Lys. 7 The between the const official report from Bor. deaux spoke of the loss by the Ger mans of large numbers of their heavy guns in the Belgian floods At Chauvancourt, where the HAVEN'T HEARD WASHINGTON, Nov. 20—The “intent” of the Turke at Smyrna In\er Dolphin was with him or not. firing on a launch from the U. 8. crulser Tennes: Secretary of th doubled his efforts to get into communication with Capt. Decker, but to Washington officials today. The German bombardment had partly destroyed Armentieres and | most of the rest of the town was on fire, at Dixmude today. The town had| been completely battered to pieces, The bombardment of the| Germans there by British monitors | in the canal was declared to be| deadly in {ts accuracy. The Ger | mans were bringing up new guns. FROM CAPTAIN was still unknown y Danieis re- nothing had been recelved up to noon, YOUNG BUSINESS MEN HAVE DINNER Nominations of officers to be voted next month were + an- nounced at the monthly dinner of | the Young Men's Business club at the Allen Dale cafeteria Thursday | night. The on “live wire” committee fur. nished a Thanksgiving dinner and arranged for the speeches, which | were made by R. 8. Drake of the Portland Cordage Co,, Attorney ¥. L, Skeel and J, V. Paterson, presi dent of the Drydock Co. P. Tammany and 8 Lamping were nominated for presi- dent attle Construction & | 'BOB BURDETTE DEAD. PASADENA, Nov. 20,—Robert J.| (Bob) Burdette, noted preacher, au- thor, hurforist and newspaperman, | known to the nation as “The Burl | ington Hawkeye Man,” died at his home in this city yesterday after ‘| | lingering {llness. COFFINS SHIELD " PARIS, Nov. 20.—The Germans | have made a strong position of a| | French cemetery near Roye, using | the vaults for shelter against rain jand shrapnel, while metallic cof-| fins along the edge of the trenches protect from rifle fire. Every day that THE STAR| bargains on THE STAR WANT AD page Fierce fighting was in progress |" PAGE 10, A Hundred Burnett Decides to Sell Magnificent Stock at One-Fifth to One-Half Less Than Actual Value. Sale Begins To- morrow and Continues Throughout the Holiday Season. Everything Is to Be Reduced. All the Cut Glass Is Half Price. Solid Gold and Diamond Jewelry Is Reduced One-Fourth to One-Half. Gorham, Wallace’s and Whiting’s Solid Silverware to Be Sold at Maker’s Cost. Howard, Waltham, Elgin, and All Contract Watches for Men and Women, Reduced a Fourth. Reservations May Be Made for Christmas Upon Payment of a Rea- sonable Deposit. Store Open Tomor- row Night Till Ten o’Clock. VER a hundred thousand dollars worth of Cut Glass, Silverware, Solid Gold and Diamond Jewelry, will be sold in Seattle at one-fifth to one-half less than it is actually worth. Owing to unusual conditions, S. Bur- nett, successor to Burnett Brothere, has decided to sell everything at reduced prices. Sale opens tomorrow morning, with everything marked in plain figures. All the Cut Glass will be sold at exactly one-half off. There are hundreds of pieces to choose from. In the Watch Department, $15.00 Ladies’ Waltham and Elgin Watches be $9.25. Solid Gold Case Wrist Watches will go for $17.50 instead of $22.50. will sold for $12.50 Elgin Watches will go for $7.50, Ladies’ Solid Gold Watches, with Elgin, Waltham or Hampton movements, worth $20.00, will go for $13.50. Even Howard Watches are to be sold for less. $85.00 models will be $68.00. $65.00 Howards will be $52.00. $40 Howard Watches are $32. These are all conteact goods. But all’s fair in love and war. > Silver Table Ware of every kind and description can be had for little money. The Holmes and Edwards La- fayette pattern can be bought for about half price, Dollar Jewelry Sale Thousand Hollow-handled Knives and Forks are $5.50, instead of $8.50 a dozen. instead of $1.75, Dessert Spoons are $1.60, instead of $3.00. are $1.90, instead of $3.50. Butter Knives and Sugar Shells, Pickle Forks and kindred small I than half price [ee eee ae, ee ‘Teaspoons are 95c, Table Spoons nieces are less Please don’t misunderstand us, This Other lines are not reduced Sut all are reduced something. is the Lafayette pattern quite so much. For instance, a set of Rogers Table Ware, embracing | 26 pieces, all in a chest, can be bought for $5. 75, instead of $8.50. Solid Silver Knives, Forks and Spoons, Gor- ham’s, Wallace's and Whiting’s makes, are all reduced, and the reductions are marked in plain figures. Clocks of every kind can be bought underpriced. You can get an Alarm Clock for 55c. A $500 Mantel Clock can be bought for $3.00. $16.00 and $18.00 Reg ulators will be sold for $12.00. Chime Clocks worth $40.00 can be bought for $30.00. Mahogany Clocks are | a fourth and a third less, Diamond Jewelry of every kind. Solid Gold Jewelry is reduced a fourth, and in some instances a half. There is over $30,000 worth to be sold during the next month. Solid Silverware is reduced a fourth—in some cases even more. A $95.00 Silver Bowl is $65.00. A $10.50 Sandwich Plate is $7.75. a" 7 Silver Plated Tea Sets, Bowls, Trays, are all re- duced. Casseroles that are worth $2.00 will be sold for $1.15. Chafing Dishes will go for $3.35. $6.00 Coffee Percolators will be sold for $3.75. The foregoing is merely the preliminary announce- ment. More news will follow as the sale progresses. The windows will sell thousands of dollars worth of goods. They will be well worth watching. Lots too small to be advertised will be featured in the windows. And at re- markable prices. 23 <j gm | The sale will a money-back sale. Mloney back if anything goes wrong. Money back if you can do better anywhere else. Coming as it does, from the oldest jewelry concern in the state of Washington, this guarantee is worth more than any amount of “words” one could use. S. BURNETT Successor to Burnett Bros, 909 Second Ave.—Burke Bldg. GF. R. & Co, Advertising Dept. is) + B M2 28S ¢ DANCING MUST BE PROPER, ORDERS FROM CHIEF LANG (Continued from page 1.) help of FE. W. Smith, president, and | They vowed that the duck was a chaste and moral fowl. They were surprised that the duck’s infirmity did not excite the pity and sympathy, rather than the condemnation, of hard-hearted Lieutenant Dolphin. It is a lame duck, Some Ducks Are Naughty It was not claimed that all ducks are nice. There are naughty ducks, just as there are naughty chickens But when you interpret the ef- fe of a lame duck to keep up jwith music played a furious tempo, you are too busy limping to |have impure thoughts. That was the case of the Bach elors. They hinted that Lieutenant Dol- phin’s attentions to their club may have been inspired partly by Danc ing Master Redding, for whom, for some reason, the Bachelors have A Pile of Wicker Baskets In Shelle Are Carried. Truck to the Gun by Four Men In Empty Baskets Was Taken Gun When the City Wai They told of one occasion when the Heutenant visited one of their dances at Christensen's in com- pany with Redding. | tle sarcasm at Dolphin. Her son Redding and Christensen are is a member of the club. She and her husband sometimes go to the Bachelors’ dances. “I must be,” she said, “a very calloused and hardened woman !f I could not see any of the tn- decencies and immoralities which brought the blush of shame to a policeman’s cheek." Russell Liked It Former Postmaster George F. Russell said he went to the dance complained of. He looked on, “We old fellows are dazed by the new steps,” he said. He thought the danced very nicely, saw nothing indecent. rival dancing masters. Mrs. Gottstein There Dolphin dented that-he had vis- {ted Christensen's or any other |hall with Redding. Five Bachelors testified to hav 1 Dolphin with Redding at n’s and gave particulars of the visit. Redding was sent for. He came and said he had once visited the hall, but couldn’t remember wheth- _Mre. M. A. Gottstein hurled tein hurled gen, { FOUNTAIN PENS “I can fit your hand.” young folks Certainly he Mrs. Christensen testified for Mendenhall, Pen Spectaltat the Bachelors’, Dolphin stuck to {t that the THE FEN STORE 17 dances were not decent. He has four children, all of dancing age. He wouldn't let them go to the Bachelors’, He had, he sald, let them to the Staggers’ dances. It was then testified that the duck frequently limped at Stagger dances, Captains Stuart and Sullivan sat with the chief on the board. Captain Sullivan gave it as his opinion that a rag might be danc- ed just as nicely, gracefully and norally as a waltz or two-step. The club tnvited the chief and the entire department to attend its dances, tn the event of the permit being renewed, at any time. It hoped the chief would criti- cise and make suggestions. Main 1473, ALBERT HANSEN ai Jseweler and Bliveremith ls Now Longe veh at His New Store 1010 Second Ave. Near Madieen. 50 CENTS Boys’, Girls’ and Children's KAVANAGH'S Firet and Union. 1006 First, at Madinon. Each Basket Has Four Handi ir Antwerp and It Shows How Many Projectiles Were Fired. by - Stormed. Which the Germani Famous 16.4Inch (42-Centimeter) and the Shell Is Transported From the a Manner Not Unlike Pallbearers Carrying a Casket. This Photo ef tf The chief said he would give the club a new permit. He hoped, he said, the young ladies and gen- tlemen of the club would be very, |very careful in their deportment| }!a future. The club |be scrupulously correc hearing ended. With a loud, triumphant quack, the lame duck, vindicated, wad died limpingly from the room JOHN W’GLINN DIES BULL BROS, BELLINGHAM, Nov. 20. His end} 'Jusi Printers hastened by the mysterious Lard | 7012 THIRD of his youngest son, Robert E. YOUR OLD Glin, whose body was found re- Can be remade into renee N s, Muffs and Fur cently floating in San Francisco kpi Model Millinery Co Bias SPOKANE, Nov, 20-—CMe hy arr the| McKenzie of Whitman county t. And the! ciected president of the Washi ton State Good Roads associatio here yesterday. ‘The assoclatio will meet in Ellensburg in 1915 dent of Whatcom and Skagit coun ties, died at the home of his son Thad here yesterday, after an {ll ness of several months. PETROGRAD, Nov. 20.—War-| saw dispatches say that German | machine guns, ammunition and rifles have been disoovered on the battlefields of Poland, buried in| mounds like graves, presumably | for use in case the Germans were | able to resume their attack on/ Warsaw, | OLYMPIA, Nov, 20.—In his ninth biennial report, State Labor Com- missioner Olson says Washington has a floating population of 23 pe cent that cannot find steady en ployment. bay, John P. MeGlinn, pioneer resi- bans. ima WASHINGTON st. Phone Beacon 1953, STEWART HOUSE 06 Stewart St, “ asad te : fe § Near Modern Stn ar Large, Modern Outage One or Two,

Other pages from this issue: