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A NEW CONCERN WITH A NEW PROPOSITION Seattle has its tailors who offer suits made to order from $20 up—according t what one will pay. The Art Tailoring Co, have opened with fp idea a & tailoring field. From 3,000 Woolens Now on Display Tomorrow take your choice made to order SUIT OR OVERCOAT for $15.00. Compare these values with others for $25 and $30. f TAILORIN 813 Third Avenue KAISER PLANNING TO RISK FLEET IN BATT FOR THIS IS BELIEVED TO BE CERMANY’S SCHEME LONDON, England, Nov. 20—Immer Vorwaerts, nie | mer Rueckwaerts—allezeit dabei bleiben!” (Ever forward, never backward—keep everlastingly at it.) There is the creed of the Germans—ACTION. England's greatest danger—invasion. | The Germans do not attempt desperate and unexpected things instinctively or from a spirit of rage. They are too calm for that. Whatever German accomplishment of magnitude is recorded, one may be sure it is not a hysterical, spur-of-the- moment deed, but rather the result of a carefully pre-ar ranged plan. But these plans have always beet subordinated to the superior dogma of “Do something; don’t stand still.” If You Can’t Win Do Something Risky German military philosophy as taid down by Clausewitz In it lies says: ye Inertia is obviously useless, and there you must DO SOMETHING, even if hopelessly risky, provided it is the only thing left to do, rather than do nothing. Could anything | be more hopeless than sitting down and acknowledging your- elf beaten, or, what is just the same, unable to beat the) enemy?” Now, what is the most desperate thing Germany can} do? In the east the cold Polish winter will furnish an ob- stacle against the so much desired action—in France it is A DRAWN BATTLE. What, then, is the most logical thing for a desperate nation to do rather than stand still and in time be pressed backward? INVADE ENGLAND, OF COURSE! Hundreds of plans for such an invasion have undoubtedly been worked over in the Berlin war office. But under present conditions, the following plan is looked upon by strategists as the one the Germans are most apt to adopt: even be encountered in the dash, How Germany which will hardly take more than May Make Dash. {a day at the most. From the German naval cen In the event that the dash reach ter—the ports of Emden and (es the English coast without battle. Witheimshaven, the Kiel canal the German warships will form a and the isle of Heligoland— crescent outside the landing force will come forth the fighting | and there t the world’s greatest ships of the Germans, dread- naval battle with the oncoming naughts, battle crulsers, de- English fleet. stroyers and other flotilla. But the hances are, and Ger. Forming parallel lines with many figures on that probability, decks cleared for action, hulls that the fleet will be sunk by the painted gray and every gun British crew at post, the line will hi This will leave the half million tate long enough for a gri |men marooned in England, with flotilia of German transat- reinforcements impossible But jantic liners and transports, |the marooned army will rule the each carrying 10,000 trained (country. men, machine guns and arti- The untrained men of England lery, to sneak out of the Ems | could not defeat a half million, or rt and take their place be- | quarter million, trained, fully equip tween the columns of war- | ped Germans, who would at once ships. conquer the country, seize its ports ‘Then the dash on England across | and forts, and mine the approaches +200 miles of open sea begins. |from the sea. If the British fleet is encountered Thus, England wil the Germans will offer furious bat-|to exist, just like tle and while this is in progress) British fleet and the colonies will it will be the part of the transport| be England! ead for the English . captains to head fo’ cw stish English Fleet to earliest possible moment, dropping | Blockade England, mines behind them en route. Admiral Sir John Jellicoe will 5 be ruler of England, being the Hope Half of Their highest official of the government Transports Will Land. at sea It is hoped that at least half of Or, perhaps, the Duke of Con- these transport ships would reach| naught, governor general of Oan English soil. ada, an uncle of the present sov But even if half should be lost,| creign, will be the ruler and head the price {s not too high quarters of the empire established Arrived at the beach, horses will | in the dominion be thrown into the sea and left to Now what will the British fleet hi tomed scows will take off 1 light cannon 1 the ship the heavy ery onto specially| built lighters and then by inclined] Planes the guna would be brought) up on the beach ‘The inexperienced English terri-| toriais—militia of the home guard| —would fall easy victims to the| host of trained men, according to} any more Germans landing. England never has food enough within its boundaries to last nore than 30 days. If the fleet blockades England to} starve out the German invaders it will also starve out {ts own 40,000, 000 people. If it sends food to the island the German army, in control of the ts- land, would be eure to get its will lift 4o? Blockade England to prevent| the German belief, and would be share. driven back into the interior, leav Might Scatter ing no obstacle to a march on Lon | don. | Whole Empire. | Germans Figure Of course, this may be only one ‘ of a hundred plans for the inva- on Losing Fleet. ‘This plan is based on the suppo | sion of England. But think what sition that the German battle fleet) condition might arise if the Ger} mans make the desjwrate attempt. will be wiped out. But the chances are, and Ger- and South Africa might find new The subdued revolutions in Ind SUIT OR OVERCOAT d } Mad CO. Bet. Marion and Columbia SER GLY INVASIONS OF ENGLAND Julius Caesar .. Second Roman Angles and Saxons . Normans (the last) .. ATTEMPTED INVASIONS Spanish Armada (defeated at sea) ... Napoleon (abandoned) ....-+seeeeees life and England lose two of its richest possessions. Australia, already pretty inde pendent, might decide to cut loose. Ireland, and perhaps with Ger- man help, would set itself up as @ (STAR-FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1914. HOW TO GRASP A GIRL'S WRIS Here's an infallible test to discover if the girl you're in love with rectprocates your af fection. The secret was discovered by Dr. W. Percy Hickling, @ noted allenist of Washington, D.C, who has placed love- making on a sctentific basis, A woman's pulse will tell the tale of her affections every time, contends Dr. Hickling. All you have to do to find out if her heart beats for you {s to put your finger on her wrist and note the pulse This can be done under pre- tense of merely holding her hand, It is, of course, presumed that you have enough of her favor to undertake such famil- farity. It’s taking a rather mean ad- vantage of the lady of your heart's desire, but anything ts fair {a love, every one knows, If her pulse foes yrocket up lke a moment you u may be ESPERATE DASH TO LAN republic, Canada, undoubtedly would be the last to go, loyal until England was counted out. All these are possibilities, the Germans. say FORMER BELLE OF CAPITAL IS BACK . ‘ Mrs d W.Wadsworthds WASHINGTON, Nov. 19,—-Mrs. James W. Wadsworth, jr., wife of| tablets toa the senator-elect from New York, Co. will be returning to her childhood | gruggists home when she comes to Washing-| them subject to an absolute guarantes ‘GETS PHOTOS OF DEAD CHILDREN Andrew Wangsmo's long search ended, The story in yegter-| Star telling of Wangsmo’s | h day's ; five months’ hunt for the photog-| rapher who photographed his chit dren, two of whom died shortly afterward, but neglected to deliver the picture, put him again on the trail, Hoe ran the photographer to earth yesterday afternoon | The photographer still had the negative. Wangemo returned to his home in Preston last night, How Thin People Can Put on Flesh A New Discovery Thin men and women—that big, heart filing Ainner you ate Inst night became of al Ds from your body like unburned through an open grate, The material) was there, but your food doesn't work | Your nutritive organs, your functtons of assimilation, are sadly out of gear and| ds and funny | jen cream rub-| out everything but the meals! are eating now and eat with every | ne of those a single Bargol tablet, In two weeks note the difference, Five to| of healthy, | a the net re r weak, stag millions of fresh new learrying pov ton, next March, to take up her of-| ficial residence here Mra yf the late John Hay and a native ot Washington, She will probably occupy her formor home, on Lafay: ette square, when she comes to Washington, in March Wadsworth 1s the daughter| king material in y mixes with yo the blood in eaatly Thin people gain all the to 25 pounds a month while taking Sar gol, and the new flesh stays put. Sargol tablets are t{flo combination of six of the b p-producing elements known to ol They come in 40 acl re pleasant, harm loss and inexpensive, and Bartell Drug Pharmacy, and all other in Seattle and vicinity sell Swift's of wolght Increase or money back STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS DOES YOUR SWEETHEAT LOVE YOU? HERE IS SCIENTIFIC WAY TO FIND OUT |SHIPS CHANGE MIND ARMY ON BR | would kill him. [should always be «|Many a person has saved himself | unhumanitarian PAGE 11, T Hereafter the store price. For example: lars, will be sold for 55c. T TO LEARN IF SHE LOVES YOU If there ts no {mmediate rise of the heart barometer, begin & casual, teasing conversation in which you mention, one aft- er another, the nan suspected rt If the girl's pulse begins to hammer hard upon the men- tion of any certain name, you may be certain that you have learned the identity of her fa- vored suttor, If it mounts to about 100 per minute—well, you might as well quit She's head over heels tn love with the man whose name has thus excited her Uniforms will all be sold 75c apiece. Boys’ 50c Rah T LONDON, Nov, 20—The German crulsere Scharnhorst and Gneisenau steamed into the harbor of Apla, formerly German Samoa, on September 14, trained thelr guns on the LE? Sit SOIL xplaining pian by in transports with half mililon men would make land between two ehipe from Emden, Kiel canal goland. The northern half of the guarding fleet gives battle to the Gritish In the North sea while the low- er fleet engages the defenders ail along the coast of Belgium and Northern France to the Straits of Dover. In the con- fusion of the naval transports — Atlantic are beached on the shores of England and the men and guns i fer the invasio; HUTCHINSON DECIDES TO CLOSE OUT BOYS’ CLOTHING DEPARTMENT Sweeping Order to Sell Everything Goes Into Effect Tomorrow OMORROW morning at 8:30 the Hutchinson Clothing Co. will begin the task of closing out the Boys’ Department. will confine itself to the Men’s goods ex- clusively. The capital now invested in Boys’ Clothing and Fur- hing Goods will be used to increase the stock of Men’s attire. Much of the merchandise will be sold for far less than half Boys’ Pajamas, worth one to two dol- Boy Scout Pants and Waists will be sold for 55c, instead of adollar. Boys’ Flannel Shirts, worth up to a dollar and a half, will be sold for 85c. Odd lots of Béys’ Baseball Suits, worth a dollar, will be sold for 35c. Odd lots of Underwear will be sold at just half price. Play Suité, Indian Suits, Cowboy Suits and Policemen’s at half price. Boys’ Sailor Blouse Suits of white linen, worth up to two dollars, will go for -Rah Caps will be sold for 10c. Felt Hats, worth up to a dollar and a half, will be sold for 10c. Seventy-five-cent Gauntlet Gloves will go for 35c. Boy Scout Stockings that were a quarter, will go for 10c. HE Suits and Overcoats are arranged in three great groups. The first lot includes suits worth up to five dol- lars, for $2.85. The second lot includes suits worth up to six dollars, for $3.65. A third group includes suits worth up to eight-fifty. These will be sold for $5.15. Boys’ Overcoats and Balmacaans will be sold at a third and a half less than usual, For example, Balmacaans worth seven dollars, will be sold for $4.55. Overcoats that were ten and twelve dollars, for $6.15. Boys’ Trousers, Boys’ Raincoats, and in fact, everything a boy wears, can be bought for one-third to one-half less than actual value. You will find the Boys’ Goods in the big downstairs salesrooms. En- trance from Second Avenue, or by the elevator in the rear of the store. will go for $3.15. The new two-dollar Balmacaan Hats are selling for $1.45. The finest twenty-five- dollar Suits are selling for $16.65. The thirty-dollar need of ready cash, and is honest enough to real reason for the sale. And that’s everything the house — Furnishings, Underwear—everything (except a few contract goods) is reduced from one- fourth to one-half. HUTCHINSON CLOTHING COMPANY, Second and Union. George Francis Rowe & Company, Your Appetite With a Little Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet, the Secret of Perfect Digestion You should see our farmers and their boys eating fn the fields. On the farm five meals a day is the rule. No one ever has stomach trouble because meals are digested and people live normally. In the elty we lose our “pep” and indigestion, dyspepsia, stom- ach trouble, etc, make us look on five meals as an impossibility. WAR DOGS ARE UNLOOSED OUT | ON THE CAMPUS, The war do ve been un- leashed on university cam. pus. Fierce, bloodiess batties are being waged, with Fred A. Woelflen, editor of the Daily, fighting with Teutonle ferocity for neutrality. ‘The campus ts rent asunder over the question of raising money for the war sufferers. The campaign was to have begun Friday. “Halt!” said Woelflen, whose} names bespeaks for him a German ancestry, and whose looks corrobor-| ate his name. It he is not German, declare some of his opponents, he should be, “Wait a moment,” cried Woelf-| len, “Let's see where this Red) Cross money is to go.” Woelflen has the deepest sympa-| thy for the war sufferers. “But” says fe, with editorial! frankness, “the letters which have| been received at the university, so-| Heiting succor, are distinctly of an-| tiGerman character.” To raise money for Belgian sut- ferers, declares Woelflen, “will he}p| along the cause of war,” rather than hasten its end, | “We, a8 a neutral nation,” he con- Farmer's Boy—“Just think of brother Joe in the city. He can't eat. Why, a sandwich like this A majority of people have come to know the blessings which an oo- casional use of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets confer upon the stomach. They are unquestionably the most | popular remedy known, for the rea- on that dyspepsia is the national disease, and these wonderful little |tinues, “should take the most cau- tablets have long since acquirea a|tious steps, We cannot be respon national reputation as a thoroughly | sible for any actions which will pro reliable and efficient cure for all|long the contest for one moment.” forms of dyspepsia and indigestion. As a matter of fact, argues Woelf-| No matter how great the excess |len, it would be charity not to send of food takem igto the stomach,|any funds to the nations at war, in one or two of these tablets will di-| order that war may soon be ended. gest every particle of it. A pack-|in the lead editorial Thursday, ho age of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets | says: in the house.| “We belleve—although it may be} that the people of! from a serious attack of acute {ndi-| murope should be made to see the gestion by using them after heavy | fallacy, the gruesomeness, the abso meals, such as are eaten Christ-\inte unnecessity of such actions mas, New Year'@ Thanksgiving and | which have characterized the policy other holidays and festal seasons.|o¢ gix powers of Euritpe and one After attending banquets; ate) Hower of Asie. Europe must learn suppers, heavy fancy dinners, after, ; i theatre parties, etc., where one has her lesson. Itgnay be bitter. Be rg) '8| Wherefore, thys Woelflen, the dined sumptuously and luxurtantly, | qyiveraity of Washingt A Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets should| University o shington and the tr . “ sw’, Ate nation as well should await the end nvariably be used, as they digest ‘ . the food perfectly ‘and completely, |°f the war before giving relief. It and prevent all possibility of dys.) Would then be real charity. Today pepsia, which, without their use, is|!t would only be further Incentive more than likely to ensue for war. Go to your druggist today and} AS @ result of ‘he ethical and buy a box. A small sample package of| Moral questions Involved, the solle- Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will be| iting of funds for the war sufferers mailed free to any one who will ad-| has been postponed while a commit- dress F, A, Stuayt Co., 150 Stuart |tee of faculty members and students Bldg.,, Marshall, Mich, thoroughly thresh the matter out, Merchandisers and Financiers. THEY LIKE GOULASH |: the Swedish hall, Eighth and i Friday afternoon and even | ing. LONDON, Nov. 20.—"Goulash | parlors,” as the American embas- sy staft call the London restau-/ ME HAS A FEW LEFT rants run by the embassy with the) Austrian relief fund for Austro-| Hungarians, have proved so suc-/ cessful there are now three of} them. | NEW YORK, Nov. 20.— Joseph Elche, a game warden of Passaic, N. J. has had six brothers, five nephews and a niece killed In the war, but four brothers and fourteen nephews are still fighting for the kaiser. WILL GIVE BAZAAR | The ladies of the Modern Macca-| bees will give their annual bazaar’ BEYOND THE QUESTION OF DOUBT THE GREATEST sicaitve RAINCOAT piste: AT MADISON Today and Saturday + Your Coat Is Here ul/3 Of Superb, Double Service All Weather TODAY AND SATURDAY 33 Per Cent Off TODAY AND SATURDAY 33 Per Cent Off Raincoats, Balmacaans, English Slip-ons, English Gaberdines, Etc. For Men, Women, Boys and Girls DEDUCT 33 PER CENT OFF REGULAR PRICE $20 SUPERB ALL. WEATHER COATS FOR MEN AND WOMEN AT $18 RAIN. PROOF COATS FOR $15 RAIN- PROOF ALL- WEATHER COATS FOR MEN AND. | COATS FoF WOMEN AT 1 WOMEN AT $13.35 |$12.00 |$19.00| $6.65 AND GIRLS’ STORM COATS) 916 $10 RAIN- PROOF COATS FOR MEN AND WOMEN AT HEADQUARTERS FOR BOYS’ Open Till 11 916 SECOND AVE. Alterations Saturda: pia Aer ~=MADISON. Night. $1.50 GIRLS’ STORM CAPES AT $2.50 GIRLS’ STORM CAPES AT