The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 26, 1914, Page 2

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WAISTS Bee" c 78c ues, Friday only We are just about to receive a large shipment of Lingerie Waists for holiday presents We have taken all our odd in any way mussed or soiled from handling and put them on our big table for Friday's sel! ing, although sold up to $2.75. They all go at 75¢, Not shown in any of our windows. Go to the department —Second Floor. Made of black sateen with deep combination ruffle. Regular price $1.49. Friday, 98c —Second Floor. Extra Specials for Frida special imitatic olor. 1 17-inch out of the Department Store business. In diues, black, The 12%e kind, 6c We Want You to Visit Our Doll and while there, take a walk through our Traveling For me y’s Selling In Our Economy Basement Such bargains as these are only made possible by our going SPLENDID BARGAINS FOR ECONOMICAL PEOPLE TOMORROW AT | PANTON’S ‘| Thursday has for some time been recognized by us as Star 4] Day for Star readers, and Friday as Bargain Day in our Econ- 4] omy Basement, but being closed all day Thursday, we will turn | the two days into one, and give our Friday customers Bargains ; that will surprise and please them. : UTILITY KIMONOS Up to $1.69 values, Friday only 95c Made of Duckling Fleeced Challis, Serpentine Crepes 1 Fleeced Calico, Regu lar prices $1.69, $1.48 and $1.25, All go Friday at 9S¢. Shown tn the de partment only. econd Floor. n or women, made of alligator; brown 5-inch reduced to 50¢. to 75e reduced Seonomy Basement Outing Flannels Wool Eider red, grays. In a ‘ 3 Plumber of styles, ie viripes, *BONS E ewne tn pink, | * MENt eae ie uding of bive. dots, In dark and stripes and checks gheoks, and ts In stripes, checks | medium colorings. | Pale Dlus. = remular 12% and fancy pat- Jc, : ular 196 qual- : fee out price, | terns. Closing out | Closing out sale tty. Reduced to | S004% Closing out yera price, yard price, sale price, yard Department and get acquainted with our little prices on Dolls of every make and size— Wonderland of Toys And Remember—it pays to buy Holiday Goods Early! This Doll is a regular $2.50 value; 22 inches tall; curled wig; real eyelashes; and stockings. awake or sleeping eyes; teeth, Full jointed and only ECONOMY BASEMENT has side part shoes Exceptional Comforter Bargains A DOLL SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY $1.49 Basement. r | | $1.50 Comforters $1.15 | $8.98 Devs Comforters $6.75 Cotton Filled Comforters. With attractive rose | Priscilla brand. Best down Comfort, covered pattern covering. Size 68x72. Closing out | with dainty rose pattern sateen, blue or pink ' price ...... Bab Aa AE FS $1.15 | 72x84. Price $8.98. Now 86.75 $10.00 Down Comforters $7.80 Good quality sateen covering, filled with first | Fs a quality down. Colors, tan, blue, green, color 5 q combinations in Persian design. $10.00 value, | ered with silkoliny F on -$7.80) with blue silk border. Women’s | | MUFFLERS Rubbers 25c Either for men or women. Mercerized and double tubu- Bea 25c Regular or Strap Sandals lar knit, in black, green, car: net Goodyear make. None better. dinal, corn, brown and some ver, Sold in most stores at 50c and fancy colors. Regular 50¢ gold. goods. All go at..... 2be —Main Floor, North Aisle, Curtain and Drapery Nottingham Lace Curtains. | White and Arabian, 50x60 inches wide, 3 yards long. Close out price, pair... O8¢ Imported French Cluny Net | 5c Curtains, 2% yards long and 42 inches wide. Come in Arab: Outing Flannel Night | Shirts in ages 4, 6, 14 and | 16 years, at 25c Boys’ 89¢ and $1.00 Pajamas for G5¢ | suit. Good quality flannels, in all ages from | 4 to 16 years. Neat designs in pink and blue. Some with silk frogs. Reduced | for one day —Main Floor. | Filled with softest lambs’ wool Bargains Rods, Lace Curtain Loops. White and $4.50 Comforters $3.25 Size 72x84. Cov in a dainty Dresden design Price $4.50. Now 83.25 GOLD LACE 25c to $1.75 utiful Gold Laces, ranging from the narrow edges to 27 inch flouncings. In metailie or top; finished In elther sil- gold, rose or bronze Ze to Priced from seereee QLI5 —Mata Floor. ee Curtain 2 for Extension be Tambour Musiin Curtains with | !an only. Close out price, pair | drapery ecru colors Be plain centers and fancy braid. ‘ -$1.25 | Drapery Ball Trimming, com ed “ccpiannon Make splendid bed | lenported Brench Cluny Net | bination colors, blue and white, ag curtains. Close out price, Curtains, 2% yards long, 42 in. white and gold, green and rose, Ns di 349-5. 75¢ | side. White only. Close out | Plain gold. Regular 100 values. 10c Brass Extension Curtain | vnite only lose out | Close out price, yard he Rods peed eh Be | price, pair 8¢ —Fourth Floor, Boys’ Pajamas and Night Gowns Very Special for Friday Only “Caford'# Unajamas boys and girls. Regularly | sold at $1.00, for Friday, your choice for 89c for OHN PANTON CO. STAR—THURSDAY, NOV. 26, 1914. PAGE 2. SHEPHERD WITH AUSTRIAN ARMY: AUSTRIANS WELCOME -CHANCETO GIVENEWSTOU.S. tlor Genehmigh » (he war press bureas, [approved | By Wm. G. Shepherd PRZEMYSL, Austrian Gail | ela, Oot, 27.—(By Mall to New York,)—When | began my | long, eventful journey to the | town, Praemyal wae the very | point of the ‘line between the Russian and Austrian armi but last night, laboring in o automobile thrdugh the mud, we found a grim Austrian Uhlan walting for us in the rain on a hill top with the news | that the Austrian army had pushed the Russians back 30 miles. It was a slaughter,” maid the| Uhlan. “The Russtans had eaten | nothing for six days. Thetr off cers ordered them to go into bat tle, but the hungry men said, ‘Give us food and we will fight.’ The officers sald, ‘We will give you @ food.’ And they turned the machine guns on thelr soldi to itive them into battle, That wae} very bad for the Runsian soldiers, wahr? Behind them thetr suns would kill them, Before | them the Austrian guns would kill jthem. And, besides, they were dy ing of hunger.” (Paragraph sor.) Will See Fighting Line The Uhlan smiled triumphantly jand started his horse off down hill through the mad, Thus the Austrian point has slip. ped out of my pres@ht reach by 30 miles, but I am promised that to- morrow I nhall be taken to the very point where the enemy's lines are so near that a constant rif cut out by the +) | world-wide distance aw; going on. The Austrian government wants the United States to know what ts ng on in Austria, Vienna was Junreprosented for many weeks in the world’s news. Austria had been blamed for sending © note to Servia that |brought on the war, and Austria's latory has never been told in the | United States } Wants Pathway to Sea | Austria's side can be told In one word-—"Russia.” Russia, Austrians say, has driven Servia and other Balkan states to defy Austria, for Russia desires a pathway through Austrian terri tory to the sea, and It was only by fighting Austria that such an end could be gained. Servia killed Archduke Francts Ferdinand, say the Austrians, but Russia was behind Servia, Austria sent the note that caus ed the war to Servia, but In reality | it was a note to Russia—an ulti} matum that the time had come) when Russia must quit such meth ode or fight And Russla fought Nothing 1s heard here about the French or British. That might be a ifferent war for all you hear of it here “Down with Russia!” is the ory in Austria, 6,000,000 Men Engaged Everybody knows that, over to-| ward the Atlantic ocean from here, | there is a long, sigang battle line dipping down into France toward | We | 5 Advance § the Price Parts, Hut all that gigantic movement, of which only a month ago | was a participating witness, seems «4 Here is another battle line, not in a garden land, like France, but through mountains and wild coun- try, over 600 miles long, with 6,000,000 men engaged today. of an offensive in Lorraine. From Verdun, in the north, ani lines extend in of defenses. In Belgium part of the area operating has been inundated afres! their’ positions. The weather le growing more severe daily. the allies will soon have to find a way of he: GERMAN RETREAT NOW A ROU clares. Uniess Gen. Von Hindenburg which was pronounced untikely, it was said the disaster to the kalser’s forces would be the most complete they have yet suffered, either in the East or in the West. WEATHER DELAYING TURKS ACTIVITIES BERLIN, (by Wireless vin London), ficial reports today blamed unfavorable weather for delaying tne Turkish troops’ operations againat casian frontier. LONDON, Nov. 26 mude was published by the Mail worthy authority. LONDON, Nov. 26—Admiraity at a The firing wae sa’ kaleer’e fo rece were jere compelled EVANS FREED BY WOMAN JURY IN _ MURDER TRIAL A verdict of “Not guilty” was jreturned Thursday morning by the jury in Judge Mackintosh's court, twhich tried the first-degree murder charge against James Evans, dep. uty game warden, acct of kill jing William Horton, rancher, on October 7 last. The jury was out 16 hours. Evans’ testimony wae that he shot in self-defense He claimed shots from an him Evans had been ordered off the Horton ranch at Bartrum station, near Renton, by Mrs. Horton, and as he was leaving, he declares, Horton came out, demanded to know why he was there, and whip- ped out his revolver. Nine women were on the jury which acquitted Evans. WANT REGULAR COOK The Central Labor Council Wed. nesday night concurred in the pro- test of the Cooks’ union against the | | | Horton fired two automatic gun at employment of N. W. Boswell, an inmate of the city jail, as cook Roswell is serving one year for manslaughter for running over and killing a girl with an auto, The labor men claim there should be a regular cook employed, Instead of selecting prisoners for that sort SIKHS HAVE TOUGH TIME AT CALCUTTA VANCOUVER, B. C., Nov. 26- The 200 Sikh emigrants who fafled in an attempt to enter Canada, and later, in India, assailed a squad of |Indian police, an attack which cost the lives of several of their number, were met by companies of Fusiliers, |Ghurkhas and armed police upon their arrival at Caleutta, | Every man was searched. Seven guns were found among them, One man had a bank book show- |ing @ balance of $11,000 To Cure a re a Cold in On Take Loxative Bromo Quinine Ta! fiats refund money if It alle 1 KOVE'S signature ts om each Da: GERMAN RETREAT NOW A ROUT, RUSSIAN WAR OFFICE CLAIMS PARIS, Nov. 26.—The French bombardment of the town of Arna- ville, only ten miles from the German fortified town of Metz, continued 't was believed to be the Gailic initiative In the development form of a wedge into the French Verdun-Tou! line REPORT ALLIES CAPTURE DIXMUDE ~A report that the allies had recaptured Dix- BOMBROMENT DRIVES GERMANS BACK bombardment from the Gritish warships off the Beigian coast un- questionably prevented the Germans from establishing d Metz, in the south, the German in which the Germans have been! ih, forcing the Teutons to evacuate | Both the Germans and Ing their trenches. TE ETROGRAD, Nov, 26.—The Germans’ defeat in Russian Poland had assumed the proportions of a rout today, the war office here de- succeeded in reforming hie lines, Nov. 26.—Constantinople of- the Russians along the transcau- today, on what !t said was trust. experts agreed today that the naval base to have been so heavy that the ite their trenches on the coast. NOTHING TO CHEER HIM NOW; BUT HE STILL IS THANKFUF (Continued From Page One.) could. The bones would be shiny when he got through. He had to be a good carver, there were such a lot of us. ‘It was a big day with us— Thanksgiving, We lived on a farm back East. We always had some | of the neighbors to dinner, and rel-| atives, and the minister, maybe. ‘I never enjoyed Thankagiving | morning. I'd get so hungry, just) thinking about dinner, it would hurt. We had to go to chureh, too. | “There wasn't ever anything fancy about dinner, No courses.| Everybody got a plateful, and) mother'd feel hurt if you) didn't ask for a second helping. She'd think you didn’t like her cooking. And Then Uncle's Jokes “It was some plateful, bo! * * *| Turkey, and dressing, and mashed) potato, and gravy, and turnip, and celery, and cranberries, and jelly,| and preserves. * * ® And after- wards mince and pumpkin ple!” He laughed “Just thought of something I hadn't thought of In years,” he ex- plained. “I bad a bachelor uncle,| a queer old cuss, who thought he! was a humorist, He had one joke he always sprung on Thanksgiving, | We kids used to walt for it, and) giggle. “Uncle Billy would bring the talk ‘round to windy weather and| women's petticoats. Dad would be. gin to grin and mother would get red in the face and make signals| to Uncle Billy to stop, on account of the minister. “If I was a woman,’ Uncle Billy would say, ‘and bad to navigate on | a windy day in petticoats, d'ye) know what I'd do? | ‘Then dad would wink and ask: | ‘What would you do, Billy?’ Embarrassed the Minister | “And Uncle Billy would say: ‘I'd take a reef in my sails and scud| under bare poles! Haw, haw!’ “Dad and us kids would laugh our heads off, The minister would | grin a sickly grin. Poor mother | would actually make some excuse to leave the table, Uncle Billy| never failed to spring that Joke on/ Thahksgiving day. It was a good| joke and never wore out.” “Does Uncle Billy still spring, it?” “Unele Billy,” he said, as he rose to go, “has been dead more years than I like to think about Good-bye.” Tuesday, § Dec. 1, § 1914 GOES —THE— Tenino Little Rock Oil Company Most Positively Will Advance the Price of Its Shares—on Tuesday Morning, Dec. 1,714 Cents | Friday Saturday a) Friday Saturday and and Monday Monday Par Value $1—Fully Paid : NON-ASSESSABLE—NO PERSONAL LIABILITY Then Up She Goes } WILLIAMSON has now done for Washington ex- actly what he said he would do—put it on the pro- ducing lst in the United States. Experts of inter- national repute variously estimate the well from 100 to 1,000 barreis daily—WITH A POSSIBILITY OF A Production by Districts. GUSHER, Crescent is under-reaming and shoving Name. Barrels. down the casing. Already the oi] stands 150 feet i deep in the casing and the baler does not lower it. Coalinga. +. % “1ST TEN) inca the botiten Of tha tale 4 Sealed The wal masa a: pyr should flow or gush. iar sane 5,825,488 The table reproduced ts an average of production " : +<: ree a few years ago in California. Today, California is McKittrick .. - 5,699,946 | producing 100,000,000 barrels annually, The average Midway eveoses 5,488,123 price for 39 years was 73 cents. T the TENINO- Fullerton ............ 4,661,123 | LITTLE ROCK field is a paraffin moon oe valuable ofl in the world, and worth from $1.50 to ee eon hte tates oeers) a barrel. Figure it out and see what an asset we os Angeles . have. THE MONEY OF THE PEOPLE OF CALL Ventura 463,211 FORNIA proved these wells 10 to 15 years ago, and Summerland 76,748 they are still good for another 25 years. The Watsonville -... $0,150 | Geological Survey of the U. 8. says it will take 100 Pu i 34,850 years to exhaust the ofl, which is variously estimated TED sos sos weve as worth $6,000,000,000, THIS MADE SOUTHERN Arroyo-Grande ....... 22,035] CALIFORNIA, AND IN PARTICULAR LOS AN- GELES—where the ofl dividends are twice as large as those paid by Los Angeles banks—59 in number altogether. This Is a Development Company WE ARE ADVISED by wire that the Standard 84-foot rig, which we ordered, is being rushed to the field and that it should be In Aberdeen by Friday of next week. This is a development company and not a promotion company. Stock sold 1s treasury stock. All the money goes into the treasury, Officers do not draw salaries, We have the largest holdings in the TENINO- LITTLE ROCK OIL FIELD. Our leases are perpetual. We are also in all the other developing fields with property adjacent to those that are or will eoon be drilling. Buy Before the Shares Advance Write, Wire, Phone or Call Tenino Little Rock Oil Co. Main Office—710 Third Ave., Seattle. Phone Elliott 3124 BUY TODAY “tetiewece” BUY TODAY the New Price Tacoma Other Places 0. C. LA BUDDE— OME TA 613 Provident Bldg. L. Wolf, 409’ Peters Bide BR. WALLA WALLA— SMITH & SMITH— mes & Van Atta, 605 Baker 810 National Realty Bidg. oe sowneenn— WASH, OIL EXCHANGE— 942 Pacific Ave. TACOMA OIL BXCHANGE— 920% Pacific Ave. ERNEST C. BASTON— Tenth and A Bta, Total .......+.+++..67,063,723 1328 First Ave. SUNSET REALTY CO.— 1309 Third Ave. PURDOM. -) BLAND— KER— 119 Prefontaine Place, Foot Marton S OIL INVESTMENT CO— 910 Joshua Green Bldg. $00 Third ay. wih HY- 1116 Third Ave. Wm. Gaisell. LITTLE ROCK— Ww. © Clemont.

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