The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 5, 1915, Page 9

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Stes FAIR CO-ED ANALYZES LOVE IN ADDRESS | TO CLASS OF TWENTY WOMEN STUDENTS: 1—SELF-LOVE. ELFISH LOVE THAT ACCEPTS EVERY- THING AND GIVES NOTHING.” 3—“INFATUATION—SHE CAN | SEE NO FAULT IN THE OBJECT O FHER AFFECTION.” 4—~ “THEY WHO KISS BUT DO NOT SERVE. 5B—"AN UNSELFISH LOVE—SH ESERVES THOSE SHE LOVES. | (From an address by 20-year-old Cary! Cody, “fair co-ed” of Chicago University, who spoke on the “Five Varieties of Love” before a class of 20 women students.) | “The first ts self-love, the love|when a girl can see no fault in the that makes brutes of men in time object of her affection. of fire or panic, when, to save “The fourth class when a person| themselves, they push women and who kisses but does nothing else in| children aside and leave them to the way of returning affection. | perish. “The fifth class ts unselfish love. | “The second ts selfish love, as Hy this I mean love for others and| when we accept everything and not for ourselves. Unselfish love give nothing tn return. radiates—selfish love concen “The third class is infatuation, as trates SHEPHERD BIDS FAREWELL TO COMRADES ABOUT TO DIE By Wm. G. (United Press Staff Correspondent) BUDAPEST, Jan. 15.—(By Mal! to New York.)—What's the use of wishing good luck to a man who's going to die? There's no luck about it. | [Russian onrush, It was hard busi-| ness, too. These men were going to stay in the city, to defend it. bs housande of ue who! n ordered out, but the men were of the few thousands who had been ordered to remain and to But | did It, just the same, In those | GPE to the last drop THey must last two days at Przemysi; in those PE Pe mee og OR DIE! last 48 hours before we piled helter) 1 had dined thrice dally for some skelter out of the city, before the) wooxs with some of these officers} who had received the orders to re- main, and saying goodbye to them| was one of the hardest things I've! ever had to do. I knew their smiles, I knew their) tvotces, I knew their jokes, their) favorite wines, their favorite cig arets, something about this fellow's home life, something about this chap’s three children. I had dipped into their lives Just enough to know and to form triend-| ships. And then the end of the Russian | line began to snap around the circle of Przemysl's forts, like a whi around a sapling, and Przemys! was doomed And that last evening. when I said goodbye to these men who must stay in Przemysl through the siege, my smile must have been : Cushion |: Il saw one of th n once more. It was the rn c, at 7 o'clock, Sole Shoe in the Przemys! cathedral, barely daylight women perfect foot The evening before, the man who oge ther with style and| 1s to be the next emperor of Aus 7 Takes away that], tria, had come into Przemys! In his | | | insures SATURDAY 10 A. M. BTARS tale ee CHICAGO MISFIT PARLORS—1400-1402 FIRST AVE., COR. UNION FORCED OU CONFRONTED ON ALL SIDES BY PERSISTENT CREDITORS DEMANDING IMMEDIATE SETTLEMENT, WOLF’S MEN’S SHOP WAS FORCED TO CLOSE ITS DOORS. WE BOUGHT THIS HIGH GRADE STOCK FOR PRACTICALLY A SONG, COMBINING IT WITH OUR OWN $60,000 STOCK Thousands of Dollars’ Worth of High-Grade Merchandise Must Be Sacrificed AT ONCE SHOES Showing practically one of the finest lines of Men’s Footwear in the Northwest—such staple brands as Douglas, Packard, Walk-Over and Foote-Schultze Shoes—our shoe prices de- serve serious consideration: $4.00 Work Shoes. Qbekd i . a Over Shoes Tops : $2.00 Bow’ Bc MEN’S HATS Most standard makes ever advertised at cut prices No Name, Schoble brands, at the following ridiculous prices: $3.50 Men's Hats; all] $4.00 Men’s Hats; styles and 18 Name and Roger Spec shapes; cut to. ® makes; 89 s $6.00 Stetson and Schoble | cul to $2.48 $1.00 Men's Stetson, Caps; cut to.. BOYS’ CLOTHING $3.00 Boys’ School Suits; cut to ....-. $5.00 Boys’ School Suits; Cut tO .....- $1.00 Boys’ Pants; Cut 10... vee. SUIT CASES $3.00 Suit Cases cut to. $5.00 Suit Cases cut to. $10.00 Suit Cases cut to. “tired” feeling. automobile, after a 100-mile ride He had come to go to church ir with these men; to join them tn to them and to tell them that Aus Hea'y Custion sotes, Aiea, tria-Hungary depended on them to $5.00 and $5.60 hold the forts of Przemysl or die in their wreckage * officer friends, earnest-fa 1402 Third Ave. vout, ng, bowing, crossing Mall Orders Malied Free. themselves, reading the pfayers, partaking in the death-mass with a man for whose kingdom-to-be they going to give their lives We left that evening in a Red Cross train, The Russian guns were sounding nearer than they had ever Hotel Baden § ose. town; the noise of some Austrian infantry regiment, holding back the Russian onrush until the last pos Entertainment § 2.) et acr'in tne. town of Highest Merit we could get out of it Before the aun set the next day the Russian army had surrounded Przemys! and my friends in the) great steel, round-roofed houses) were working their great guns for| their very lives. Przemys! is still an Austrian island in the Russian flood. .Its Entrance 104 Pine § v,""" "" "" "mers" Da sends ite wireless me nKe Russian artnies, over t Carpathians, saying We a till holding out But it is now an island 100 miled who, through Errors and Excess,@ | 4 f the 8 doesn't come, suffer from Chronic Weakne we'll know thatthe steel of ithe Impaired Manhood, Pain in theg| Russian shells was stronger than Back, Nervous Debility, Lost Vi-§|the steel of the Przemys forts, 0 tality, Kidney and Bladder Trou. |the hearts of those brave Austrian blee—quickly cured by using officers who stayed In Przemysl to OR. PIERCE’S TABLETS hold it or die | or Uvinin se” rves"tn ease JEFF DAVIS’ BOYS | LOVE THEIR FLAG anteed. For by Kinsell Bros., S¢ nd Madison, Third and Columbia Address all letters to NEW YORK, Feb RAYMOND REMEDY CO, 217//2 Pike St. Seattle, Wash n shore, and some Hoboes visitor to the place who Insulted ithe American flag, LIZZIE, THE WOODLAND PARK OSTRICH, LAYS FIRST OF HER 1915 MODEL EGGS The slumbers of Dr. Gus Knud HOYT SHOE C0 And in this, the audience of offt-/"ns, keeper of a n few of m ' a Woodland 4 he trad lll Mh at te early Friday morning by the darned est cackling he had ever heard The rumpus awoke the neighbors for blocks around the park biggest ostrich, had laid her first 1915 model eg. Doe hurried to the scene and cap. ired the ege. in a year, and they are paying $25 a dozen for them in Chicago. Llzzle had a perfect the neighbors with She had Lizzle, the Therefore, right to wake her cackles to cackle over, Three Eggs Laid by Lizzie, Woodland Park Ostrich dozen he is going to unload them) ness. the ostrichs at were disturbed Lizzie only lays 12 ownership tea afair something kilowatt hour the light plant Dale ‘says attle otri ous ones: Get a Breast at any a sieve and jany time, Jerippe, as it Heving at once. Chicken raisers vertisement, (ERICKSON AND DALE MIX UPIN =: HOT ARGUMENT The expected happened the meeting was held under th pices of the Women's Good Govern ment league, at change, the debate on munteipa! between Fro mstart to finish they agreed| tune, char to disagree on everything They did that perfectly 1c hey disagreed on Krickeon’s pro posal to reduce the cost of re |lighting from 6 iilowatt hour They dieaeree| oo SOLDIERS GOING MAD line for $1,500,000 as to who was the real enemy of Dale said he Hot Tea Breaks a Cold -Try This | "008 ese mall package of Hamburg a, OF AS call it, “Hamburger Brust Thee, pharmacy. spoonful of the had better take| It fs Inexpensive After Doc has saved up a few) warning and start in the Jitney bust-) vegetable, therefore harinless.—Ad- | Were 25,000,000 and South America, sjetyonpe 150 Arrow Collars cut to 50c President Suspenders cut to $1.00 Monarch Dress 7T5c Underwear cut to cut to . 35c Men's Wool Hose cut to cut to $2.50 Flannel Shirts cut to 75¢ Chambray Work Shirts cut to $3.50 Men's Coat Sweaters cut to 50c Silk Neckwear cut to 80c Heavy Wool Sox sea 18c 38c 28c one 68c $1.50 Pure Silk Hose cut to $1.00 Union-made Overalis cut to $2.00 Dress Gloves 50c Work Gloves cut to 1 7c THIS STOCK MUST BE CLOSED OUT AT ONCE, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. INDIVIDUAL PURCHASERS CAN BUY ON THE SAME BASIS AS DEALERS. TO GIVE OUT-OF-TOWN BUYERS AN EQUAL CHANCE, STORE WILL OPEN AT 10 A. M. CHICAGO MISFIT PARLORS 1400-1402 FIRST AVE., COR. UNION Shirts 48c ... 28c $1.00 Ribbed Underwear 38c Re 1lc 25 Linen Handkerchiefs 4c cut te 89c wer ot te... COC oes Wee) Underwear 89c Underwear cut to. 91.18 28¢ Boston Garters 8 c 89c mee One 13c $1.00 Knitted Silk Neck- arene cut 80 38c SATURDAY 10 A. M. MEN’S SUITS AND OVERCOATS This line of Clothing comprises best_makes and including Alfred Benjamin, ch Wickwire and Kuppenheimer Suits and think of it! All Spring styles and patterns at wholesale prices $15.00 Men’s Suits and Overcoats; Alco and Regal makes, cut to..... $20.00 Men’s Suits and Overcoats; Kupyenheimer and Alco makes, cut to... $25.00 Men’s Suits and Overcoats; Society Brand and Kuppenheimer makes, Alfred Benjamin and Hirsch-Wickwire MAKES CUP tO osc hse: abe Cone Ps $27.50 Men’s Suits and Overcoats Alfred Benjamin and Hirsch-Wickwire BUAKES, CUETO. eins foes can os $40.00 Men’s Suits and Overcoats; hand-tailored Alfred Benjamin and Hirsch- Wickwire makes, cut to. 0.665.606. 5<08 s $3.00 Dress Pants; $3.00 Corduroy Trousers; cut cut $4.00 Dress Pants; $18.00 Men’s Pt cut 1.8 Raincoats; 1 WO. cceevee ded s' CUETO. Bk i eg es $25.00 Men’s Slipon Raincoats; Though the Woman's Ex | CHICAGO, Harry Mae to the street HBeboe nts to 6 cents They disagreed n like Dale {pal ques were the danger |, KELLOGG, T-monthold White 4 by Mrs voted against ex dwood has cireumference, found insfde. the German folks Take a table. | tending the city light plant service | TELEPHONE GETS HIS! to the Duwamish valley because it was illegal NERV $o HE OWNS ace Ae “I committed Erickson said he wasn’t setting E, bery, Come and get himself up as the advised the sions would be legal Outside of th few things an¢| several others, the debaters were ir excellent harmony Councilmen | through an open Erickson and Dale was not a pink ninth floor of arthy and John Ma ¥ d with burglary, wabk-| Placed the watch in the transmit-) submitting to the people a suffrage on a six-inch| ter. Goodale heard the tick of the amendment. The house had already to a fire escape and escaped timepiece and appeared worried ed more than 100 feet PARIS Feb. & SOME PULLET, THIS Leghorn pulle’|to sour and upset measured 9% inches at Its greatest and was larger thar When opened, a sec ond egg, with the shell intact, war JURY DISAGREES _ EVERETT, Feb tea, put a cup of|the case of boiling water upon it, pour through| charged — with drink a teacupful at It Is the most effective |or F. O way to break misappropriatins $2,500 belonging to the local aeric | B., disagreed a cold and cure/ doubtful, It opens the pores, r congestion. Also loosens | An ostrich egg i# six inches long,on the egg market and knock It|the bowels, thus breaking a cold | and weighs two pounds, When fried|high@r than a kite at Hotel De Gink forelbly ejected ¢ is will cover an entire platter. understood = the | jurors stood 10 to 2 for poquittal It has been computed that at the and entirely | tim@of the arrival of Clumbus there | Indians in North | raw. own up, supreme court Why did you squeal?” and the law department of the city, UP TQ WATCH THEFT eps’ Sheri’ Mecraney, ounctl such exten charge of Goodale. TOWANDA, Pa, Feb. 5.—Led It was the . Oras from a cell if the B: ford county jail to a telephone tn the jail office. i Goodale was made to confess urglary over the wire. Chief it got me nerve,” plied i TAKE PERILOUS WALK ist Ser ae was NEW YORK TO VOTE window on the| this watch,” sald the chief. “I | mil 5.—Climbing | didn't,” replied Goodale. ALBANY, N. Y., city building, ° Listen, said the chief, as he state senate passed passed it " said the chief. guess you're right,” talked over one of them things, and he sullenly re STOMACH SOUR? STOP INDIGESTION, }ment into stubborn lumps and |come back | ause a sick, sour, gassy, stomach?) You feel different this down Pape'’s Diapepsin di-|with the stomach Feb. 5. a | gests everything, leaving nothing No difference |no ga no bel tke Juris of|how badly your stomach is disor-!tions of undige dered, you get happy relief in five ,clears and you feel fine minutes, but what | most is that it strengthe: ulates your stomach 80 you can ee your favorite foods without hing an egg which tof Pay sure. Diapepsin 1s quick, positive |ach disorder. | GAS, HEARTBURN—PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN Nurses returning} |from the front tell of hundreds of| violent partisans of| soldiers driven mad by the roar of| j munieipal ownership, Ike Erickson |the heavy artillery are dangers to the light plant ing of great shells Erickson said that 1 who looked upon m tions from the viewpoint of the Do some foods you eat hit back and put puts your stomach {fn a healthy and the burat.| taste good, but work badly; fer-|condition so that the misery won't | Now, Mr. and “Mrs, Dyspeptic, jot|Pape’s Diapepsin comes in contact vanishes—your stomach gets sweet, pleases you| Put an end to stomach and reg-|by getting a large fifty-cent case s Diapepsin from any drug store, You realize in five minutes Most remedies give you relief | how needless it is to suffer from in- etimes—they are slow, but not | digestion, dyspepsia or any The Jury in| W. Knowles | MEN, INVESTIGATE ann pe @RE THAT 1 CAN ¢ Why mubsect yourse fey when a th SAY gr you. "MONEY A retrial ir doe" OR. "BLA | Ehrlich’s Great for ‘Bl Iatered at «Minima Come to m reliable Wass [io “DR DONAWAY Office Hours 9 a, m, to 8 p.m. Sundays 10 a. m. to 8 D PROPERLY, honest diagnosis of your " 1 EXAMINE PREE nine In Seattle a women Disorders Admine Uaton and Think

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