The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 9, 1915, Page 2

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)

8 wae rR MoreB For Tomorrow, Wednesday, at JOHN PANTON CO. See Windows for Bargains—See Stock on Second Floor Positively the Greatest Suit and Coat Bargains Ever Offered in Seattle, Comprising Plain Tail- ored Suits Made of Up-to-Date Materials, Well Lined With Skinner’s Satin; Also Coats in Full and Three-Quarter Lengths. You Must Come and Inspect These Wonderful Bargains. —SUITS AND COATS— Values Up to $27.50 Your Choice for $3.98 —SUITS AND COATS— Values Up to $35.00 Choice for —SUITS AND COATS— Values Up to $45.00 | Your ig - $9.98 Wonderful Bargains IN OUR ECONOMY BAS 25c Housewares for 5c Glass Lamp Founts, Olive Dishes, Wine Glasses, fancy Almond Dishes, clover pattern Saucers, china Butter Chips. Values up to 5c. Your choice for 5¢, 35c Crockeryware for 10c Fancy Cream and Sugar Sets, Butter Chips, Tea Plates, Glass Dessert Dishes, small Guernsey Baking Dishes. Values up to 35 Your choice for 10¢. 45c Imported China 15c Clover pattern Austrian China Soup Platés, gold-edged Berry Dishes, clover pattern, larger size Austrian China Dinner Plates, gold-edged Soup Plates, Guernsey ware Pie Plates, Tea Plates and Dinner Plates, green Mine Austrian China Berry Dishes, Oatmeal Dishes, Dinner Plates. Values up to 4c. Your choice for 15¢. 75¢ Haviland China 25c Rose pattern Haviland Soup Plates, Tea Plates, Porridge Dishes, Berry Dishes, Olive Dishes, gold-edged Oatmeal Dishes, Austrian clover pattern Milk Bowls, China Tea Strain ers with drip bowl, etc, Values up to 75. Your choice for 25¢, $1.25 Haviland China 49c Austrian Platters, Haviland Oatmeal Dishes, Haviland Dinner Plates, Haviland ani Austrian Butter Dishes, Austrian Vege table Dishes, hand-painted Sugars and Cream- ers, Haviland Gravy Boats, etc. Velues up to $1.25. Your choice tor 49¢, $1.98 Imported China 69c Fancy Salad wis in beautiful designs, lovely deep biue Powder Jars, fancy Syrup Jugs, Bon Bon Dishes, Trays, China Nut Dishes, Haviland and Austrian Platters, Royal Blue Austrian Vase, etc. Values up to $1.98. Your choice for 69¢. $3 Imported China for 98c Large white Pitchers, gold-edged Pitchers, Austrian China green-band Vegetables Dishes, Haviland China Platters, Gravy Boats of Haviland, Olive and Celery Dishes, plain white Austrian China Vegetable Dishes Salad Bowls (Haviland), covered Butter Dishes, Haviland and Austrian Cream and Sugar Sets, etc. Values up to $3.00. Your choice for 98¢, ted Dishes for $1.69 $3.50 ishes, Chop Plates, large Hav- fland Platters, Ransom pattern Platters, Soup Tureens, etc. Values up to $4.50. Your choice for $1.69, $5.50 Haviland Dishes for $2.25 Haviland gold and white covered Vege table Dishes, Salad Bowls, white Ransom pattern Soup Tureen, Gravy Boats, gold and white Platters and Haviland flow Platters, etc. Values up to $5 choice for $2.25. $11 Haviland Dinnerware $3.50 Haviland gold-band Soup Tureen, Haviland gold-band covered Vegetable Dishes. Boats, Haviland large Platters, ete. up to $11.00. Your choice for $4 Kitchen Necessities Stovepipe Wall Ring, black or white, each le. Enamel Strainers for 3¢. Stoneware Salt 19¢. $2.50 Perfection Vacuum Washer ior T5e. 10c Bluing ior 7¢. Ammonia, pints, four for 25¢. 49 English Stoneware brown Tea Pots 19¢. Boxes, 25¢ Nottingham Lace Door Panels, 10¢. 75¢ Net Door Panels, berg “applique, 39¢. $1.25 real hand-made Door Panels, 49¢. $3.95 Curtains in a number of styles, pair, $1.75. 35c Curtain Scrims (remnants of 6 yards long), yard 10¢. $6.75 hand-made Lace Curtains for $2.75. 45¢ White Goods, dots, stripes and plaid weaves, 36-inch widths, yard 25¢. 25¢ White Goods, Madras, stripes and plaid weaves, with Batten- ttenberg Ripplette, Crepes, in 27 to including dotted Pique, Crepe, in fancy yard Swiss, dots, 15¢. $5.00 Portieres, border, $3.75. $4.00 Portieres, green fect with fringe, $2.48. $2.25 Portieres, in with fringe, $1.69. $2.75 Portieres, in ings, plain or with fringe, green with tapestry tapestry ef- brown or red, Oriental color $1.98. $1.45 Couch Covers in plain col Oriental effects, stripes, etc., plain or fringed, 98¢. $3.50 values for $2.25. $5.00 values for $3.25. 39¢ Table Covers for 25¢. $4.00 Table for $2.75. $2.50 Table for $1.69. $1.50 Table for D8¢. $1.50 good, warm cotton filled Com fort for B8¢. $2.25 silkoline covered Comfort, nty colored patterns, $1.69. $3.98 Comfort, filled, with goad quality teen, in Dresden patterns, $2.98 Covers Covers Cover in cotton covered pretty oe nen nn tan 0 iin et icin a RE ea i a Aa ac Stock STAR—TUESDAY, F BRUARY 9, 1915. JITNEY DRIVERS JONES SPEAKS LABEL BY PARTY SAY THEY CAN'T ALL NIGHT TO TO RF REMOVED ‘SAVWY'NEW LAW BEAT SHIP BILL FROM THE VOTER Protests are being made by arty ors of fitney busses inet th methods applied tn the tlons under the ordinance went into effect Ww . un tory Monday ble to get information in regard knowledge necessary to qualify « sald & committee which The Star office, .“Many jitney drivers have been down there ever day and are told a somethin, that will be necessary to 5 mination Today we were told wating to be familier with the baggage and Passonger ra We cannot be reguired te wee why have & geographica knowledge of the elty, know graveyard, park, hotel house and fire station, In order run a fitney bus, and why compelled to qualify and know tax! rat body knows the jitney conts Willing to Reasonabie “We do not object demonstration of ability to a physician's ever taxt driver when every to health, or a requirement to abstain | require with other neers from liquors, or any ment to convey pas safety and dispatch Counctiman Hesketh’s bill for the busses was in regulation of jitney troduced in the council Monday. 1 fixes a Hoense of $10 4 year instead Counctiman of $30, an proposed by Dale, Other provisions are No riding on running bords. Only one person, or one person| y occupy | with a child in arma, no the front seat with the driver Passengers must enter and leave curb on motorbua next to street right hand of machine Stop at Corne In congested districts, are to be taken on and at street corners. When pavements enger off onl are slippery rear wheels must be equipped with chains examina which to the called at new we should } reached the general subject of nav! apartment to we are rate is five to making a drive, ertificate of | *tands. fNoTO sh, held house at Feb. 9 Senator the floor in 9:45 a, m, today ! hours filibuster ahiy Still ap ot th Was e parently fr Jones Washingtor poer 1 nd te ry owed the ore Weeks of Masseach other ment more than bliean government pur agninet chase Ser and « y mained or tw constantly In » relieve the Washingto: show signs of weariness Their aid ed, how ever, Jones ¢ ted the ter alone throughout the night Jon Kills No Time At 7:20 a. m. Jones’ remarks h read y mtion lawe Durtng the entire night ator had confined his ep the sen h entir and had not resorted to the reading of papers and books to kill time. It was predicted here today that |the present of the senate | would probably extend indefinitely if the administration tnatated on putting through the ship bill as it Determined to Kill Bilt | The republicans express their de termination to fight to a finish jto keep the upper house In se right up to March 4, If nece defeat the measure They will not only kill this bill {ney way, but also will atop any ap propriation bills until the adminis | tration yields. This will mean that an extra see sion ca t be avoided WASHINGTON, Feb, %—Count von Bernstorff, the German ambas dor, has asked President Wilson « to pardon EB. R. Scott, the Raymond y| Wash. man, convte of writing jhim threatening letters Piles Cured in’é to 14 Days orpecee if PAZO Own the te Car must be brought to full stop | tee F when passengers enter or leave. Drivers may refuse to carry toxteated persons or those who e gage in boisterous conduct Drivers now holding vehicle 1 conse will be given credit for unex pired term if the new bill passes FIND TERRORS A . METROPOLITAN TONIGHT STANDARD GRAND OPERA CO LOHENGRIN| Prices: 50¢ to $2.00 OF NAVIGATION WASHINGTON, Feb. 9.—A merged Washington what Secretary pinnacle rock discovered tn waters by the sokat and geodett survey bottom to within 17 face. Twenty-one such terrors of navi feet of the sur gation werd found, he reports, in 42 miles of ship channel monument ts Redfield calla one| Alasko It rises 600 feet from the i stan” PANTAGES drag.” says Secretary Redfield | “was 60 square miles each danger discovered w The cost of the wreck of the Price er State of California was 31 and over The cost for | ne) Vaudeville’s Inughing hit, MARCO TWINS 5--Musical Nosses--5 0c and 20c This Great Dental Offer Will Last Only a Few More Days $100 REWARD if any testimonial we pub- lish is found not to be geno. ine. Cut Out the Coupon NOW! & Your teeth need to be at- tended to—now's the time to have it done—and save money, Absolutely Dentistry. Read what for others and satisfy way TESTIMONIALS wan very i mutated your my three teet to my previous & another dentist. He broke two of the th teeth off, which were so painful I did not let him finish pu my_ teeth Rut now tT ¢ truthfully aay we have We can you the done please same nervous office te extracted xperience w when have loast fenr, vurt me a bit ANDREA 8. BUVIK OLN, 40th Bt My wife had some work done in your offic he was #0 pleased with the work that she advived me to go there, and I am certainly grateful to her that 1 dtd, r the wh tooth that you extract me did not hurt a bit A. J. PETHRS Renton, & for f Wash, Forth #4 aud More . if used on or before February 16, 1915, will be epted as $2.00 cash on any work amounting to $6.00 or more up to $16.00 after @ cent disc regardiess of the amount of there 0 per count will be given. work 1 want done. ‘or example, you have you can save $8.00 discount with this you save $16.00 on an #10 th of work, at 20 per cent coupon, and $80.00 Job, etc our same prices remain exactly the during this discount offer as they have been for the past years on all work Thin coupon good only at the Regal Dentists, 1405 Third ave., werthwent corner Union st Good Onty of the Meme! Neotel Offices Me REGAL DENTAL OFFICES Dr. L. R. 1405 Third Ave. Clark, Mgr. W. Corner Union filtbue-| ly to the pending ship purchase bin, | COUNT ASKS PARDON OLYMPIA, Feb. 9.—Party tration will the election law recommended by the senate committee on privileges eetions today This concession to the independ | t voters in the state ts probably | » most significant flustratton of the power of the referendum of the | people as a club to keep the legin lators from running riot | The republican organization lend ers had urged a law that would compel y voter to tell the reg istration officers his or her party | affiliation, to be kept a_matter of public record. Republican leaders in the legislature finally abandoned this partindn idea The wenate recommends » the ae | under | not be required and mittee, however, party conventions to preced rect primary nomina-| tlons Candidates for party nominations must subscribe to the party plat-) forms in order to entitle them to run. | Compulsory second choice voting ie elimina . and candidates are |permitted to advertise in newspa pers and magazines MUNDAY NAMED ON PARK BOARD Frank P. Mullen, who quit the! park board in a huff because his col leagues could not see things as he saw thom, will be succeeded by Charles F. Munday, well known at | torney, Mayor Gill appointed Mun-| day late Tuesday. Munday is a Columbia university graduate, served two years in the! territorial legislature, and during! eland’s first administration was stant United States attorney Ofter by the United States, Bra | zil, Chile and Argentina of a media. | “|ton commission would quickly end Mexico's unrest, In the opinion of| Prof, G. W. Umphrey. He offered) this solution Monday in a lecture i | LORD GRAY ELOPES AGAIN For the months Lord Hin bride NEW ‘ond las Gray was Marjorie Wilson, YORK, Feb. 9. time tn 10 22, eloped 19 CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 OF THE SCENE IN ALLIES’ TRENCH men of them. “You see, really we're in winter) quarters, So are the rmans. I've been in an important part of the line and we have not done any real fighting for six weeks it's a wonderful sight, though, the trench country. All you can| see are barbed wire ny The trenches are so well made that you can't distinguish anything “There's utter silence, most of the time. It's at night that we! have lively times | Always pecting an Attack | Each side is expecting the oth er to pour out of the trenches and make an attack, The situation is ys very tense in the darkness T'm not ing that the men don't go to sleep, but there are lookouts whose nerves are strained to high € all the time j “The slightest movement of any sort in the direction of the enemy's trenches sets the lookout firing. It may only be a weed. stirring tn the} wind, but that's enough for him The men all jump end begin fir immediately whether they see| ny thing not. The firing rur down the trench, sometimes four miles. This is because we are afraid the Germans may rush from ir trenches and charge | Noise Awakens Germans | Then the Germans wake up. They are afraid all the noise means that we are charging them. They | match us in making noise, They shoot In the darkness, even though they see nothing This ¥ go on for 10 or 15 min-| utes, and then a great bomb of| white light explodes between the! two trenches. That means the Ger mans wanted to see whether we were coming. And It always means that the Germans are not charging. | Let's quit firing and go to sleep, ts what the German white bombs tell us, or what our white bomb may tell the Germans. And! the firing gradually ¢ out. It ts! not until daybreak that we really begin shooting again | Begin Shooting at Daybri have never been abl ain the shooting at daybreak always opens up, whether the offi s start It or not. The men do ft.| they all figh until) fast is over. One man after] another lays down his rifle and be gins to eat the food that has been| brought to him through the com- munteating trenches And you can't heer any until 8 o'clock for eating stop | shooting | and smok-| | Know Each Other nglish and German so diers know each other by face and en by nar The astonishing thing is that they don’t hate each other, You can't keep that feeling of blin hatred between — the trenche “You know that Christmas truce | was a bad thing for the soldiers! from a military standpoint.” Then the major said an astonish ing thing “If you wanted to end this war, all you have to do would be to let the men have anoth- er truce or Qwo ike that Christ. mas one. They'd get to talking to each other and THEY'D DE CIDE THAT THE WHOLE BUSINESS WAS FOOL. ISHNESS, AND LAY DOWR THEIR GUNS AND GO HOME.” “Co-operation and Mutual Understand- ing Are Needed at the Present Time.” A masterly analysis of present day condition BY OUR QREAT EMPIRE BUILDER, J. J. HILL. The Bon Marche is having this article reproduced in its own space and at its own expense in order that more people may see the necessity of doing their part by registering—and voting at the coming election (although there is absolutely no intention of suggesting how any- body should vote). REGISTRATION BOOKS WILL BE OPEN UNTIL MIDNIGHT TONIGHT IN THE PREFON TAINE BUILDING, YESLER WAY AND PREFON TAINE PLACE. age, and one of the M ‘ way construction, dustrial conditions” JAMES J. HILL, one of the est financiers of most celebrated authorities on han made a of the country the rail ech on th esent ‘in At the time the speech was delivered, The Associated Press carried the essential portions thereof and they were published in The Times However, the Manufacturers’ Association of Seattle thinks that what Mr. Hill said {* of so much {mportance that it ought to be treated editorially. Hence the following Mr. Hill made the broad declaration that everybody was fa miliar with present conditions, which bad driven capital into hiding—put industry on the bum and was impoverishing the Ja boring classes as never before. He declared also ‘Many concerns have been shut down, on half time, or with reduced fore: New enterprises ara not being started. Old ones are not being extended, It is a time of hesitation, of uncertainty and of discouragement. “The number of unemployed is constantly increasing—an4 such conditions call for a calm survey of the situation without prejudice—the causes which have forced the country inio such 4 portion. Others are running “Looking back to a period prior to 1904, when the business interests of the United States were prosperous, it is not difficul to decide what influences have disturbed the situation and dim med the outlook, * * * The reduction of tariff duty was promised by both political parties, and the fulfillment of that promise was demanded the country sre Od “On the heels of this came the war that has disarranged the Industries, the occupation and the daily life of most of the civil ized world. * *¢ “AS & prosperity destroyer the r must yield a place io & more disastrous cause which produced it ‘Coming down to the radical and permanent, as distinguished from the partial and temporary causes of the bad times, one stands out prominently by the volume of its effects and the per- sistence with which it is raged all over the country—and this is the legisiative crusade against busines sli hte “The business interests of the country have been under fire for more than ten y ~and the attack has steadily increased iu violence and decreased in discrimination. “The ingenuity of restiess minds has taxed itself to invent new restrictione—new regulations—new punishments for guilty and innocent alike. “Fach of these invaded some new territory—laid the hand of authority on some new occupation, until the innovation scarce- ly stopped short of declaring any marked business success to be prima facie evidence of crime. The country is feeling the inevi- table effect of such a policy. ‘All kinds of business and industry now begin to feel the heavy band of Interference that for many years rested on the railroads alone. These have been unable to obtain the capital to keep them abreast of the work they ought to do—and all other enterprises have suffered from the same famine. “Capital, repulsed from one employment, is finding other doors shut in its face by unfriendly legisiation. Capital justly fears that those opportunities that may still be open will yet be barred at an early seasion of congress “Bo capital decides to stay comfortably at home until there be some promise of better conditions—and the country is now feeling the full effects thereof. Our progress towards a centralized paternalism is so marked ~and has gone so far that the middleof-the-road socialist has little reason to complain that his party has not already secured a majority Inder laws passed at the last session of congress, most cor- porate business in the United States was put under direct federal control. Every year sees the transaction of business made more ex- pensive * by laws ordering expensive improvements or additional services—or the laying of new taxes—or the com- peiling of the engagement of additional employes, and the raising of the compensation of all the old “This ts the history of paternaliem—of centralization, since ever the words or the things were known to the world. “That governing method has always been the most wasteful of ail, no matter whether it hid itself under the title of Monarchy, Aristocracy or Democracy. Under the tribute which it attempts to levy, business in the United States will eventually become unable to conform to the onerous conditions of the new er After criticising the system and pointing out the Incompe- tency of the men that have the enforcement of the law, Mr. Hill makes this astounding declaration “Industries which represent thousands of millions of capital belonging largely to the people of moderate means, who have to live on its income, are under the orders of officials chosen for political reasone—many of whom could not earn on their merits a salary large enough to keep them alive in the service of con- cerns which are now absolutely at their mercy!” Thus it happens that nations whose intelligence is no high- er—-whose initiative is far | whose ideals are lower than ours —are ahead of us in this respect. The people of the United States are trying experiments every day—cutting off limbs--extracting vital organs, just to see if they will continue to perform functions in some new environ- ment—playing with life and death in political hospitals under the guidance of doctors who have not even studied anatomy—and with nurses whose idea of the best way to restore a patient's strength is to open another vein somewhere in his body and let more blood run. “Paternalism and extravagance have lived in conjugal union from the time that governments began, No decree of divorce can ever be pronounced between them. Their offspring—INEFFI CIENCY—is the perpetual disturber of wholesome business Mr. Hill finally closes his magnificent address in the follow- ing sensible and logical language “Rest from agitation, intelligent economy, efficiency, harmo- nipus co-operation for business institutions as well as for political divisions—these are not abstruse Ide They are things as long familiar and as little reverenced by the mass of men as the con- tents of the Decalogue. “We must go back to them or suffer the penalty paid by ev- ery creative thing that defies the law of the physical or that of the moral order of the world. “The business interests of the country are anxious to do their part. Selfishness alone would impel them to co-operate in util izing opportunities not likely to return. The men behind them have their share of patriotism, too. They bave a great stake in the future progress of the country “Co-operation, mutual understanding, mutual confidence, in place of distrust and enmity, are powerful means for natural growth, “To us, if we have not lost the qualities that have made and kept this country as great in its citizenship as in ite material re- sources, will belong the rewards of labor without envy and liberty with self-restraint.” Published in the intefests of “BETTER CITIZENSHIP,” by soaMARCHE. Union St.-Second Ave.—Pike St.

Other pages from this issue: