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PANTON’S PANTON’S PANTON’, Clever Spring Suits | Moderately Priced $12.50 to $25.00 We specialize on popular-priced ‘Women's Wear.” Our new Suits combine style and good workmanship with low prices, and the result is pop- ularity. We are showing black and white check models, navy blues, blacks, putty, tan, sand, battle- Ship gray, etc., and they are all in styles aimed to please the fastidious maid or matron. Priced from $12.50 to $25.00. opelecece epare ecePEveeesss We have them in all col- ors. In meshes of a dozen TIPPERAR a yard, and 50c. Finished Veils, Merode Union Suits Union Suits, usually sold at $1.25 and $1.50 per suit. This well-known make requires no recommendation, and you can choose from both extra and regular sizes at $1.00 each. Ladies’ medium-weight Union Suits, in ribbed style, in pure white. Sizes 4, 5 and 6. Serviceable garments at a low price. 50c values for 37¢. 35¢ 7 Medium weight VAL. LACE A new shipment of Val. Laces in in- sertions and edges. They are in the pop- ular two-thread Val and a fine assort- ment of the French We n patent, values up to $2.25, now Val. in novelty ‘ $1.48 meshes. Widths 14] [ Boys’ Oxfords, regular $2.00 and A clearance of > $2.50 values, now OSe ate of Ladies’ Hoes. Colore aren ft 2, inches. Priced [I Foiis Low Shoes ia white ne black, tan, pink, blue and white,| | at Se, 10¢, 15¢ in cotton lisle and boot silk. per yard. $2.95 to $10.00 Our Spring Hats comprise every style that promises to be popular this semson. They are of silk, straw or braid. Colors include blue, brown, battleship gray, rose, putty and sand color. Trimmings of edible-looking fruit and berries, and the ever-popular French flower clusters; ribbon trimming of grow grain and satin {s also very good. Styles range from the Tipperary effects to the large flat sallors. Priced very mod- erately from $2.95 to $10.00. Untrimmed Hats 98c to $3.00 Untrtmmed Hats tn fasctnating styles, including Tipper ary, Tricorne, Military and Flat Sailor models of hemp, satin, novelty barnyard straw. etc, in all the popular spring colors —Cordeau bine, put a, battleship gray, ete. Moderately Have ever considered that when you buy a you long skirt. Corset stamped with the Warner confining the Mame you are as- sured of a corset acings. Lace fashionably shaped and perfect fitting— of strong, soft ma- terial, accurate de- Signing and the highest standard of quality throughout? skirt. med with silk ers attached. PANTON’S Sale of Shoes tvery pair of Men's and Women's Shoes on sale, bargains offered Children’s Low Shoes, valu $2.00, Children’s High Shoes, to $2.60, now Misses’ buck and canvas, A model for the average figure, as illustrated, with medium low bust and Material is of extra quality coutil, elastic band at back of skirt for Zoned marquisette flap under front aose supporters attached. A new model just received for the medium figure. Material is of coutil and is trim- under front lacings; PANTON’S regardless of coat mention a few of the many now ... Mary Janes, "sh00 and $2.25, now. 81.48 values up 81.25 low Shoes, gunmetal and up to Bee 50, now ‘ eee ose figure to uniform lines. and ribbon trimmed; six Price $3.00. Medium bust and long embroidery. Boned flap six hose support- Price $2.00. — HOUSE VOTES DOWN ‘WILL TRY TO WIND MOTION AGAINST UP CONDEMNATION EIGHT-HOUR REPEAL rae Urging speed in pushing the Rat- OLYMPIA, Feb. Feb. 16.—By @ vote of | trial, 8 to 21, the house yesterday de feated Rep. Murphine’s motion to Indefinitely postpone house bill 41, which seeks to repeal the eight-hour a resolution was introduced by Councilman Dale Monday. It 1n- structs Corporation Counsel Brad- ford to bring the condemnation to immediate trial. This matter had Jaw on public work. been tried in Judge Humphries Although Rep. Renick of Seattle court last year, but the supreme Yoted with the majority, he an- Court, on the appeal of the recety nounced he did it only for the pur.|¢T# of the Seattle, Renton & South pose of securing A reconsideration, ©™. held that the awards were too and that when the measure comes #™all, and a new trial was ordered up on final passage he will vote against it. Rep. Lum of North Yakima made| TO PROSECUTE BOY the principal speech for the repeal) wi of the eight-hour law. He sald the) CHEHALIS, Feb. 16.—Herman farmers were demanding it, that the| Yenzer, who declared on oath that short work day was hampering road|Oiga Raschke, local high school and bridge work particularly, and|girl, who married C. C. Smith last laws enyhow was 16, le to be prosecuted The Same Yesterday, — — pes ROASTED FFE | | nier boulevard condemnation sult to! that the state has too many freak! week, was 18 when the girl really! OFFEE... ‘MISS CHARLOTTE WILL JUST HAVE TO STAND FOR IT, Having cast the die, it is up to | Miss Charlotte Jones now to do one of three things, as follows to wit Quit eating. Quit eating cafes. Find a smoking-less beanery For it {s our painful duty today to chronicle the sad fate which be fell the communication of the afore. said Charlotte Jones to our city fathers Without so much as a pause, the communication, which urged the in restaurants or passage of a law to prohibit smok- | ing {n restaurants and cafes so that | perchance be of the said burried to smoke might blown into the Charlotte Jones, swift annihilation Parllamentarily speaking, ordered placed on file not face was it was Today and Tomorrow STAR—TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1915. PAGE 2 CROWN PRINCESS OF GERMANY RECEIVES KARL VON WIEGAND; By Karl H. Von Wies nd United Prese Staff Correspondent. ‘copyrighted, “1918, by the Untied Press righted tn Britain and Argention) RERLIN, Jan. 30. (By Courier to Naw Yowk,)—"After | all, is it not the women and children who are the real suf-| ferers from war. Theirs i} the suspense; theirs the dread casualty t; theirs the alter- lnating hope, fear and despair that a father or a husband ora Ibrother may be among the} missir The future, to them,|! may gloom and poverty Theirs never can be the it was the Crown Princess Cecelie, the future empress of Germany, who was talking. In the Cecellen House, the beautiful $ Crown Princess Cecelie the Fatheriand’s Women's As the gardens and field—anywhe hands are needed | sociation at Charlottenberg, | met her. | | | “Even the women In the ‘ hata vend kitchen are playing a part nde which Is proving a big factor began, acting ae an ange! of In the wer mercy, comforting the wounded “With the talk of attempte sr hg women end to starve us out, who can say “Rurope is one vast hospita,”| het the Haustrau in the Pay pF sed gek ger yo on a| kitchen may contribute to Ger. Pa “ D ro success by new, rigid pity! How happy your Amertoan | women should be—happy mothers jomatio seenemy | of |happy wives, happy sisters. They| [007 by Planting, raising and beg Parse vegetables and have none of the heartaches and | miseries of war, lof the suspen They have hone/ . “German women are herotcal that is ours, |xiving their all—father, husband, ee ene ie Nome noc nen.| Drother-—thelr own strength, work traliaed ton departments of socio.|*24 services—all for the Father logical work, including the feeding] !4>4. Hut in the privacy of their of & number of poor children, the| Or) eee ey ened the furnishing of pure milk for chil! ads ghey dren of the poor, giving of practt-| \ : | “ States e women and child cal courses in housekeeping to) c+ ali the warring nations, and os women and girls, conducting kiteh |” Jens where the poor may get food) Peclally | at nominal prices, depots for visit ee the ling purses, and the like peaimaesech | ‘The crown princess has central (xed her activities here, She espe |elally takes tnterest in the hospital | wards, She was aimply dressed. The future empress is tall, grace | expressed — appreciate Christmas gifts sent SAN FRANCISCO, Feb, 16.- ful of movement, and of the type/man and woman were killed and best desertbed “chic” andjtwo men injured as the result of dressy iitney bus acetdents in various There {# neither pore, atiffners nor condescension in her manner. Her big brown eyen dance and she shows great animation asd |vivacity. She is a brunette. Her | mother was a Russian grand duch and she is @ relative of the) sows on the Pana She speaks German, Ru®| have broken three world’s record: jalan, English and French. | according to F. When I was presented to her by/er. A Duroc “TL under-| pigs in 328 days. parte of the city Jersey | Capt. Jachman she sald: and that you were able to) One sow, before she w: It must be tn-)old, farrowed 31 pigs. at 8— enter the trenches, | teresting.” farrowed 44 pigs, two 15 each and The princess passed into a large|one 14 fostival hall and lecture room| = ,, . which has now been transformed CUSSED” THE MAYOR | WARDNER, Idaho, Fed. 16. into a hospital. The first cot she stopped at was occupled by a sol dier whose shoulder had been shat tered by shrapnel | As she drew from the wounded |man the story of his ordeal, ne igianced with pride at the fron leross pinned above his cot | The princess inquired abont his family, gave him a bouquet of flow- ers and a picture of herself and her children. A majority of the patients fn thi ward were serious cases Men Fight; Women Nurse When she had completed her vte- Itations, she sald “Our women are playing a big and complete role, They have vol- Fiaig a “cussing” when the city streets, CO. arrest today ©. L. MILLER INDORSED Geo, F. Moore, W Hyatt, Ge W. Aiken and J. E. McGrew, nets pors of O. Le Miller, candidate fe nomfnation for the council, issued a statement approving h candidacy J. P. Daly of Nome says the se ond session of the Alaska legis ture, which will establish record amount of legislation. for TALKS WITH HIM OF THE WAR |!stor and work with the Red Crons.! They console and help the widows, |care for the wounded, and work in 2 KILLED BY JITNEY) VANCOU VER, W Wash., Feb. 16. —| Rama ranch H. Cotter, the own- sow had 39 Thirty-four lived jstand you were with my husband/and were sold at a large profit. months | ree sow Charged with having given Mayor executive advised him to get off the Fitepatrick fs under Monday will open March Ist,/ small | ‘ston of the German compromise the enemies, if England would remove) During the th exist re) expert workmen continually shiftin ly) neither of these on to al OFFICERS: I was informed by tered great difficulties on account run to one side and necessitated the drawing down over 2,000 feet, and on account of the pelled to blast off about 300 feet of the6%4-inch casing, in order to straighten the iree g and Report as to the Condition of "the Washington Well on Feb. 5 1915 weeks that I havebeen in this district I have spent consid erable time in and about the Washington Well, and the following are facts the head driller that some considerable time ago he encou of a shifting formation, which caused the hole to of the 44-inch casing, which wa curvature of the hole he was com hole, and to be able to draw the balance of the 6%-inch casing, amounting t about 1,700 feet, which was done, put on a new shoe and thereby keep the casing loose, by continually raising and lowering it and adding the new pipe. While ar operation of this kind entails an enormous amount of expert labor, I am 4 i] to say they have been very successful, inasmuch as they have perfectly stra t hole, and have carried their 6%-inch casing down to within 60 feet of where when they started to they will once more be iri the solid sandstone, and when the 6%-inch casing enter this formation it is anticipated the hole will be sufficiently solid that no more cas will be required, and drilling can then proceed without interruption. I may here state that in the opinion of Mr, Seifert, Mr. Kirwin and Mr. Ernst the real oil sands will be reached between March Ist and March 15th, No doubt interested parties would think the drillers were very slow, when as a matter of fact they are working which i mous difficulty of straightening the hole for 300 feet in caving forced through from the sand rock below, air is filled with an odor of petroleum, and as the bailer is emptied, by throwing a lighted match into the drain the gas will burn for many feet up the derrick. Nearly every bailer contains more or less oil The above letter was written by Mr. L. entlemen are Washington Oil Company. STOCK IS NOW SELLING AT 25¢ PER SHARE! GERARD-FILLIO CO., Inc., Fiscal Agents WASHINGTON OIL CO. 500-514 Eitel Bldg. E. E. Gerard, President; Emil Schumacher, Secretary; George W. Johnson, Treasurer; U. H. Fillio, Business Manager. as the been gair t ha straighten the hole. When the OO fe 1915 24 hours every day, and are most careful and proven by the fact of their having overcome the enor- a gumbo shale, which i In spite of this fact gas and oil seepages are so that when the bailer comes up the (Signed) L. ERNST. Ernst to Mr. Marsh of Seattle, and stockholders or otherwise connected with the Telephone Main 7420 al WASHINGTON, Developments in Feb. th 16.— contro- versy between England and Ger- many over the use of neutral flage and the proposed German bh. or placed the United States forwarding by the can state departme in blockade of British waters ha In the attitude of an intermediary be- tween the two belligerents. T Ameri- to Eng. land of the combined German c- a. attitude. Simultaneously with the untartly mobilized for the Father- land as unselfishly and as herotcal ly as the men are playing their| part | “The men fight; the women min | reatment or peared in the Preas cx of bisurated id; and tts 518 Pike 8t.—Phone Main 5661 We are offering, for one yuld aupply b A Logical Dyspepsia THRORTANC J ACIDITY ‘TaTion During the st two or three years reports have frequently ap cerning the United States forwarded threat, and offer to compromise, has apparently established this submis. evidence restrictions placed by her on ship- from the owners of the American ments of food stuffs and conditional steamship Wilhelmina, now held tn Falmouth for a prize court U.S. ASKS RELEASE OF SEIZED CARGO | United States by Ambassador Count [LITIGATION OVER TIDELANDS ENDED SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 16.—Lit- igation that began six years azo lover the ownership of 12 acres of | Seattle tidelands on the West | waterway, valued at $100,000, is | thought today to be finally ended |by a decision of the U. 8, circuit court of appeals. Title recovered by the Insolvent Merchants’ Nation- al Bank from the Seattle Water Front & Realty Co. is affirmed Quit Sneezing!) A little Kondon's Catarrhal Jelly placed in This is designed to show that the) food carried by the Wilhelmina was intendad solely for German civilians) and not for the German forces in the field. The state department also re- quested England to release the Wil-/ helmina’s cargo unless it has evi- dence in the matter hitherto unde veloped the nostrils will bring reliet. ° Your druegist In the note submitted to the) Srssctuect Money Deck itit tails. A250 Von Berstorff yesterday, Germany offered to abandon her plan of de stroying the merchantmen of her| KONDON’S Original and Genuine > CATARRHAL JELLY Dea’ delay, Use it at t once. Its cool Bealing effects are wonderial, erman civilians. sore pose, nose bleed, ete. week only, from February § 4 supply bi-| to 13, six good patterns of B eniy trom to two poontuls new, bright, clean stuff, all Bor which, taken In a “ittle water) WASHINGTON, Feb. 1915 patterns, suitable for sit after meals, ting room, bedroom, dining ff) 4! , fermentation ane om mona room or kitchen, sidewall, —|® ero ome ceiling and border to match ng series ¢ firm of manu gists has now suc fog a 5 grain tat all the valuable of the ordinary b fn a very conventent tablet of bisurated magnesia now be obtained of druggints ever: Enough for any room in your home, no matter what size, including a brand new Japan handled 12-inch trimming shears Ten good patterns to select from, all bright, new, 1915 stock; can be used for any kind of room—a bargain not offered before. Sidewall, cell- ing and border to match ENOUGH FOR ANY ROOM IN YOUR HOME, Including a brand new, Japan-handled 12-Inch Trimming $1. 75 Shears Muhl Paint Co. New Location—-618 Pike St. them inatead ready prescribing Advertisement |the powder form. SAVE MONEY ON MEATS Frye & Co. Markets Wednesday Special. Choice Steer 12c Pot | Roast. [keund Steak,...18¢ Choice Shoulder 1 2c 15¢ Tle Pork Roast. .... Choice Mutton Chops ....... 18¢ Wild 10¢ Choice Spare Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp. Ribs Choice Loin It signifies purity and quality. Shops Open Until 6:20 9. M Cc CE if Pork Roast... . Anchor Brand can where and many physicians are al almost instantly etopal hithe house, at ste a tended far beyond midnight, this morning agreed to support the compromise government ship pur) chase bill as a party measure. The vote followed a stirring ap- for party wl |peal by Speaker Cl solidarity. ou have wandered for in the wilderne y of they could not support the caucus the do this if they wish. jam the compromise bill the house quickly and se) the senate, the president with legislat TINY SCHOONER [After the storm Feb. 5, steamer Delht was aband the salvage tug Salvor, it posed that she foundere Salvor was |$125,000 wreck and run fo! The Delhi managed to ‘The Taku Il, a fishing |mud banks off Sumner where it anchored her. the small boat will come | soodly amount for salvage. List your Real Estate Want Ads. 16.- p*| vote of 154 to 29, the democrats in| The South in a caucus which ex-| pany received from the British gov: sald he, you will continue to wander there | unless you follow the leadership of the party.” Seventeen their intention of bolting, Under the rules adopted by p men are permitted to KETCHIKAN, Alaska, Feb. when the By a early 16 years “and democrats announced | saying bill the | It 1s the plan of the nfajority to through nd it to The program {s to pass the mens ure before adjournment tonight. It lis expected the vote will come jabout § p. m, Republican members today de ‘nounced the alleged interference of ton, | SAVES STEAMER 16. joned by was ad obliged to leave the ir safety float off. schooner, sighted her, and towed her to the island, Owners of in for a in Star | |shall be divided, and are organizing | ave been sold. Write us pie. 35,000 drug; remedy, Avoid dangerot F generous free sell this splendid oat tae me VOTE TONIGHT PALO ALTO, Cal, Feb. 16 Leland Stanford university caasias| accepted the resignation of Presi dent John C. Branner, effective | July 21. GET HEALTHY ORDER SOUTH BEND., Ind, Feb, 16.—/ Bend Motor Car com-| and 6—OTHER BIG ACTS—5 10 Reserved Seats 25 20 One week in advance. Another Sensational Story | of “The Exploits of “THE POISONED ROOM” PANTAGES “MUM'S THE WORD” Comedy, Music and Girls MR, AND MRS, ROBYNS Other Features 100 and 200 ernment a second order for $16, 000,000 worth of automobiles for the British army WANT COUNTY DIVIDED PALOUSBE, Wash., Feb. 16.—Res- {dents of north and ‘south Whitman | county are determined the county | to have the legislature act on sueh | @ plan. SEATTLE’S RELIABLE CREDIT HOUSE A Clever Style Rg FOR SPRING 1332-34 Second Ave. 211 Union St. Special at $25.00 Made in crepe poplin in all the latest shades, such as putty, sand, hagueyprim. rose, green; also shown in navy and black The jacket Is 5 back and front, exten well over the ‘hips to @ a point. The fullness ts taken in with @ belt just above the waist line, “Long silk revers and a fancy lace col- lar finish off the jacket to @ nicety, The ‘skirt is threo-gored “flare with Comprehensive Displays of the Newest, Most Effective Modes in SPRING ‘HATS “TODAY'S STYLES TODAY".