The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 13, 1915, Page 2

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STAR—TUESDAY, APRIL 13, 1915. PAGE 2, So “Credit Is Your Privilege” Smart Silk Suits For Early Summer Wear OUR choice of an unusually large as- sortment of mitty new Silk Suits, in styles that ire right up to thé min- ute. A late shipment of garments makes || these our showing superb Shown in taffeta, file silk and silk poplin, in shades of sand, | ium, navy blue and black. Special at $25 A number of White ¢ f worombo 4] e material, length 42 inch made ith the yoke and belt effect, especially priced at $25.00. | Seattle's Reliable Credit | House Today's Styles Today 1332-34 Second Ave. 211 Union St. FIRE RAFTS ARE CONFESSES ida SURGLARIES According to Acting Captain of ves Will Kent, T. B. Hel Man, arrested Satur De ahha Doom and Mc n, con to several burglaries Mon ON RUSS FORTS | PETROGRAD, April 13—A new German offensive accom panied by renewed bombard. ment of the fortress of Osso- wetz, strong Infantry attacks, | and use of floating rafts and incendiary bombs, has been launched from walk! southward toward Vistula, according to patches today. The bombardment wetz has been heavy gune. of Oss resumed with Aviators have also circled over the fortress, dropping bombe. 1 Incendiary bombe have been ‘We will fit a gold-filled frame| with spherical lenses and leather, ease, complete, for $2.50. This in eludes a careful and accurate exam Optical Co. : EVESIGHT SPECIALISTS Floor, 306466 Arcade Bidg. | Bring This Ad With You | Human Machin bottom by the Russian guns, it was stated. The Russian general staff has {no fear that the renewed activities ‘of the Germans indicate another at-! tack the way running m Warsaw to Petrograd Officials believe the attack is a | diversion to prevent Russian rein-| forcements from being sent to the Carpathians or to conceal the! weakening of the German force tn| Poland. The resistance of the Austro-G man fe * defending the Carp thians is now practically broken, it jis declared today With the principal heights domi- nating all passes in control of the Russians, the worst of the fighting which has been very desperate and bloody, is over. | The vast Russian forces are on |the verge of sweeping down the southern slopes into Hungary | proper. It is predicted here that within a week the Russian advance guards seen on the Hungarian hatadindea Seen Marooned on Ice? NOME, Alaska, April 13.—18| Vilhbjalmur Stefanason still alive? This is the question raised here following reports received in the mail dispatched from Wainright Alaska, March telling of natives |having seen a white man marooned on an ice floe drifting in a south \westerly direction toward Wrangell island. Wainright is 50 miles north east of ley Cape, on the Arctic coast near latitude 70 The city ordinance relating to storekeepers sweeping dirt from) | thelr shops into the street must by lenforced to the letter. Chief Lang | |has advised patroimen. The street | department complains that the law | which prevents the sweeping of dirt into the street is being fla grantly violated | danger of see, years? | report no signs of seep for the In submitting the report of these we bite Sees peepee for 7e | experts to the council, t past 15 consecutive days \cabiietiaeks, cn tay 10, 1 Water has been flowing Into the the following language new dam over the old timber dam NO BLUNDER MADE IN CITY'S DAM; SEEPAGE FIGURED ON BY EXPERTS FOR THREE YEARS The Star is correct In urging the, And the city properly investigated ity to stick to the allting process|the extent of the probable leakage of wealing the leakage at Cedar|and made | river, as had been at all times} Now, wh ‘ome planned but never yet attempted,” | certain Interests are trying to make said former Mayor Cottertli Mon-/it appear that {t is & surprise; that day arave emgineering blunders had Cotterill is an experienced en {been committed; that no plans had} gineer of high professtonal standing, | been made to meet the aituatior Je an Intimate eatudy of the] Hut even the expert engineers em: | subject while mayor ployed by the city In 1912 agreed) The talk of building an 18foot/ with the board of public works that) wall one mile long, at a coat of|the seepage would be no greater $1,500,000, must be a joke,” be said | than ld be aafely taken care of It was while Mayor Cotterill was] by ordinary methods in office that the council employed| No thought was ever expressed of three engineers at $50 a day each to} building « Wall of $1,600,000 cont. — | nvestigate the conditions at the} “ee | Cedar river dam . | One of the questions asked by th Sealing Process unetl wp untictpated leakage. This was the question Closes Dam Leaks; | Seepage Ceases| Advocates of the natural sealing river dam are jubilant! front,” whieh | In there ee through the north bank with water at an elevation of 1,690 feet, if the lake is raised by| of the Cedar gradual stages, covering a series of| at returns froth the since March 31) There has been no perceptible recession Last November water was turt “The board of examiners state that, in thelr judgment, there may be a loss of from 50,000 to 65,000 acre-feet of water per annum,| ed into the new basin, and in 1 through the north bank. THEY DO| “ay# © ut as though from a NOT STATE, HOWEVER, THAT|#leve. Recently steps for remedy THIS L WILL IN ANY WAY | !n& the seepage have been discus IMPERIL THE DAM OR ANY OF | 6d gestions Including the con iTS APPURTENANCES, OR R | etruction of a concrete wali a mile DER THEM IN ANY WAY L long. Such a wall would cost a EFFICIENT, EXCEPT THAT THE| million or so. |AMOUNT OF WATER AVAILABLE Councilman Erickson and others! very fair idea of what the summer | conven Seatt ‘There was a parade at 11:45 Tuesday, the opening event of the day. The procession passed along |the principal business streets, aft er assembling st First ave. and James The session began Tuesday aft ernoon, following a formal address of welcome by Mayor Gill. The next important convention will be held May 11, when the State Grand lodge, Knights of Pythias, DR tL. B® CLARE, DD. & convenes for one day's seasion. ‘s The fi , Mrs, Lucy Alger Again ions on june 14, the ational Asso Testifies to Regal Den- ciation for the Prevention of Tu- tists’ Painless Methods. fons are going to mean to berculosis, which is to be a twoday affair, Gentlemen Several months! The greatest event of a ago | visited your office through Shriners’ convention, tal my inl recommendation. in July, beginning on the That visit you extracted sixteen continuing until July 17 teeth and this time you extracted five teeth, and I think it wonderful they were all pulled without pain. | I have sent several of my friends to you and will continue to be a| booster for the ‘only Regal Den |L. O. M. W. Holding State Convention Three hundred Ladies of the Mac tists. Yours truly. x “MRS. LUCY ALGER cabees of the World are here this Bothell, W " | week from every part of the state There you are—we have now|** delegates to the quadrennial ate convention of that order. which opened Monday with the alec- tion of Alice L. Robertson of Se. attle as delegate to the supreme convention. pulled a total of twenty-one teeth for Mra. Alger, and she tells you over ber own signature that none of them hurt her at all. Your teeth probably need attention right now. | : Gon can come to us with the as Pil convention * on surance that your ™ will be | fay. niet t, after rep t done in the most modern and sel. | ee and ® numbe: “: entific manner, that all material |P!cked teams. used will be of the best and that/ the price will be absolutely the lowest; and, best of all, that the work will be done without hurting you @ bit. Regal Dental Offices Several hundred attended the 26th annual meeting of the Seattle Presbyterian society Tuesday in Bethany Presbyterian church, on Queen Anne hil). KEYSTONE LIQUOR CO. As soon as stock is disposed « a large stock of the choicest Here are some of the prices: BOTTLED IN BOND Study this diagram and note the petetinal ferves that branch off trom SE een | Mellwood, full qt 80¢ unny Springs, full qt. 80¢ Cedar Brook qt. ..80¢ Sayeed vy nerve pre chenias full qt. 9Oe Cedar Run, qt -65¢ gion along the sp Green River, qt 80¢ true of brain workers, and a turbance in the caliber of the blood | imessete im the brain follows in cheir| “There FINE WINES Swiss Colony ‘Port, ; per gal. 65¢ must be no pr re on rom their origin in the brain | ending in the various or- | arts of the body Italian per bottle 25c that Doctor |f Imported Domestic Port, ‘ Sherry, Angelica, ete la hina. Female worth from’ $1.50 to $5.50 Lamba) th tion ‘rouble Half Price 188 Per Cent, 85c Alcohol, Full Quart ....... KEYSTONE 1123 First Ave., me fell you #0 Towilh not e and Nerve 214-16 Peoples Bank Bidg. nd and Pike, Houre, 9 «. m. to m. Consultation free, ¢ : FON 3, flurry in the closing days of last|/company has given orders to dou-)are being DR. L. R. CLARK, MGR. WASHIN , he ah 13-1 saty. ‘Toe signs of fedustrial pros | ie its plant and will employ 600 1405 Third Avenue The figures on this coun-|perity are particularly strong. Mills! more men. N. W. Corner Third and Union | try’s exports and imports for) that have been idle for months are) MINES SHOW PROSPERITY — | E| March are practically all in. |reopening : | At Calumet, Mich., the Tamarack | \'They are amazing. The de-|¢ Mer riding a = Coe mine has reopened with 500 men partment of commerce reports! have recoived © 10 ory cent ia se ae = Brcgrin d after eight show that the value of exports | crease AN mit eo in the Lake Superior of American goods to foreign| From Butte, Mont., it is reported | copper district are taking on men.| countries was $321,420,500. beset the fargo miners’ pay will) The Flore Iron Mines com bir po increased about 25 cents a day.! py at Florence, W - = lpany at Florence, Wis, has re f. At present we still have This is Coe Riage s M In Hazelton, Pa, a 10 per cent] sumed operations and mines of the Wines and Liquors at hand 000 greater than the fattest/ increase in wages has been given|Reading company also will reopen March on record, which was|to miners 00n. in 1912, when the exports were|NEW FURNACES OPENED Western mines and smelters are R| valued at $205,411,462. | The Illinois Steel company at] working to full capatity. More men BULK GOODS |The exports for last month were |!Y. Ind. has opened six. new ; ei “ on | ¢ hearth furnaces, giving em 6-year-old Sunny — Brook, D}#! MAO ETS greater Chan. tee MOLE | nient to 1,000 more men fi ae IEEE M2 $1 ou }iast year, The total imports for | Ploymen n tan q 9¢; pet Al last month were almost exactly| The Pullman company of Chicago "MAT : ae $2.95 $160,000.00. will need more men to handle a TODAY c Fine California Brandy, full y ¥| Thus we sold abroad 100 per cent ploy alan order f om the Ne . York Tonight, Balance cd Week ; ad! Subway company for 478 ali-steel HOCK AND FULTON at. Fi er ga more than we bought abroad j Sw b 70¢: uy & tl ee Ss | for every dolar we owe the for | Care - um, Gin, Blackberry, Ap-B\ Niecigner for March, he owes us $2 In the factories and steel mills) ‘The Candy Shop ple and Peach Brandy, full, {And at that, the imports w of Chicago Heights nearly 10,000 qt. 70@: per gal $2.45 Y 1) onty $23,000,000 less than for Mi iyohs men pate roturned to work, Eighty | soe x, Rest Sents—B0e ef] jlast y lactories and locomotive works te IMPORTED GOODS U Comparing figures with last Au-|2&ve resumed operations on a nor | gust, the month of commercial stag. |™#! scele. Hennessy 3-Star.. R Fi pation following the outbreak of OHIO COMES TO FRONT naa ee the War, the enormous improve The reopening of the Central Lo Black and White R a work to 4,000 men, Eight hundred | “THE RAJAH'S GARDEN” Aquavit No. 1 E Pro e ong men have been taken on by the cdoven Paslile D — | Calume company and the Chie Florence Modena & Co. ~ America’s gain in exports cago Pneumatic Tool company ha 10¢ and 20c J | | a t 1 y € . r pike on 500 more mer sorclipeimnenininiiatic il Rainier, Orympa, Sarma: 7 | ft Plants of the International Har Lager & Bock Beer |vester company around Chicago [7 ‘ Fi 4 large bottle Cc de in fever of Jhave doubled thelr force Ne Make Motion Pictures | '8162,160,200| 12 Ohio the Empire and Thomas Finest Equipment in the ‘ sheet iron mills at Youngstown Nesthveest LIQUOR co. Stocks are showing a strong,|have reopened and all the sheet healthy, upward trend, Recent]iron mills in the Mahoning valley Jacobs Photo Shops Corner Seneca, trading on the New York exchange|ore running full blast P-t. Builaidh, Seattl has been the greatest since the! In Daton, O., the Maxwell Motor els aan. Mb sr Saturday. Shoes direct from the factory. $3.00 to $4.00 Odds and Ends, Shoes or Oxfords; sizes 6 and 7 only; good styles. Money-raising price $3.00 and $3.50 Gunmetal and Vici Kid, Lace or Button; all the newest shapes. Money-raising price $3.50 and $4.00 Goodyear welts in Blucher or Button, Gunmetal be sold for $6.00. Money-raising od $6.00 and $7.00 Shoes, Craft,” the Big Z ane Hand Dry Shod and the “J. & M.” Shoes, all go for Money-raising price Lot Nos. 1008, 1032, 1011, 1021 —these numbers are the best lines this factory makes—all double sole, large extension, as near water-proof as any leather can be made. Sell regularly for 1422 THIRD AVE. To Raise Money to Meet Pressing Obligations Seattle people are fast learning that when I advertise a bargain it is a real one, judging by the hundreds of satisfied customers who were waited on in my store I have just received a large stock of Boys’, Misses’ and Children’s I ordered these Shoes last Fall for this Spring delivery, and these, too, will go into my Big Money-raising Sale at Sacrifice Prices. These brand new Shoes go on sale tomorrow at 9 a. m., and here’s the prices I’ve put on them to raise cash quickly: MEN’S SHOES $1.45 $2.35 Shoes in Gun- $2.50 and $2.75. Money-raising price $3.95 Z Shoe SEATTLE sizes from 2! to 6. The e Big fact, made. Money- raising price $2.50 Boys’ Shoes— Money-raising price. Big Z Logger and 16-inch French metal Calf or Patent Leather, Lace or Button. Regular price $1.65 $2.50 and $3.00 Misses’ Shoes, These Shoes are strictly sole leather bottoms, solid counters, and in the best leather Shoes $1.95 Boys’ Shoes $1.45 B. ROBINSON Between Postoffice and Pike St. price .. Button in white have persistently twid out for the| “or A - COR 710 GEBBRATION OF COW. | Baye Feteisentty ae cot Sy el or Vici i Kid, leather lined. | Veals, double sole, water-proof; Money - raising THE (AMOUNT OF THE SEEP.| cial particles by con refilling] Money-raising $2 95 retail for $8.50 and $9.00. i of the basin o wator| . . Gt Testh dbs, od. babies task: Fean Oe | price .......4. . 2 Money-rai ng t was well known that there would| Divers were at work Monday, cut-| price be a leakage at the new dam, for| ting the two feed plants cc Sit ER nearly every dam ever built shows| with the power plant, which w & leakage. }erushed recently by an earth slide Children’ sShoes 0. xfords, all Attempt to Kill ‘BAKERS MEFT IN Sizes 81, to ieee. ie Sunday Closin; ; bh loney - raising ‘Alaek | 1144, in Gun- price eae ee GITY; ITS FIRST "eat Lehas, JUNEAU, April 12.—Sunday clos ent Leather, Wee tio rasate yestersay etser Lace or Button. aon 3 a law to repeal it by a BIC CONVENTION $4.50 and $5.00 Hand welts in | All solid leather. Tae. ta'the ssesta, howerer, the the newest shapes; large variety. | Regular price repeal atruck a snag. The eto 88 THe pacitic Northwest Master These Shoes are worth more | $2 and $2.25. eter the bitte introduced yes-| Bakers’ convention, the forerunner money wholesale. Money - raising |terday were measures to abolish lof the ‘many ate ind | national Money- -raising price sale price e 1} punishmer d to provide | convesth le he hi ie laden tatwanen. yeas, Tunseey opened’ s pe 1,000 pairs of Men's Shoes, 15¢ Men’s Sox, black and tan— |neawion at the Beattle hotel English lasts, cloth top, in rubber M. ae | There are several hundred dele bottoms, rubber heels, hand s ioney-raising I/2e | gates in attendance, r Sizes 12 to 2. price .... * The convention ie no small af. welt; all new arrivals. Were to |talr, and from it can be gathered « “Footform” 50c Suspenders— 50c Silk $3.00 Boys’ Shoes— Money-raising price $3.50 and $4.00 Boys’ Shoes— Money-raising Ladies’ Shoes $3.00 Ladies’ Money-raising price ... Money-raising price ... 25¢ Wool Sox— Money-raising price ... 50c Work Shirts— Money-raising price ... $1.00 Dress Shirts— $1.50 Dress Shirte— Money-raising price ... Hundreds of other articles re- duced the same proportion as above prices. $1.95 $2.35 Shoes, duck. 19¢ 19¢ Hose— taken on every day, The United States Steel company will resume work at once on its | $10,000,000 plant at Duluth. | A better class of orders, and more of them, though no big increase in the volume of busi- ness has yet been experienced, Is the general report in the lumber mark A gradual im- provement is looked forward to, especially in the Northwest. So declares U. K. Swift, manager of the W. |. McKee Lumber Co., who is regarded as one of the best-posted men in the ium- i ber busin TONIGHT ALL) WEEK beat seats. Nights and Mat., 50c to § "s BMawest and Beat ZIEGFELD FOLLIES Staged by Leon Errol | 00—-ZIEGFELD BRAUTIES—100 (METROPOLITA Wes. Mat Wor NEXT SUNDAY All Week | Conaws: ere Cyril Seott _LOEW’S EMPRESS The Famoun ¢ JOE WELCH +k

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