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wood charge. We cordially invit % % Sho ares ’ a Car ‘ Bont = i not epitt Dreak; regular price satiafied customer by «tying long, satisfactory we wise te Oriental Bor tro: No oak Dining Chair tn finish; leather slip seat . $3.15 ine r price 3 apectal end extension Cur- ; Ie values for .... New Showing of loory ead White Enamel Farniture SJ agent, sent for lan named 0. when the others you, Charley?” the doctor. & sir, Sometimes, when ow are shaking, | sit At other times | shake alone. And sometimes we to me that the “Shakers” ly all the fish-eating In- i are “Shakers,” to the terror and grief of Miss Clark, the Presbyterian misslonary— @ influenced by hypnotism. Sut Chariey stuck to it that thook or sat still, as the moved, and that what the might be doing did not lest in the least. lor was puzzie He ‘falled it “self-hypnosis,” and let W go at that. ‘ eee & was four years ago that the Movement came to the Peninsula. It came from wher It is not re to the Shaker religion back in inja and Ohio. It has no Ro high priest. two or more famiiles of Indians dwell—in the where they still live by IT’S GOOD IT COMES FROM $ ia i , t , , t J 7 . ar BS ma ORES & Bat +. 8 Sena on Full Cream Ic for U. 8. Purple Stamp purity and quality Open Until 6:20 9. M. Carpet, $1.60 grade for. Our Headquarters " SCARLET COCKPIT OF EUR. HOUSE.GRUNBAUM FURNITURE CO,, INC USE YOUR CREDIT—WE CHARGE NO INTEREST No one seeking credit need leave this store disappointed. No red tape. No extra € you to use your credit. * The best Range brains _and_experlence have ever produced.” “QUICK MEAL” STEEL RANGES Specials. — for ce c raarite 27c a talr Carpet, 36c 40c 48c 65c 90c $1.00 $1.25 charge for laying 6r [pag Wool Ve pet, $1.25 « Best Velvet tate «tor alr > extra t grade nd fin Axminst the kt that makes oxi patterns; vo values tor... $21.75 new fall showing of ima is now complete; priced m We per yard up. for Linoleums. for laying THEY ARE BETTER BECAUSE: They are just heavy enough to be frood, durable and lasting. The strengthened parts are those where the m st woar is. ‘The walls are Asbestos lined. They are made of steel, conseque ey are strong and cannot poet ig Rig only Range made where the Bs Flue, Back Wall and a Jnside lues are Porcelain Enameled, Absolutely Rust-Proof, Terms 81.00 down and 81.00 per week. Your old stove taken os part payment extra tly Genut Wear } Golden finished © Dresser, Sa seean Wendhouse-Grinbaum | ii2: A ‘ 3 Eurnifure @-ise | on fetrom | 4167°424 Dike Street: jn Und urniture Shaker” Religion Hits Be Afth of a sarin of storics Fred L. Boalt of The Star staff te Cape Fiatiery, Neh Hay and | parts of the Olympic ‘There will be other articies hunting and trapping in the clear.) “shake” with fanatic zeal ings in the foothills, where they] ralse stunted, half-wild ponies; on} the Pacific Coast; on the reserva- tions at Ozette, Hoh, Quileute, inalde. hstrung and emotional | represented by the agent, they have 1—“I Shall Long to Hear From You Sea.” da’s patriotic postcards. ‘WOUNDED VETERAN, 12 YEARS OLD, EXHORTS | CANADIANS TO ENLIST ing meeting Before this time the English-born of the clty (and it had a large num- ber) had been enlisting so rapidly that there was no need of resorting to artificial stimulation of any sort But Kitchener's new call for BY HARRY PAYNE BURTON TORONTO, Can. Aug. 2-— Toronto is nothing more nor less, ind than the London of the new world—American- ized, to be sure—but still smell- of the overwhelmingly r st o |“more and more and more troops @ to Canada to see it |has changed all this, and so To lronto announced a great “mass “in war-time’ 1o report the re- actions of thi colony of Great Britain to the terrible conflict being waged In and about the meeting for recruiting” to be held jin her music hall | At 8 o'clock the meeting was to begin. At 7:30 the doors of Massey ‘| Memortal music hall were opened The place seats 5,000 persona, and at 7:45, the police declared, there was not room inside for an- other soul. So 80,000 stormed the great plaza |before the city hall and there a | monster outdoor meeting was held. A trolley car which fs marked, “To Berlin via the 109th Regiment,” goes about the elty all day. Signs on it tell “all who want to join to climb on,” and ft ts seldom it returns to recruiting headquar- | ters without strap-hangers. Last night, when it stopped oppo- site the music hall, where the great meeting was going on, a small boy climbed up on the roof and started OPE. : The problem was to find out whether a colony is a FACT OR A FICTION—to learn, first- hand, from the case of Canada, whether a people can be actual- ly HEART-LOYAL to another group of people from whom they are geographically remote and joined merely by ties of government and sentiment. 35,000 at Great Meeting Thirtyfive thousand people of Toronto, representative city of Can ada, surged thru the downtown strects of this place the other night and answered the question. | They backed up their expressed devotion with the offers of their lives! | It was Toronto's first real recruit’ to address the crowd. Under governmental displeasure, ax} *| Years ago Catholic priests went 3—"With Love to All at Home.” STAR—MONDAY, AUGUST 9, 1915 FRENCH WAIT GERMAN RUSH BY WILLIAM PHILIP SIMMS Copyright, 1915, by Press; Copyright in Great Britain.) ITH THE FRENCH ARMY AT THE FRONT, Aug. 6 (Via Paris, Aug. 7.)—If the Germans make good their threat and at tempt to smash thru the tines of the alliés to the channel or upon Paris, the greatest slaugh ter ever witnessed by man will occur, The kalser will meet his Waterloo, This te the opinion most em- phatically expressed by every officer of the French army, from generals down, with whom | talked on a tour of the battle front on the anniversary of the firet year of war They declare they only fear the Germans will not try, Knowing such jan attempt would play into the hands of the allies, For the Ger } mans, they say, it would be the be | ginning of the end | +guch a drive would be pre doomed to failure,” one officer said | “Then weakened by frightful losses, | the kaiser’s legions would be at the |merey of the allies, who, with time |working to their advantage, have from the first conserved = their troops to this end and largely the thanks is due to the genius of Gen Joffre.” On trip over the battlefront 1 was shown sights which few, if civilians have heretofore seen if they did see them and were bt, they paid penalty of standing blindfolded before a firing squad, ITALIAN RESIDENT IS BURIED SUNDAY One of the largest and most not funerals in ttle’s Ital ny took place Sunday at the o of Sundacio, who Friday after an filness of sev eral years The funeral services were held t the residence of Mr. and Mra Mike Napple, Rey. Father Carmel! of Mt Catholic church offic 4. The dead man came to this country when a youth, and formerly was engaged in business here. He ts any or the Virgin survived by six sisters and other relatives, all of this city, The sis- ters are Mrs. Frankie Napple, t Misses Mary and Annie Sur dacio, Mra. Ada N Mrs. Rosa Brang and Mra a he A unique feature of t ineral was the presence of two mourners who combined the relational father and son, and brothers-Intaw Their children were equally mixed in kinship These men are Frank and Mike | Napple, who married sisters fter the death of the elder Mrs. Napple. “heathen” rites. Outwardly stoteal, the Indian ts) told it ts “Ignorant superstition” to ve in “totems” and other spir *, good and bad. b ah Bay and Queniult—there they|had to abandon their ancient} thru the mountains, making many WARTIME POSTCARDS GATHERED BY BURTON IN TORONTO, CAN. ee 2—"“Somewhere Across the “1 am only 12 years old,” he said, “but | am a wounded vet- eran of this war. You may see that my right arm is in a sling. 1 got across to England with the first Canadian contingent as a stowaway and, once there, |! insisted on fighting for my country, “For six months | fought In the trenches and then | wae shot in the leg and arm. “The leg Is all right now, but not the arm. But as soon ae it Is, | am going back. “| am Bugler Pe’ at your service, y of you FULL-GROWN fellows are going to meet me In Flan- 1129 Hiawatha ave. | PAGE DEAN AUSTIN Miss Isabella Austin, since 1909, dle@ at the Bwed ington known "PASSES AWAY dean of the United) women at the Untwersity of Wash. hospital Sunday afternoon from }complications resulting from a re |cent operation for appendicitis, The student body of the unt versity was dumbfounded Monday when the news of her death became BERLIN, via The Hague, Aug. 9—Blasting hie way thru the Russian defenses, Gen. Von Galiwitz, with 300,000 Ger- mans, has advanced to within less than ten miles of the War saw-Petrograd railway, one of the last two avenues of escape for the Russians in the Warsaw district. GERMANS CUT RETREAT LINE ESTABLISHED 1876 ac Pjougall ¢ fouthwick Store open from 9a. m.to@p. m. Gally, Seeond Ave. and Pike St Continuing the Sale of Dix-Make Dresses Thousands of alumn! mourned Supported by heavy artillery, [her death with « personal and] which leveled the Russian field Regular $1.25 to $3.95 Values | Grares, telephous meseages and| Works the Teuton infantry hee Sotes of sympathy poured. ta on| Ment, erward with evenin- This is the largest sale of Porch Stine Austin’s 4 i - creasing momentum until one Minn { mother, Mrs. F.| of the last Slav lines of retreat and House Dresses ever held b | Austin is now threatened. M i alias Austin became il just a8] ‘The occupation of Praga, a acDougall-Southwick = or an ley, Cal, to attend the menting of suburb of Warsaw on the east bank other house in Seattle to our o eae or c of the Vistula, by the ° vi ile > , the Associations of Deans of Wom officially announded today. knowledge. svery dress has the / Sg ight jes, of which] 4 terrific battle has now begun Dix-Make label, the guarantee of | at the Bug river, south of Vyskof, \ | The operation which became nec- when ehe died. brother, Charles C. Austin, of Min- neapoli#, who ts en route here to attend the funeral GIRL DIES IN SURF AFTER BEING SAVED Harrison G. Platt, @ local capital- int. Miss Platt was socially popular. Miss Platt was caught tin an un \dertow and was belng carried to sea when E. T. C. Stevens, an at torney of Portland, and his son, went to her res She had brought to shallow water she collapsed, heart when from unconscious, BROTHER AND SISTER DIE | MARSHFIELD, Aug. 9. orRe !Lecocq, 22, and his sister, Helen, 18, were drowned Sunday while the \boy was teaching bis sister to swim FEAR BOY KIDNAPED Fred Dennidemico, 5, is still mise ing Monday from his home, 108 jor #t, and his mother suapects has been kidnaped. The boy dis ared Sunday while playing on front porch, It is reported by neighbors that he was last seen in the company of a man who walked down the street with him. [but they make little headway against the “Shaker” faith. Old-timers in the country see tn Shaker” meetings an incongru ous blending of the ancient Indian rites and the ceremontals of the Catholic church. The cross {s used. ee th She leaves, besides her mother, a apparently | reaction, and became | where Von Gallwitz is endeavoring essary Was successful, but complt-lto force a crossing. The F C Russians cations developed, and she sank 3 ee og S conscious |r? making their stand behind « fortified bridge head on the south ern bank batteries are covering the opera tions of attacking forces and eng! neers who are trying to throw pon | toons across the river on both sides of the Slay position Thirteen miles to the southeast |the German forces which occupied Serock are moving to the south in an attempt to force a second cross i ing of the Bug west of its junction ured voile, linen crash, stripe | PORTLAND, Aug. 9—There was| with the Readsa river, madras, percale, chambray + sadness in many Portland homes| The Germans who crossed the I dad ras, percaie, chambray an today as the result of death in the| Vistula south of Warsaw are stead gingham. cer eeinpere surf at Gearbart Sunday Miss iily pushing on against the Russian waret Platt, 16, daughter of|jeft flank, and the ring about the Polish capital is rapidly closing. The German press today predict ed the capture of thousands of Rus- |sians before the operations are | closed GERMAN LOSS MORE THAN TWO MILLION LONDON, Aug. 9—-German losses in killed, wounded and missing to date total 2,178,638, according to a dispatch from the Berne correspondent of the Post today. 'MITAU RETAKEN BY RUSSIANS, REPORT AD, Aug. 9 ven back the German forces in Courland and recaptured Mitau, according to unofficial re ports here today was taated the war office had no information las to the reports to make public. It lympic Reservations; Indians Shak They hare been! converts among the Indians. Later| At Neah Bay, the largest reserva-| repeat Miss Clark’s sermo the Protestant missionaries came, | tion, Miss Clark, the Presbyterian missionary, holds services every Sunday morning from 11 to 12. The priests and priestesses are always in the congregation, and they give the little missionary flattering at- The “Shakers” meet from noon to 2. Straight from the mission church go the priests and priest- There are priests and priestesses./ esses to the “Shaker” meeting to BRITISH DRIVE a) HELD UP YEAR who has had exceptional « studying the situation concerning which he writes, His mame, for obvious ree- sone, te withheld By a United Pres: Spondent COPENHAGEN, July 22— (By Mail to New York.)—Eng- land will not be able to use Kitchener's army for an of- fe fe dri against the Ger- mans this summer, and prob- ably not In the autumn. If the coming winter is se- vere enough to Interfere with effective military operations, ‘@ may be no major English mpt to drive the Germ back to thelr own frontier til next spring—one y In the meantime, peace may come, and the war may end with- out the full strength of the British empire having a chance to test itself against the Germ Munitions Situation rious The United Press also learns that the British munitions situation is more serious than is generally known, and that peace is nearer than publicly acknowledged British statesmen realize the em- pire's prestige has suffered severe- ly because of the small part Eng- land’s army has been able to play in the continental fighting. This is the principal reason why England will not talk about peace terms. Once Great Britain's offensive power 1s rehabilitated, England will not be averse to making overtures for ending the war, Turk Victory Would Satisfy Recovery of military self respect could be gained by England if Sir Ian Hamilton's army would bring the Gallipoll campaign to a tri- Staff Corre. ders?” ! The speech was the greatest hit, the papers of Toronto say, of any-| | thing that has ever occurred in the leity, Over 100 recruits climbed on 12-year-old Peter's car! Canada’s aviation camp Is on the shore of Lake Ontario, some miles west of Toronto. | It is in charge of Glenn Curtiss, the famous aeronaut and aeroplane builder of the United States. | At Long Branch, Ont,, where the} camp is located, there are now 80 young Canadians in _— trainin, Twelve have already received thelr) commissiones in the royal flying) corps and have started to England, ) each with his Girtiss biplane, It is estimated that within a year Canada can send to Hngland 600 trained aeronauts, all equipped with) Curtiss machines To this end Curtiss has already) put up a large factory in Toronto) and is turning out biplanes there for the government at top notch speed. jan umphant end. The forcing of the Dardanelles would be chiefly a British victory. The Gallipoll! operations, there- fore, are more important than the campaign in France and Belgium insofar as their bearing on peace ts concerned Sir Ian's task 18 becoming no- ticeably Hghter after each assault against the Turkish positions, and quarters not given to baseless op- timism believe the fortifications guarding the Dardanelles narrows may be subdued from the land side by next autumn, possibly before. Must Save Ammunition The necessity for hammering at the Turks {s one reason why the English army in Flanders {s so short of ammunition. Not only has the British war of: fice failed to supply sufficient shell but also it has neglected to furnish adequate number of machine guns, The British army on the conti- nent has been unable to create a diversion favorable to the Russians because Sir John French fears a From the opposite bank German The Rus satisfaction and good wear. $1.25 Dresses are 89c $1.50 Dresses are $1.19 $3.50 and $3.95 Dresses are $1.95 A splendid variety of styles are offered in good staple colors. Materials are striped and fig- A Special Purchase e $2.50 Linen Damask Cloths $1.98 We could only get 97 of these Cloths. They are priced this low because there are no napkins to match. These Cloths were just received and are all fresh and new. A Second Avenue Window will give you a fair idea of the patterns. They are made of a heavy Irish linen Damask. Size 68x68 inches. Come in spot, thistle, ivy, rose, and pansy patterns. These Cloths are very good values at $2.50 and are Tuesday's selling, $1.98. —Third Floor. extra special at the price for MacDougall-Southwick e With Fanatic Zeal Dr. Woods m—with | Miss Clark grieves. | frilie. | Then they shake. They laugh) But he can't forbid “shaking.” and their eyes roll. They utter The “Shakers” are Christian The fact is, probably, that “shal queer cries, sometimes plaintive, ing” provides sometimes glad. Often they sink }to the floor—the meetings are held lin the Indians’ homes—and lie in a state of coma. | Bill Hayte once went into a trance and stayed in it for hours. sermons New Pure Mi Goes Into E Will Be requiring consumed in milk either must be pasteurized or must come from cows which have been submitted to the tuberculin test, will become ef- the ordinance which La id after several weeks of a bitter fight in the city council. The health department wil! enforce the ordinance gradual- ly, 80 dairymen will be submit. to no hardship in making in milk will be issued Tuesday, thé old permits expiring Mon- day night. Besides the above provisions the |new ordinance raises the standard of buttermilk from 4 to 8 per cent of milk solids; and ice cream from 8 to 12 per cent of butter fat. It applies to sweet cream, skimmed milk, fermented milk, ice cream and bulk condensed skimmed milk. If the tuberculin test shows cows are Infected with tuberculosis they {depletion of his ammunition tn a futile drive might later permit the Germans to get thru the British lines to Calais. Practically all the ammunition the English possess must be hus- | banded for defensive use on this ac- | count, England Can't Keep Up Whether England ever can man- ufacture war munitions proportion- ate to the German output Is begin- ning to be doubted. The lack of organizing capacity Englishmen are showing is amaz- ng. Even now, nearly a year after the outbreak of the war, Woolwich arsenal, London's great war muni- tions factory, {s not running at its maximum capacity. Some of the men employed are stock exchange brokers who work in an amateurish way during Satur- day half holidays and on other casual occasions. More than 100 secretaries, many with their wives and families, re- turned Monday from the four teenth annual Northwest Hmployed Officers’ conference of the Y. M. C. A, in session all last week at Seabeck. Several talks on phases of asso: ciation activities were made by Richard ©, Morse, general secre tary of the Y. M. GC, A.'s of the world. ‘ Health Department Announces Enforcement of Law} Y.NLG.A. MEN RETURN’ I lk Ordinance | ffect Tuesday BOBO GIVES UP REVOLUTION WASHINGTON, Aug. 9.— Gen. Bobo has abandoned his revolution and ordered his Hai- tien followers to disarm, Bobo announced himself as a candi- date for president under the reorganization which Admiral Caperton is trying to work out. Gradual. must be placed in quarantine, or| may be killed, the owner to receive | $35 compensation from the state. Everybody working in milk! plants must pass a medical exam- ination, to be made free by the city health department. The regulations of the ordinance apply to all parts of the district from which Seattle derives her’ance man, milk troops. The patrons of our first-class hotels and restaurants are exacting—they demand the best. Women go where the pastry and cakes are noted for their excellence. Men are attracted by hot bread and biscuits—when fresh and moist and light. The pastry cook with a reputation uses K C Baking Powder because he knows that results are certain; every time everything is as good as his best. Then, too, with K C Baking Powder he can mix the various kinds of batter before the rush of the meal begins and bake as needed so that every ordergoes to the table fresh and hot, yet the last he bakes are just as good as the first. The reasons behind these reasons is that K C is really a blend of two baking powde One commences to give off leavening gas as soon as moistened. The other requires both moisture and heat to make it active. Dough or batter will re- main in a partially leavened condition for hours, and when put in the oven, will come up as light as if mixed a moment before. For cookies, pancakes, doughnuts and the like, which cannot all be baked at once, K C is %dis- pensable. For all baking the double raise makes Follow the example of the professional cook and your baking will be equal to his Second Av. and Pike St. makes no secret of his displeasure. “good medicine,” more zestful and more nearly like the spirit-worship of their fathers than can be found in the gentle orthodoxy of Miss Clark's excellent Tom Wilkinson, Centralia insur. enlists with Canadian sare