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Sold Only at Eilers fas The Great Mastrola y 1$ A WELL CONSTRUCTED, WELL FINISHED Talking Machine of the Modern Horniess Type. | plays them well, how well you can easily judge by coming up and asking us to try your favorite rec 7 STAR—FRIDAY, AUGUST d y Time to Get in on y This Offer! / t plays all the Records and cords. The special price and terms to STAR readers have disposed of more than half of the two hundred machines which we promised to sell in this way. As Easy as Clipping Decide now, if you want to participate. the Coupon Are the price and terms offered by NAME Eilers STAR readers. ADDRESS $3.60 delivers THE MASTROLA and complete out- fit—itneluding Six Selections, the Record Cleaner, an assortment of Needles—the price complete is $14.60 $3.60 cash, then 50c a week (Eliers Talking Machine Company, Third and University, Seattle) already two bu very complet lections, andar $14.60 coupon We guarantee the Mastrola as fully as we do the most expensive machines in our store, and in adtlition we will change it any time before the end of the year for a larger machine and al- low you the full purchase price. WHEAT MARKET “continue FEELS EFFECT |TROMPACE* | OF WAR REPORT Fawepy nore bar | FAILED; NOTE DATE! CHICAGO, Ang. 13.—September | back. wheat lost a full cent at the open-| ng of the board of trade today and | dropped an additional 7-8 during the first five minutes’ trading. | December wheat lost 2% cents) jat the opening, but regained 1-4 | during the next 15 minutes It is estimated orders for 2,000, Then he ran away Monday, parting quietly and at 3 a, m. He| helped a newsboy and earned 4) cents. He found a good lead pencil} and traded it for a sandwich He went to the laid down his four de coppers, and their homes and th much the Machine ia only $12 King St. depot, | Mmited of A great many have had the Mastrola sent to a number to ot last remain: ndred machines can't The price of », and the outfit, luding , an assortment o ‘ecord ch See easy onger. ° six se needles te CHHOPPER SEPKELL Se On, s D CONVENTION OF W.C.T.U, HERE Seattle is getting a lot of bully publicity right now as a forerunner to the coming In October of the na tional convention of the Women's Christian Temperance union nal, national publication of th: In several issues of the Union Six-) you eat at the Cafeteria you the satisfaction of g that you are ting absolutely the that the market af- The prices are no than you would elsewhere. Open 6:30 A. Mf. | [Continuous Service to | 7:30 P. M. Hient service. Large 4 zanine dining room ‘Jand triple service count- pers. [Fine reading and rest foom for the convenience ‘ of our patrons. <° ” | ae ye 1421-23 4th Ave. ining Joshua Green Bidg. 000 bushels of wheat were canceled | sald yesterday }you please, sir.) Buying by the European allies’| A policeman took him back to | interests fs said to have come to a/the home. halt. Various theortes for the cause | bd jot naa in .buying were ad-| Wednesday he tried yet again vanced, |No d ticket would he buy James A. Patten declared he did iy ie ‘started to walk, and got as |*ccompanied them |not believe it was due to belief! tar as Georgetown. He would fool|, Between 700 and £00 delegates lthat an early peace might be ‘em this time. jare expected, besides temperance | reached, but rather to the poor | And wouldn't Maggle and the by = bringing the total at least | bility that the allies believed the | © OF Man be giad |, “Lov Mow pilpanlapirond inti baal gs i gamle Blad |" There will be big issues before the lor that thelr funds for buying sup-| They caught him and took him|CoDvention, which will be in session | plies were running low | back at the Plymouth church from Oc | The forcing of the Dardanelles tober 9 to 14. The campaign for would place Russia's vast wheat | next year in the states remaining crop at the disposal of the allies. | 1 ad wet will be mapped out and plans up —-—— jthe 12th, Carol McCool gave the) aisg will be discussed for lining up | jealendar never a thought. Three) congress again on the proposed T |times and out! He'd not try again, | l ‘Two You HS ESCA | ba. constitutional amendment providing | RI R R So he gave his back and his hands | onan eohibition j to the chores, but his thoughts | pi eG ee MONROE, Aug. 13.—Charles Me- jwere in Walla Walla careal ccamtas Lelian and Lynn Stitt, two youths | ‘Twas while they were scrubbing floors. The tempter spoke, he be-| lxentenced to the reformatory for) latealing an auto and later partict | ing a mischievous shrimp in over. iSHIP BIG WIRELESS alla twice too large. OUTFIT AS “CIRCUS” pating in the burglary of a clothing store at Snohomish, made their es . “Now's the time, you harp!" says the tempter Now's the time to! make your getaway! Beat It! cape from the reformatory here AMSTERDAM, Aug. 13.—Ap Officers are confident that they will paratus for a big Wireless station be captured today They were at Constantino) was shipped from You've tried three times and fall-| ed. They'll not be suspecting you) now.” dressed in overalls and black coats.) aro) yeCool faded away ike a|Germany to Turkey thru*Rumania | 5 alked and walked|#% ® “circus,” thus not violating pene se. - Wales Rumania’s neutrality He figured out a plan. jtered a house. A kind-faced wom- | | WITHOUT CIGARETS an answered his knock at the door oi | \"".t've been thinkin’,” sald Carol P i — McCool, “that mebby you'd be hav-} | LONDON, Aug. 12.-A big Lon-lin gome wurrek I could do, I'm don newspaper, carrying on a "Cl®)pandy, I cud cut the grass, an’|Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly arets for soldiers” campaign, 4N-| mind the fince—I see some pickets| Spots, How to Remove Easily nounced that without cimarets the) gone, Ye have errants ye want| Here's a cha Misa Freckle British Tommieg could not beat the} pun,” |face, to try a remedy for freckles Germans. | The woman laughed with the guarantee of a reliable Tom,” she called. “Come| dealer that it will not cost you a ALTOONA, Pa., Aug. 13.— | ing instructive articles on Seattle, |by Mrs. Cornelia Templeton Hatch ler, former editor of the publication, |now residing here ing Seattle at work and play have ore Thursday passed. Came Friday, numbers | | He en “Oh, cd look at the big man that's ask-| penny unless ft removes the ling for work.” \f ckles; while if it does give you A tall, broad-shouldered man | a clear complexion, the expense is in his shirt-sleeves came to the | trifling During a fog a speeding Penn- door. Recognition was instant | Simply get an Mince of othine syivania R. R. n ran down and mutual, Jdouble strength—from any drug and killed seven track laborers “Well, welll!” said the man |gist and a few applications should here today. to Carol McCool, “'tis kind of |show you how easy it is to rid - —— you to look me up and save me | yourself of the homely freckles and the trouble of chasing you. If |get a beautiful complexion. Rarely you'll wait until | get me hat |is more than one ounce needed for and coat, we'll go back to the the worst case. home together.” Be sure to ask the dri THE BIG MAN WAS THE |the double-strength othin POLICEMAN WHO HAD AR. |is the preseription sold under guar RESTED CAROL M'COOL AT |antee of money back if it falls to THE KING ST, DEPOT. remove freckles, BESSIE BARRISCALE tn THE MATING A College Play of Un 5c—CLASS Merit. shD AND VIKE “A ticket to Walla Walla, if| White Ribonners, have been appear-| Pictures show | 13, 1915, PAGE BULGARIA SETS HER WAR PRICE ° EVENTS IN THE WAR ONE YEAR AGO TODAY August 13, 1914 Armies of France and Eng land battle with Germans along a line Holland to Switzerland Great Britain Austria ne Bulgaria not to join ‘s enemies. Rumania watches Bulgaria German staff admits heavy low on Russian frontier England sends out cruisers to protect trade routes. France dispatches warships to search Atlantic for German commerce destroyers King Victor Emmanuel catia home foreign envoys for con sultation President Wilson federal investigation price increase at war with orders a Into food e e BY HENRY Woop (Copyright, 1015, by the United Press Copyright in Great Britain) SOFIA, Aug. 9, via Berlin, Aug. 10.—Bulgaria would send her armies against Constant! nople within 24 hours if Serbia would cede Serbian Macedonia to her. V. Radoslavoff, prime minis ter of Bulgaria, made this frank statement to me today In an exclusive interview granted the United Press, the Bulgarian premier for the first time revealed to the world ex actly what Bulgaria demanded in the present negotiations, what it asked from the Austro- Germans for remaining neutral and what it asked from the al lies for driving the Turks from Europe, an operation which ad- mittedly would prove the turn ing point In the war for the al Hes. Of equa) {mportance was his re ply to t port in cireulation t Bulgaria, having won Constanti ple, would demand It as her prize. "That fear is groundless,” Premier Radoslavott with emphasis “The international, commercial and political respo: itien attached to oeraphical are must always rin but for oné end extend our frontiers until they embrace the peoples of our blood, but that end must be ranteed to us beyond a doubt If we were asked to fight alone, we are ready Bulgaria Holds Key “If we were asked to fight with Serbia and Rumania in a new Balkan alliance on the side of the allies, our willingness remains But to the allies » “Give back wil ‘ou best is the storm ce test diplomatic awirl said, Ce too great for a nation t Temain amall, like B “Wo will fight That in owr gua Greece nin and we we car ve Radoslavoft of the « world th He to the world war, great and the {him INTERVIEW CAUSES LONDON SENSATION dian nt in the auKe olds ats of « nvolved swarm here, essure is centering on the key very Aug. 13.—With the foreign office of the allied powers as well as ot Austria and |Germany bringing every pressure [to bear to enlist Bulgaria on their | side, the interview of Henry Wood, | United Press staff correspondent, with Premier Radoslaoff, was | printed in London today and caused a sensation in diplomatic circles } 3 spapers gave the interwiew jthe greatest display and comment-| ed upon it editorially at length | With the demands of the Sofia government #0 clearly stated by the premier, they urged that the allies make every effort to secure | Bulgaria's participation. | those |. LONDON FEDERATED CLUBS OF | Y.W.G.A. TO PICNIC The Federated Clubs of the Y |W. C. A. will have a moonlight ex cursion on the sound and a beach |picnic at the Y, W. C. A. camp on Bainbridge island next Friday, |Friends are invited to Join with thé members in this annual excursion | Tickets may be secured from mem. bers, or at check stand at associa |tion building. ‘Don’t Be a Dradge All Your Life | Don’t always for others. | Work for somebody else first, and jget the training you need, but plan! |to be your own master some time. | |To do that you will need money. | Get it by saving It. Put away some each week, and let it accum julate, Let the Interest compound | |twlee a year. | work Interest Mf Per Cent UNION SAVINGS & TRUST Co. | | OF SEATTLE | Capital and Surplus $815,000 | JAMES D. HOGE, President | |N. B, SOLNER, | Vice President and Trust Officer HOGE BUILDING | tn the Heart of the Financial | District TABLISHED 1876 ac [ougall Cfouthwick and Pike Se Store Open 9 A. M. 0 6 P. M. Second Ave New Fall Millinery | At $10.00 for Saturday EW Hats for Fall ar riving daily—fashion pre- us N licts any hat that is becoming as the hat to-wear. : So deftly copied and adapted, ind indeed, often improved, from their exclusive originals, that the cre- themselves would be proud to acknowledge them as their own. Picturesque Sailors, Tricornes and Turlvans that fit closely to the brow. Trimmings are ligt in quan- tity, but sufficiently original to have the word smart applied. army blue, dreg ator Felts and satins of of wine, “75” (the new ¢ green and black. An unusually ray), Italian attractive assortment inexpensively priced for Saturds $10. Fall Stocks of Boys’ Clothing Are Complete and Ample to Supply All Needs and school opens September 8 Let tomorrow be inspection day—bring the boys in and look around. Styles for slen- der, medium or stout boy. “Our Booster Suits” Are Always $5.00 At this’ price alone we have 10 different models in about fifty new Fall patterns. Every Suit has two pairs of trousers —all-wool and mixtures, $5.00. And All-wool Suits in many styles and patterns at $6.50 and $7.50. —Third Fleer. NEW BAGS IN A SALE $1 95 $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 and $4.00 Values HIS sale represents the entire Fall sample line of an impor- tant manufacturer, the name being withheld by request We wish to lay special stress on the fact that this sale offers only Fall styles, new leathers, new shapes, new trimmings, all at an unbelievable price Leathers are mat seal, polished pin seal, Angora kid, grin seal, Canada calf and Morocco. Frames are silver, gilt, gunmetal and_ self-covered leather. They are silk lined—some have jewel fasteners. A Second Avenue Window will give you an idea of the values in this sale tomorrow. Bags that should sell at $2.50, $3.00, $3.50, $4.00, and a good many at $5.00, in a great sale for Saturday, $1.95. 9 —First rior. 50c Lavoris Mouth Wash 29c Pinaud’s Lilac Vegetal {tol Tooth Paste, Quick and & for 2he¢. Fink's Ise. Herpicide Hair Riveris Powder, Newbro's Tonic, 20¢. $1.00 Pinaud’s Eau de Quinine Hair Tonie, 65¢, 10¢ Mallinckrodt'’s absolutely pure, 7é. $1.00 Listerine, the best anti septic, 59e, 10c Armour’s Venetian Bath Tablets, all odors, 4 for 25¢. Colgate's Ribbon Dental Cream, the large size, 206. 60c Daggett & Ramsdell's Per- fect Cold Cream, 31¢, 12% Carmel Castile Soap, the purest, O¢, $1.00 Hair Brust in rubber pad. 696. Ibe an Tooth Brushes, transparent handles, 10¢, $1.50 Gouraud'’s Oriental Cream lbe Powder, 11¢, 50c Dioxogen, disinfectant and gormicide, $B¢, —First Floor. Peroxide, . bristles set Violet Talcum leather goods Final Clearance .of arms to stated ' Tub Frocks for $4.95 That Should Be $7.50 to $9.75 SCORE or more different styles that re- flect the most original and charming ideas, and indeed, the price is exceptional. The majority of these Dresses are of voile, in wide stripes and dotted floral effects,.and are touched with dainty little trimming of buds, laces or ribbon. Special, $4.95. * Tub Frocks for $9.75 That Were $11.75 to $15.00 This lot represents the remainder of our Summer styles, including ratines, linens and dresses of imported yoile. Two-piece Dresses, others with soft girdle effects; skirts that are full and fluffy. Spe- cial, $9.75. DEFEND SALE OF —Second Floor jand sifch | they transport Denial Aust to England's control would be unneutral NOTE TO AUSTRIA 3 WASHINGTON, Aug. A re. Austria's the shipment of munitions to the allies was cabled to,Ambs sador Penfield Mm Vienna by the state department last ‘night, it was announced today The American right of this country any bellig communication to country Austria maintained the hipment of munitions to the al Hes, while the central powers could not obtain war supplies from the same source, was not in keep ing with the United States declara tion of neutrality In reply the administration iterated its position as previously that under the existing! to protest | jured at San an attempt to a while driving an auto. ply against upholds the export note to Ta rent feges tn the t In “the this “: " munitions esire and that the rules can anged during the progress t y | not be jof the r : to the allies because Germany and| of munitions A cannot secure them,’ owing the Dr. 8. Hegelsen, 60, woman phy-| sician, killed and two passengers in Luis Obispo, Cal, in rid hitting a boy | Boys’ and Girls’ Summer Hats $3.00 a $1.00 This includes the entire stock of straw, silk, and hand-made Hats. —Third Floor, 35c to 45c Silk Ribbons 23c Yard 5, 5! 6 and 6! inches wide. A new shipment of 1,600 yards of wanted Ribbons will be sold at a special price for Saturday. Fancy stripes, Dresden and plain colors with silk stripes. Widths from 5 to 6% inches, Very special Ribbon values, 28¢ yard —First Floor, |terms of international law all bel-| | John Mahan, head of the Mahan |ligerents are entitled to purchase | Advertising | and his two daughters, are here en “Lots of is coming into this country he declared, stimulat- will be agency, of as route to the expositions, money because of the war," Var orders have already Jed business and prosperit }lasting and ever-growing BULL BROS. Jusi Printers sea, 4013 THIRD *ecause I determine your needs before attempting to effect s| aduate of ited Sta ave had 90 years expe ally licensed phynte —9 yours in Si 1 EXAMINE FREE f the vital organs, Nerves, Liver, Vartcose Veina, Blood and Skin Diso Kidney and Bladder, Varioocele, 6" oF "914" for Blood Disorders. 0 me for reliable Wasserman Blood Test. DR. DONAWA $-4 Liberty Building Union and 7 Opposite Postotfice Office Hours, 9 am, to 8 p.m. Bundays, 10 9, m, to 1% Sto: Chicago, «sAIN 1043