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| || IMPORTANT : SALE! BARGAINS HE BIG CLOTHING SNAPS of the Year—an opportunity to stretch your dollars to the very limit of their purchasing power! — and Stratford oe In Young Men’s English $ : Models—sizes 34, 35, 36, % 37, 38 and 39—about 150 Suits, all told — VALUES UP TO $35—All in perfect condition. ot: ae ANOTHER LOT, about 250 Men’s and Young Values up to $30—Re- *] 3. AO duced for quick clearance Men’s Suits, in all sizes— $ All Full Dress Suits aes sold up to $50, cut to : $24.50 All 1/2! 3 oe tie Price Fancy Vests .... Caps All Hosiery (except Phoenix)... .. | All $1.50 and $2.00 Shirts. . .$1.15 seeeeeees++-ONE-FOURTH OFF | All Shirts up to $1.25, cut to. . . .85¢ (Contract esi. Excepted) Our entire stock of Hats and Furnishings is new, the department having been opened but a few i}. weeks prior to the recent fire. | EVERYTHING ADVERTISED IS GUAR. q ANTEED IN PERFECT CONDITION. | TONKIN’S 3 : ' “THE STYLE SHOP” HOTEL a | him now. “Alt ik Is Justice at the hands of these men who bene- fited by the company’s money thru my husband, those men who forced my husband to pay his gambling debts by thri . Ing his position? My objection in making this statement is not to solicit pub- lic sympathy. One of the news- LAST VISTULA FORTRESS IS IN GERMAN HANDS, CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 TO CRY OF MOTHER papers sta’ that | was broken-hearted. | am not. RERLIN, A 20.—N % Ierself more clearly understood to “On the other hand, | was ig owen love Geor-| jone of |this report today STAR—FRIDAY, 1915. PAGE 5 118 AMERICAN LIVES SNUFFED OUT BY GERMANS’ SUBMARINES July 20. t stated that 112 Brit Ish merchantmen and 168 ing Veasels had been sent to bottom Possibly 50 belligerent sels have been sunk since but the strict censorshiy f it impo: estimate About 70 neutral ships have been torpedoed since the Ger man order took effect AUGUST 20, Since the German submarine war began last February, 1,736 118 Americans have been killed as non-combatants, Including veo hen, akes ible to get an accurate the result of the operations of the undersea boate. Between 300 and 400 shir all nationalities and all classes have been gunk The Inst official estimate by the press bureau was made on SINGS “TIPPERARY” TO CHEER UP WOMEN AS SHIP GOES DOWN QUEENSTOWN, Aug. 20 Notts and we were thrown tnto the a single vivor from the Arable) Water. s ieitineat’ thts “pe I thought all was over, 1 do sient pond apheig not know what ed to the rine which sent the White others who were in the boat but ner to the bottom when I came¢ some one in a the sube nkin, feboat threw me a haw Britis) 1 far was float nea and clung t They believe the same until f wa aa By that the Arabic her death blow time | was exhausted. I saw ten But all agreed th t boats pull away from the Arabic of thetr own danger was the One was filled with water sx ing of a white streak in the after clearing the liner and sank marking t trac f the 8 Carroll, a professional sing which struck the t er, said the women aboard the The calm whic able were particular calm and the order maint displayed great self contro! Finch and his ¢ Several we ntily clad passengers of the they were forced to hurry on several! who had t and suffered severely from cold asters and saw Many w st in their berths 1 panic, were ¢ on in thetr t Two Lifeboats Capsize clothes The passengers and mer There we ur the crew w mer r We sald toda ‘ ft f froe boats whi ABs Ar a wa I upon striking ship Jos. G The women Montreal, b #8 owing to Canadian minister of marine, told z and the cold a thrilling story of the Arabic roll ir spirits | sang jing over the lost boat that was) "Tipperary launched from her and throwing) D. Curry, assistant purser. the occupants nto the water and several others corroborated the “Most of the passengers were on story of Captain Finch, who « k or at breakfast when the Ar he stood on the bridge of the Arable Sbie was hit id DeLorrimer. until that structure began to go Possibly we at i heir nder. berths I was on the ige at 9:1 About sawa sub watch the Dunale whiet mari ane! Ww ha torpedoed said we for * was the Finc § y on our starboard | Duns! @ wan a faint sound | side I saw the wake of a torpedo ,of an explosion and we took it for It was not more than 30 yards away granted the Dunaley had been tor pedoed. About 15 minutes later we had our own explosion. The Ar Jabie stopped almost tmmediately The ship rocked and then began I did not see the submarine and had no warning of the attack “The torpedo hit us to starboard Water spouted up with the explo sion and some life boats were lto keel over. Most of the passen- splintered. The ehip began to set gers and crew took to the boats tle rapidly, but absolute order was speedily and without any show of/ maintained. The small boats had panto. been previously swung out, as I “IT was among the last to enter knew there were sub rines In the the boates. It had not) vicinity. If two boats had not cap cleared the aide of the Arabic when | sized there would have been scarce the vessel rolled over, She strucklly any casualtion.” eee ‘San Francisco Woman Is Dead; 31 Others Aboard Arabic Are Lost LONDON, Aug. 20.—American The American vice consul at’ survivors from the Arable are unan | Queenstown has been instructed to imous tn declaring the White Star jket affidavite from all surviving liner was torpedoed without warn | American passengers as to the cir ing when she was sunk by a Ger-jcumstances surrounding the sink |man submarine yesterday off Fast ling of the Arabic nek | Lists received indicated two Consul Frost at Queenstown made | Americans were missing, Mra. Jo- to the American |sephine Bruguiere of San Francisco embassy here. (a and Edumnd Woods. Tho latest figures Indicate 32 per- | Mra. Bruguire ts positively known sons were missing. Of the missing. |to be dea: . & Queenstown dispatch but six were passengers. Other®itg the © are officers and members of the|atternoon Stat stated this crew of the Arabic. The totaliare: A. Helle Nebeker, Logan, number of rescued is placed at 391.| Utah ; James Oulihan, Philadelphia; Thomas Elmore, New York; Rev |F. A. McAllister, Chambersburg Pa.; James T. Rowley, Chicago Mr. and Mrs, Della Covington, New York; John Olsen, San Francisco | Louls Bruguiere, York; Mr and Mrs. Phillip Collier, Buffalo: | Mise Sadie Shrimpton, Syracuse, N. Y.; Claude Roode, Schenectady, N. Y.; John Nolan, John Olschewski Tamley, Trenton, N.J.; | Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burgess; Mr. and Mrs James Calmon, Laopold Moore John Dolan, W. I. Ramadell, Wm | Hughes, J. Kellett; Fred M. Winson Salem, N. C.; John F. Day, Miss L G. M. Day. Trenton, N, J.; Christopher Me R. L. R. CLARK |FORMER SOCIETY LEADER | You Wouldn’t Want a. SAN FRANCISCO, Aug. 20.—Mrs B ick Fix Y Josephine Bruguiere, who is re ri Tod, _ ond our =| ported as among those missing from eeth, Either jthe liner Arabic, 1s a former San The bricklayer knows his business, |ETAncisco society leader, Dr. Pedar Mother. 1 know you are too sin-| never happler in my life, be |Siewsk has fallen. The capture of/ai rignt, and if you wanted a house |S. Brugulere, a gon, lives here, She tite to twist my words as some re- se now this long suspense (the fortress to the west of War built, or a wall, or anything in the | now lives in New York, | et do, Oh, those report-| is over, and my husband is for- (saw was officially announced to- | a | have almost driven me| ever out from under the de | 4,, urn during these past few days| grading influences of this city. pete if aoe her lips twitched with the | “My husband did not lie to Novo Georgiewsk is 20 miles) © west of Warsaw ispicion of a smile. aoe to Make Statement 1 don't want them to think I am of them, or of anybody; so €6 that is concerned, for I have Rothing to be ashamed of; but | gambling } | As the Germans advanced upon |the Polish capital, the Invading | armies around the fortress jand with the fall of Warsaw Novo |Georgiewak was tsolated | The Russians defended the fort |ress, however, leaving a garrison) to oppose the Germans have, exposed thi long ago; but it would have cost him his position, But | would say in conclusion, if the law |S feel that it is my duty, because | justice, if they get my husband, I know, to make,a public} they should also take with him it f | the men who made him a fugi- "IT could only say something | tive. went thelr « only Kir to ha +|. NEW YORK, Aug, 20 Metropol!) w |tan newspapers in the Kast, in edi-| torial expressions on the sinking of ‘ |the Arabic, today took the view that while the situation 1s serious, full information should be awaited be- Y toot! pre ” fore action is taken Betws forever close these gam- “MRS. H. L. DUNAWAY. Novo Georgiewsk is the last of Wie ani dae! gran’ «partes tie pe hetis, or cause men who are the Vistula fortresses to be held vor man Who spe pressed that 4 rms ny per ee ex Wllowing in my husband's footsteps PRESIDENT HAS | the Russians ial A devotee Bile oct to maintain friendly. relations iy back before it ix too late, I The Germans have now made malaete e to the 6 eietnan tits the United bedins ak continu| ee | EVES EXAMINED) sore? ih cote tne reducing occa! "hlat re MTS ch attach up ttm Sar “4 | | Americans Following is Mrs. Dunaway's| | Georgiewak, Ivangorod and Lublin, |f ire 1" a Kraan beams | <iiapremplons -of tha Sew. ork! Ment as she gave it tome) .siiNGTON, Aug. 20.—Presi-| ,It is believed at least 40,000 Rus Menas and’ Card: ant tho Staten alt lent Wilson slipped out of the|slans were captured when Novo hohe aeevatvaisal at tea ei feat don’t want the public to | white House early today and was| Georgiewsk was occupied, expressed in the East. The Tim that | am upholding my | .norted to be making a fast auto snag r riate [Said | ier tat tone nied Goins: |mobile trip to Philadelphia. The 000 FOR | natee tae the very best of materials Mer should be plain, even to war og - | am shielding gue fe | president, {t was said, went away WANTS 9 and up-to-date of painless methods, |mad Germany, that friendly rela Ethers heic. |fo have his eyen examined. FORT STATIONS fic terest syesaticns ‘without tons cannot continue If these gate “\ am in a position to know pale @ patient erable wrongs continue to be per-) oe en and signed | petrated.” worked night and |BUILD ENORMOUS | av anh NEE: MeNew York World: “No. verdict shortage which he RIFLE FACT sidering Friday the recommenda dence is received, The situation is meaaarees to pay to gambiing tions of WASHINGTON, Aug. 20. The | o perintendent o U e | largest factory in the Uniteg States of Utilities Ve rs n: latiow men, you who called ie Supe itendent | 8s me Pftirseives his friends, who |under one root has just been com- tine, eperine Me sent or Bout, : ny dystone, Pennsylvania bs 7 Aigpeaegpeandl yk ng Lien nr na ‘of rifles by the |ings Josenhans, that $20,000 be in- " WPon it to the extent that you failed him by phone when he (Was in his own home with his wie and child, and tempted im until he ieft us, if you are his friends, it is time you your manhood by helping cluded in this year's budget for the installation of comfort stations at) Third and Pine, First and Seneca, | |Remington company. It is 1,200 | feet high, and when the war is {t 1s to be taken over by the Baldwin locomotive words for the|Third and Main, new court house, manufacture of engines, The plant | library, federal building, and Leachi will work 5,000 men, and Madison parks. a committee composed of EST and Pike St ABLI ac | Jougall C fouthwick HED 1876 9 A.M. 06 P.M. love C ore Open Another Sale of Blouses NS IT long ago we 2 to the women of Seattle the biggest $1.00 Waist values they ever. had. Tomorrow will be another day of Waist values equally good—in voiles, organdy and French batiste. Sty that have won the approval ¢ those best qualified to pass judgme Mi the practical kind that smart people nat urally select. There are a great man es, and quantities are down to a few of each num at $1.00 You Can’t Beat Waists Like These Fountain Pens 85c Safety oSelf-Filling T the two styles, with 14-kt. gold pen Tinted Stationery 18 Box Novelty Stati anteed. Y« HESI ur choice of each fitted rres Cx 18¢. Paris sans Stationery A soft-finished Paper that will be appreciated by the particular correspondent ; 85 sheets to the pound B5¢. Envelopes to match, 2 packages, 25¢. —riret ricor. clopes } W Bl sizes School Shoes for That label HE kind he won't wear isfact out in a hurry; scuff- and t ing and kicking won't hurt are I them, neither will the wet days. They are made boy- styles proof, designed especial Every for real hard wear. " Made of tough, pliable calf, Blucher style: that ac- boy. $2.50 and $3.00, cording to size ‘ond Floor Cretonne Neckwear 19c It Was 50c HE remaining pieces of Cretonne of Collars reduced to Neckwear—consisting and Sets—have all been 19¢. There is not a great quantity, as you know Cretonne is still popular Regular 50c pieces for 19¢. Iceland Fox Neckpieces $1.95 $2.50 to $3.95 Values this popu- but A very special price for lar Neckpiece. The fur is very long and pure white. Each Neckpiece is 36 inches long, and special at $1.95. Firat Floor Coats—Re-Priced for They Are Reduced to $9.75 mode Navy blue serge Coats. Coat styles that are always good, but the urday’s price, $9.75. always $5.00. for $1.00 Second Floor. Saturday Originally $15.00 to $21.50 vats from our regular stock, all late summer es that are desirable. hite, blue, gray and tan corduroy Coats. ack and white check Coats. are broken and they must be sold. Sat- —Second Floor. Boys’ School Suits have “Our Booster” on the are guaranteed to give sat- ion—the seams won't rip he buttons stay on. There its of different patterns and of all-wool materials. Suit has two pairs of knickerbockers. Sizes from 6 years up to 18, will fit the big, growing “Our Booster’ Suits are Third Floor. $3.50, $5.00 and $8.50 Children’ Fy Coats $1. 50. Sizes 2 to 8 Years HESE are last season's Coats, but kid- dies’ coat styles have not changed very much. They will be fine for school w In this lot you will find serges, covert cloths, black and white checks in al! desirable colors and good styles, such as the Peter Pan Reefer—Saturday, $1.50. $5.00, $7.50, $10.00 Children’s Coats $2.50 Sizes 2 to 8 Years And Coats that were priced even higher checks, serges and whipcords; Coats with hand-embroidered collars. The variety of styles is large. You will surely buy these at $2.50. hird Floor ytalked about ‘American Newspapers Advise Uncle Sam to Be Deliberat e ‘NET NIGHTIES this country net} doing, not talking. We must wait The designers have created one model of net robe de nuit that is slit from the ankle length hem to the waist where it is caught togeth- er with a soft bow of pink ribbon were lost then that is run through a shirring decide gra que stion of what around the waist. A second pink is to be done he question is of D bow ties the slit skirt together at for the facts.” the knee The walst of the gown is made ‘ST. LOUIS HAS It's a nifti And a wee Q FLOOD; WATER © SIX FEET DEEP uite the nicest thing in nighties Is sweet Nettie in the net. (Written for the United Press) Nettie has a nightie | Me By MARGARET MASON That is nothing more than net. of two wide panels that taper to mere straps over the shoulders forming a low V-shaped neck and no sleeves or _under arm covering, CARL WAS “ROLLED” Carl Hassan, 1108 Stewart street, was “rolled” by three men with, whom he had been drinking in the Belltown district Thursday night? e, natty nightie bit naughty—yet NEW YORK, Aug. 20.— Butter. and relieved of $110 in gold and flies of fashion ought to feel at) bills. ST. LOUIS, Aug. 20.—-Heavy rain,| home in the net. Perhaps that is —_—__— cningntintreniiietedinionniadial tarting last night, and which was) Why they wt . biden it to gar ill falling today, has flooded the|™ents for strictly home wear southwest residence section of St Cartai@ly the new fet nightios ert ansen Louis, In some places, the water/are homey is sald to be six feet deep Time wa Several families were found to|a garmen be marooned in the upper stories of | bated th without being homely when the nighti Jeweler and Silversmith ntioned he privacy was with of |1010 Second Ave, Near Madison ret Se undeniably serious their homes during the morning|the boudotr aR nem Boston Globe: “If we assume! and the polce and firemen, Now they discussed in ant tr work done that the Arable was torpedoed with-| were called upon to rescue them,|the very best families a eee to out warning and that Americans) ‘The tunnel from the Clark st, post) They have to be nly discussed The World Millinery fronstrate our palniess met : fice to the Union station is half|because they are all open work 1316 Second Ave. | Telephone poles of glass molded filled with water You can't make veiled allusions : x : ene! Regal Dental Offices der @ heavy wire net are being he Des Pers and Meremac |to ‘em even though they are made pebbab Br ed dp lp. Dr, L. R. Clark, Mgr. made in Europe. They are rarely| rivers, ordinarily small streams, /of vells and illusion the °8. | Saturday. 1408 THIRD AVE, broken, will neither rot nor rust| which run thru the city, are far out/The net result is th at t e ne ” N. W. Cor. Third and Union. ‘and are impregnable to insects. of their banks, |net nighties are being v much) i |