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HIPPODROME Third and Chery THEATRE Eugene Levy, Mgr. We Otfer tor Your Approval One of the Strongest Programs Heretofore Shown 1—Robt. Athon & Co. In “The Derby Mascot *2—Palma Duo Comedy Acrobatic Act 3—VJulie Raymond Singing and Talking Comedienne 4—Aloha Trio Hawaiian Entertainers 5—Burnham & Yants Novelty Comedians Allies’ Side of War The Submarine Fight Real Battles Fought Before Your Very Eyes Use of Cruel Wire Man Traps French Airmen in Action Every Phase of Military Life on the Western Front HENRY FORD SAYS: “If pictures like these would be shown to the people the wor would be stopped.” JUDGE FRED GRAHAM SAYS: “Reality and Hell”—the film pictures of war that all should see.” Come early and avoid the rush. Positively first run. No raise in prices. 5c Matinees 2:30 Pp. m. to 5 p. m. Evenings 10c KING PETER OF SERBIA FLEEING INTO EXILE | A remarkable photograph, showing the tragedy >of Serbia. The pathetic figure seated on the ox cart @ Peter, King of Serbia, snapped as he fied before the invading Germans into exile in Italy. The ox cart, a royal coach, an ammunition wagon in the \ as: 5 Ae HODGE KEEPS BOOZE > An order was signed Tuesday by| Jndge Gilliam in the superior court| directing Sheriff Hodge to hold all) liquor seized in the recent raids un til the cases have been heard in court, Prosecutor Lundin has file information against John ©. Eden, charging him with unlawful posses sion of liquor. Eden interposed a demurrer the information, Wonderful War Pictures Wait for the Great War Pictures taken right at the front with the Russian troops, at the Class A theatre next Saturday, Sunday Monday and Tuesday Albert Hansen Jeweler and Silversmith ‘010 Second Ave. N Sr rp ee to it Madison 4 | One of the most tragic photograpns of the war shows Gen. Put- v. t nik, the aged commander-in-chief of the Serbian army, being car toe mit, | fled over the Albanian Alps, in a box rigged up like a sedan chair fave cost of < profi,| and carried on the shoulders of his faithful soldiers. Sick and worn bookkeeping bad ac-| with defeat, Gen. Putnik was unable to walk, and, as there were heey? vate dentin neither ho nor wagons available, he was forced to lead the re STALL, 70 FLOOK, PIKE FLACK MKT. treat in the manner shown above. Pasteurized. Lowen STAR—WEDNESDAY TRAINS ARE HELD FAST (WN GREAT ~ DATs The heaviest and most con- tinuous snowstorm experienced in this section of the Pacific Coast for a decade has played havoc with railroad and street car traffic, prostrated tele- Phones and telegraph wires, and created a condition that is considered today presaging floods when warmer * In, FEB. 2 NORTHWEST |liveries 1916. PAGE BLIZZARD HOLDS UP MAIL Edgar Battle nounced this morning that mall di Postmaster an would undoubtedly greatly delayed until the breaka storm Registered mail, letters pers and first, he said, and an flat pa handled effort will be pp all local mail on the dailies will be made to k mov Dynamite has been resorted to tn the Cascade mountains to break up the hard-packed drifts before big rotury snowplowa are sent charg ing Into the mass The Chicago, Milwaukee & St Paul eastbound “Olympian” train jis reported caught in huge drifts of| |snow near Lake Keechelus Snow is 20 Feet Deep Slow progress is being made, but jit fs thought the train will leased today and enabled jceed, unless the severity storm Increases At the west portal of the Mil |kee tunnel, in the Cascades of snow ts reported Within a few minutes after snowplow has made its way thru ain passes, the tracks are vered with flakes, and the * of the rotary again are quired before trains can move Traine Attack Drifts The wind is howling and biow ing the fresh snow tn bilzsard-like Jelouds al) the way from Auburn to {Cle Elum. Only two Northern Pa ciffe trains have crossed the jtains since Monday, the |Coas Limited, eastbound, and the by at Burlington Express | These trains got thru only taching four locomotives and a ro jtary to two cars and making head }iong dashes at the drifts. By thin |method the l0car trains were finally jerked to the summit, after jall-night efforts. | No attempt is being made to op jerate freight trains Great Northern trains are for the most part annulled Rafiroad men belleve |train service to the East jocmptotely tied up by night INVESTIGATING FEDERAL SITE City investigation of the Sauk Suiattle federal power site will be started The utilities committees of the council appropriated $2 to apent on meter readings to test the power of the Sauk and Suiattle rivers. It was intimated that no site would be chosen until after the new councilmen, to be elected in March are seated Outside eng to investigate report. . E. BALLAINE SUES John FE. damage suit W.a WwW. E. laska Central nment owned railroad, Ballaine alleges | brother own 320 acres of land near the Seward townsite and that in the sale of the railroad to the gov lernment the defendants reserved the 320 acres for themselves, In the boom that followed Ballaine al leges that he and his brother lost |large profits that would have ac erued thru the sale of the lote CLERK IS ATTACKED Struck over the | tle and robbe | who had ord: | 409 Broadw be re to pro of the a | that may all | immediately Tuesday wi r ineers sroposed 1 and Ballaine Tuesday for $500,000 c Jemme' of ond, now Alaska Northe trustees the the n that he and his ead with a bot ) by a man d groceries sent to Tuesday, Walter MacDonald, a clerk in the grocery store of H, W er, 526 Broad way, lay In the snow for half an hour before recovering conscious: ness. The vacant |BELGIANS PLAN A WHITLOCK STATUE It is pro a statue of Brand Whitlock, Amertcan min ister to Belgium, in commemor ation of his courage in sticking to his post and alding the stricken Belgians JITNEY LAW MUDDLE EVERETT, Fi The jitvey bus law is one of the mort imper lfect and confusing ever drawn up. This is according to Judge Ralph C, Bell, who handed down a@ written decision yesterday holding the bondsmen not responsible for acct dents occurring outside the city | imite WILL TEST SERVICE ERK Feb | 409 house at Broadway ia | | | | | ~Mayor PD, D. Merrill does not believe civiJ ser vice rules are binding. He ys dis charged three city emplg and 4, will make a test case, % WILSON 1¥;.7 SED ® 14,” he dem-| A %° ndorsed | tion, | ot, MILWAUKEP’S ocrate of Wise Woodrow Wi) ‘e | i Eastern and Southern mail is tn definitely late All regular carriers tutes are being used, but are unable to take their usu in on account of the difficulty in walk ing thru the heavy snow Parcel post perishables will be de i, but all other packages will id until more important r is cleared r parcel In iselewn carr ter post automobiles the garage Wednes day and extra men wer placed in service afoot We will do the best we car sald Postmaster Battle. “We can not, however, promise anything, and all delivertes will be curtailed until the storm breaks. Most of our car tiers had to walk to work,” CITY PUTS 600 MEN TO WORK ON STREET Six hundred laborers were set the as snow downt w on wn intersections dnesday morning. They worked under orders fr Superin dent Case of the str department to keep crossings storm sewer inlets clear Twelve big auto trucks away heaping loads of snow was dumped into the guiches. Floods are feared “if the snow melts quickly, Case hopes to dis me of much of the snow before it warms up. pt and hustled ECLIPSE OF SUN DUE) Weather Seat tial morn conditions permitting will be able to see a par eclipse of the sun Thursday ing 4 o'clock until o'clock, according to Professor Boothroyd, of the university In 1914 @ similar occurre place, but ause of th Seatle people could not see it WOMAN HURT IN FALL After falling at Univers ‘ond av Tuesday and ev hip, Mra, Anna Jacob 5 Harley ave., walked more than a block befor: pain to faint was taken e 1T'S GROUNDHOG DAY This is Groundhog day. Tra- dition says the groundhog ventures out on Feb, 2 after and takes a squint at the w Wet sun is out, so that he can see his shadow, he goes back into his hole on the theory that there is going to be six weeks more of winter. If he doesn't see his shadow, he stays out, convinced that spring is com- ing soon — } THAW IN PORTLAND; SCHOOLS CLOSED PORTLAND, Feb. 2.—After a solid month of snow, the silver thaw struck Portland with all of its violence today. Wires, trees and buildings were encased in ice, stre car traffic was demoralized, and tel ephone and electric light wires were en on every nd under the nt of the ice bro! w ery The treets are of slush and the gutters are runhing full of water from the melting Sleet, driven by the southerly wind, soon developed into rain, and the combination did not mix All night ft rained, with the Wil mette river rising steadily, and dry creek beds running torrents, Rain was still falling this morn ing and freezing on wires No trains reached Portland yes terday or today. Severe snow. storms have completely traffic thru Eastern Oregon. WOMAN WANTS JOB Mrs, Lottie Girt wants work got a Job shoveling snow, but says| a policeman told her she would have to quit, as “It 1s not a woman's job. Mrs. Girt, however, insista she will do any kind of work, and so she! is looking for any Jobs that may offered, Her only support is thru her own efforts and of her 15-year old boy, Who sells newspapers. She lives at 1515 Seventh ave. If you have a job for her, call up The Star, Main 9400 COPS CAN'T REPORT downtown seas 10 Many policemen did not report! for duty at headquarters Wednes day morning. They telephoned that the couldn't get down OFFERS FREE SNO Hert Swezea of the F ing Co. has a weird sense of humor Hert got a great pile of snow front of his pl Wednesday, dec orated it with little American flag stuck a nicely letter The sign read SNOW, HELP and ign on| top of it FRE VE YOUR SE and substh | at which} school in Portland {s clos-| ed today because of the silver thaw. | be! | | | | | | | | | | | Se we ee PRIS SAIS VATS DOR ISS VOR ISS SC ISS SO ISS ISS SOS CS. ac | Jougall C fouthwick™ ; ——————————— “THE BEST FOR THE PRICE NO MATTER WHAT THE PRICE } * — = = = Special Purchase of Women’s New Spring Coats “In a Three-Day Sale, Beginning Thursday HIS purchase represents the entire sample line of a manufacturer with the reputa. I if i tion for having the best style We are most fortunate in being able to offer samples of Coats that be Spring and Summer at prices that are 331-3 to 40 per cent less than regular Five Special Lots, $7.50, $9.50, $12.50, $16.50, $19.50 for Spring ti will worn thi DRESS COATS of corduroy bou and ather trimmed will be more popular this ith in coral, white or blue; Mara- White Chinchilla Coats that eason than ever before. Several belts and pockets == g new styles, novelty STREET COATS of medium and heavy weight materials ; checks, plain ned plaids. The very newest stillion Cape Coats, with leather collars and belt butte belted and tyl styles colors | fancy full SPORT COATS of knit cloth, 1 vat, Scarf and Hat chilla Sport Coats with Velvet collars, and Vel et Hats to ma Coats of new ch outing materials fancy colors The vailable Chis will last but three day Coats in these five groups will not be after Saturday. Every style is decidedly different, consequently selections tomorrow will be the best $7.50 $9.50 $12.50 $16.50 $19.50 —Second Floor. DO De SSS a Qong VSS SSS SSS ELIENE LIVES IT OVER AGAIN} but After Pat went away | went over to ne"8 always there will be a bad)thing was gone from my very that will show just how we It feels Weformed. 1 find my made a mistake and did not follow | at times bitter and suspicious I found her giving little Eliene|the pattern even with the knowledge of a bath. I had never seen her look The whole |I have done for Budge and so unhappy. Even when she was/and no matter how we weave,|and even with the clinging just learning of Harry's perfidy | how beautiful we make the tex-|my arms of my darling she did not seem to have that aw-|ture and color afterward, there is | sometimes ask myself, ‘is it fully hopeless look on her face as|always the ugly spot that unrolls|the price’? now, and whows itself when we least, “Certainly it is not, itt ¢ Y expect It to. |save them from the feeling of ruptly. “Harry by that one terrible mis-|appointment and disgrace i bowed my head take has put himself out of the|envelops my whole being and ‘Oh, Margie, has it taken me) way of making life easier and bet-| most makes me give it all this long to find out it.was all @jter for a great many people, For | times, aistake?” [he could have done a lot of good! “You know that What do if he had been made mayor of this | something like this much surprised town.” |commit two by two, ye shall 1 am afraid I ought never to Why doesn't he go thru with|for one by one.’ He should have gone back to Harry, never|it? Jim thinks he would win, in| said; ‘The sins ye commit one adopted the twins, never tried to | spite of the story, especially if he|/one must be paid for over it from_the world that they |said ‘yes, I did it, but I have|over again, by all those whom fabric 1s spoiled, asked ab-| | know she you mean?” I asked keep as sure i ; | \ her father Margie—y | on You have swollen feet and hands! Stiff, achy joints! Sharp-shooting, rheumatic pains torture you, You have difficulty when urinating! Look out! These are danger signals, Trou- ble is with your kidn Uric acid poisoning, In one form or another, — has set In, It may lead to dropay or fatal Bright's disease if not checked. i ‘ O11 Capsules tmmediately. an old p world fe ural k They are paration, used all over the nturies, combining nat. — healing off and herbs, well physicians and used by in their daily practice. es are not an experiment= makeshift, “patent medicine” or we effect Is only tempor-— They are a standard remedy, jand act naturally, gently and quick= |ly. sBut when you go to the drug- | gist, insist on getting the pure, orig- inal Haarlem Oil in Capsules, fe sure the name GOLD MEDAL ts on the box, and thus protect yourself against ‘counterfeits, In the witness chair, Gillies ap-| |peared collected and frequently | smiled PRAISES THE JEWS Jews have developed a higher intellectual and spiritual power in the United States than in any oth- j}fund, made blocked |account betw |tember,, 19 | Whom W © er Print-!direction of Gillie in claim he knew to be spurtous. . tained er country, according to President Suzzallo, of the state university, who spoke under the auspices of |B’nal B'rith to members of all | Jewish societies Tuesday night When Gill was arrested, he| “Society” he termed the “least promised to “rock the state,” and| American of all institutions,” and this, apparently, is what he meant./8aid that the man who climbed Ernest Denies Statement ahead in the world was admired Ernst in an interview flatly de-| everywhere except, possibly, in so- nies Gillies’ statement clety. There is absolutely he sald nst will be called by the state in rebuttal Gillies deposited we not my own dear babies. /atoned as few men have atoned.’”| love and all those who love you.’ little Marg it just | don't want my children, especially not stand her judgment on the| “My dear Eliene, this is just the To keep your digest re cannot conceive to understand r, and she will bate him for be-|not their real mother and some suse they will rep-| “Margie, I want to tell you this. | C nt in uu can't go back—you jer been able to feel the same to- in, You have just got to|I have never been the same WOM | Largest Sele of Any Medicine in the OLYMPIA, Feb. 2.—Flatly ing the role of a “Good Samaritan,” Gillies, former claim agent of ey fund, continued his testimony when he said that Industrial Ernst had given him $1,200 to larceny, in connection with the this statement in ex- Now, you see, some time not only| “Oh, Margie, I could not bear/ (To be continued.) these boys will know this, but also|to have it all gone over again. I] seems tho | could not have |the boys, to know it until they are Help Diges iad Jaughty” know of this, I could | big enough to understand.” ie matter, Youth is always so cock-|time then, for it to come out,/organs in good working 6 a so hard on the ps that | Budge and Toddy are too young/ = nd so hard on the sins that | Budg: d To | der—tostimulate your! ; Doughty will hate me for let-| “They are old enough to under-/tone your stomach and ting her bear the sins of her fath-) stand if some one told them I was regulate your bowels, t k traying me. She will hate Budge |child would be sure to do this. | Toddy h mind, the fact that|T want to explain something to did not love me. Oh,, you as well as I can. 1 have nev- ILL so back and make it all| ward Harry since that awful time—| f S and do the best you can,/an. It is with me as tho some-| Soldeverywhere. In bexes. 10c., 28. denying the story of Frank going good for their board and lodg. Stowe, confessed forger, J. F. ing until they could get their mon | the state industrial insurance today, after throwing a bomb into the proceedings yesterday, insurance Commissioner A. B. keep “as a sort of trust fund.” Gillies, who is on trial for grand looting of the industrial insurance the rise in his bank en February and Sep planation of N Free Examination LADY ATTENDANT 22-k. Gold Crowns Bridgework, tooth Porcelain Crowns. Id Fillings Silver Fillings Best Rubber Plates, and up per cent reduction from the above regular prices for February only, ‘CUSTOMS SHOW GAIN approximately | The port of attie customs re | 5,000 during the period under in-| ceipts for January show a gain of| vestigation, He explained that he} $31,253.61 over December, and a} got $1,420 from Stone, his partner! gain of $24,456.31 over the month} in the fishing business, in repay-| of January, 1914 | ment of loans, and that Stone still} : pomreeneeseaieeten owes him money; that he got $1,850 BLAME INCENDIARY from a man named Wii! Black for some ofl investments; that he de z Fresh footprints leading to and| the back door of a vacant posited $120 paid him by men to he had made small loans that he transferred $650 from his! house at 5692 Swift st. which was! destroyed by fire Tuesday morning, | | lead the po to believe that the} safety deposit box, and that he re ceived $1,200 from Ernst blave was the work of an incendt- ary nothing to it, ONT p He Tries to Explain Stone had testified that he had rged warrants and claims on the insurance fund upon the The latter de K. to any He} ax methods that ob in the department agies knew Stone's paying out] in the money for claimants in advance of] cat their receiving their warrants. Hel Gunch at said he himself had done that, play- Pike.—Adv, EAGLES GIVE BALL The attle accident | We do exactly as adver- tised, All work guaranteed 15 years Cor. of First and Pike Opposite Old Public Market Laboring People’s Dentist. nied he ever gave his O. 17th annual ball of the Se-| aerie, Fraternal Order of} will be held Monday night ‘agles’ hall, Only members} Hollywood, 212 | 1 xplained th He the =