The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 16, 1916, Page 6

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UNPARALLELED BARGAINS For Friday and Saturday Seventy-F ive N’S SU > i Pric Limited to sizes 34, 35, 36, 37 and 38, and medium weights. Just what you will need 30 or 60days from now—some of them Suitable for all-year wear. These are garments that we bought before the war sent dye-stuffs and fine imported woolen fabrics cannot be duplicated at any price. They are not but the values are there strong. ‘te Sale is for Friday and Saturday, but you ut and try them on today and Thursday, “sky-rocketing.” Some of them exactly the latest cut, are privileged to pick Think of the Price—Just Half Seventy -Five Overcoats and Raincoats On Sale at the Same. _ Time as the Suits at 46 Price And “believe me, ” there are certainly some bargains in this lot. in anitie yp ¢ first time Friday and Saturday WASHINGTON, Feb. 16.—A_ ro- mance of the White House base- ment was revealed when Lavinia Gibson, colored laundress, return- ed to work, beaming with smiles. She married a soldier. 405 Pike St. _¥ Just a Step From Fourth and Pike. HERE the householder is sure to get full i ‘ V value for your money, where quality holds | a high hand, and where all foodstuffs are gua- | anteed. We Sell the Best Butter in Seattle §c 2 bbs. 75¢ Lb. For.. fae” 30c MACARONI VERMICELLI . SPAGHETTI | | 75c Boxes 65c Also 10c Sizes Imported and Domestic Cheese Delicatessen Goods, Fancy Groceries. The Season’s Finest Fruits. National Market Come Today—405 Pike St., Near Fourth Ave. 1916 John B. Stetson and Schoble Hats will be shown at Tonkin’s, DR. L. KR. CLARK We Have No Time to Mix in Politics We are too busy attending to our | Fewula: business. We realize that to | conduct a successful dental bustn ‘We must attend strict! to nothin ne =PRut | attention hott the it is possible for faster our business te growing nese in hen any other dental bue Northw t Is dotng {t—tha: ‘We employ in this office the it type of mraduate remis- lt uated from jand who have passed the « amine. | tion of the state dental board. ery | Ticats from the state dental anging right on the wall in f his dental chair, In plain You positively t uneatisfactory dental work done ized how “got are to yor ra! <0 your eomtort and happt- and to your effictency, you o 14 not delay thie matter ute—you woul | right) away—TODAY, |have your teeth attended to. |our ayatem of low price, large volume of busin |brought the cost of the b work down to a point where it is the reach of all. to remember this—we spe- | iain ‘on DENTISTRY here—no pol- itioa—no tame. Har stunts 5) the bi for your money in high 1 seryice | Our written guarant ith |all work, signed both by the oper- | ator who aid the work and by L. R |Giark, D.D. &, owner and manager f And ith our olutely essential to the proper performance of painless den tistry, therefore, thie is one of the few offices at which you can now get pain! dentistry done as it should be done. 1405 Third Ave. | and Unton. Jeweler and Silveramith 1010 Second Ave. Near Medison Star Want Ads acreage for you, will sell the TTT TELLS tF | | ° | groceteria? tisaw; no confusion; in-|marked In plain figgers so's there BLOODY FIGHTS Kaiser's Son Describes Hand- to-Hand Night Battles | FRENCH LOSSES HEAVY BY PRINCE OSCAR OF PRUSSIA Author-80n of Kalser Wilheim Copyright, 1916 But it was not the tnfantry at-| |tacks that made the great winter battle of the Champagne for ‘us, not the hand to hand struggle in the trenches, |man against man, |where the Ger. jman, being the jstronger, always overcame the | Frenchman. | No; the terrible! jartillery which jthe French brought up and the endless mass of munitions |they had at their disposal, these made the stay in jour trenches @ jhell and turned | the difficuities of our troops into un forgettable deeds | of herotsm. In a proportion- jately small space, jthe Frénch |100,000 grenades! We found a French order of bat- tle, wherein the writer allowed 18 grenades for each meter of trench at the place of attack! Tells of Artillery Fire And those were not divided thra- out the whole day, but for perhaps one or two hours! The speed of firing was Ifke that of a machine gun, excepting that these were not infantry shots, but grenades of every Hber. “Dram fire’ we jod this kind of artillery fire, ite results were fearful The wire entanglements were to- tally destroyed, as !f wiped out, and the trenches were turned Into} fiat troughs, the shelters wore) broken to pleces, no method of for- tiffeation was able to hold out for even a short time against snch fire. One thing only did hold out: German discipline, German faith, German courage! and the outer world. Seen from the rear, It was a picture to shudder at. In addition there wi imittent rolling, thundering, crash- ing, which even miles away sound: od ike a heavy thunderstorm. It med impossible that “any Hving thing could endure in that bell. And tf the firtng stopped end- jdenly or seemed to hesitate and |French infantry attack followed, then out of the hollows, from haif- destroyed shelters, trom torn sagks of sand, our brave musketeers, grenadiers or fustliers rose, fixed their weapons, wiped the dust from their eyes, and repelled the attack. Not only once, but dozens of times did they do this! But if it chanced that one of our trenches under fire was emptied in order to diminish our losses, sometimes a French fnfantry at- tack under protection of the artil- AUNT M’LISS VISITS THE GROCETERIA | eet yuh mean, “Why, Aunt M’liss, a groceterta ia the very newest thing In stores. You walt on yourself very much as do in a cafeteria. Get the “Grocetert Land o’ Goshen! What next?” says 1, Well, I'm bound t’ be right up t’ th’ minit, so I started right out t’ find th’ newfangled thing. I lo- cated {t at 509 Pine at. an’ they didn't have nothin’ on me If ‘t was th’ first time I'd ever set foot in one on ‘em. I looked "bout pretty sharp so's not t' "pear queer Well, I'd say ‘t, was "bout th’ decentest place o° th’ kind I ever everything just like clockwork. There was rows an’ rows o’ shelves, with all kinds o’ canned goods; everything , from breakfast foods to clothesping, each wa'nt no need a askin’ foolish ques- tions, Yuh jest had t' use yer eyes an’ brains, if yuh had any. They're real cute ‘bout th’ ‘rangin’ of it, Yuh enter thru a whirligig gate like, that won't let yuh go back, an’ everything's fixed so's yuh just gotta keep agoin’ till yuh get all th’ things yuh want, an’ by that time yer plump up against th’ one that takes yer money Never see anything like ft. I hed no idea a buyin’ anything when I went in—Jjust thought I'd rubber, but when I found I could get things from 25 t’ 30 per cent cheaper than anywhere else, I jest kept on a buyin’—cheap things is such a tepptation. Land sakes! I saved 20° cents on a dollar's worth, I ruther wait on m’self any old time than stan’ round, first on one foot then on t'other, waitin’ fer a clerk Me f'r all th’ new things—and th’ man't ties up yer truck is so awful mannerly yuh jest feel like goin’| again. They must a knowed I hadden't been there b'fore, f'r they | asked me how I liked it. Don't see| how they guessed. The Groceteria’s got me, kiddo. Spring and Seneca ahington Second Av: jstomach relief and cure known. \ AMERICAN With Its 100 Beautiful Sea Maidens Continues to Break All Records TODAY THE SMALLEYS —in— AND ALL WEEK “Hop, or The Devil's Brew’ More Sensational Than Undine pecially since there waa no longer any hindrance, Then straightway our brave men in fleldgray leaped out of the nearest trenches with bayonets and hand grenades fixed for attack, aod nearly always threw out the enemy with heavy losses or killed them. But ff this attack was for some reason postponed for one or two hours, the result was not so sure, and usually cost ® great deal of blood; for this short time sufficed for the French, who are very clever at making any sort of de fonses, to seize quickly for their purpose the captured trench and to bulld it up, to bring up several machine guns, to erect on each side a barrier and sand bage— the socalled French “nest ready. Fight Hand to Hand Then our regiments had the heavy task of again taking this “nest,” after a long, hard battle, sometimes lasting several weeks. Oceasionally we met in hand-to- hand battle, whgrein bayonet and hatcheta, otheels and apade PAPE’S DIAPEPSIN FOR INDIGESTION OR BAD STOMACH Relieves Sourness, Gas, Heart- burn, Dyspepsia in Five Minutes, Sour, sassy, upset stomach, tndi- gestion, heartburn, dyspepsia; when the food you eat ferments into gases and stubborn lumps; your head aches and you feel sick and miserable, that's when you real- {ze the magic in Pape’s Diapepsin. It makes all stomach misery vanish in five minutes, If your stomach {s in a continu ous revolt—if you can’t get ft regu- lated, please, for your sake, try Pape's Diapepsin. It's so needless to have a bad stomach—make your next meal a favorite food meal, then take a little Diapepsin. There will not be any distress—eat with out fear, It's because Pape's Dia pepsin “really does” regulate weak, out-of-order stomachs that gives it ite millions of sales annually Get a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store, It Is the quickest, surest It acts almost like magio—it is a sci- entific, harmless and pleasant stom- ach preparation which truly belongs in every home. SEME AMUS PHONE Q MAIN Sloe SRD. A MADISON THR BEST OF VAU DRY 2:20 mess BDA y Tall New york "yas With 10N SHOW Hamilton and 16 Arthor LOWS SW WARD o Girls ’ A N Wonderful Oriental Dancer “OTHER HIG ACTS & 10¢ and 200 lery carried the empty trench, es-|edxes carried on a TY work, until the enemy was killed or surrendered. A musketeer from a Rhinish infantry regiment hed his thumb completely bitten off by a Frenchman. It was the hand in which he carried hie hatchet, The brave mah concealed his pain, took his hatchet in hi left hand, and, with it, em: ed the he of the Frenchman and the man behind him. We can divide the French attack methods into divisions and mass attacks. The first mentioned always went in advance of the latter; the strength of the troops thus related fluctuated from company to di vision strength; their real aim was as follows: After shattering drum fire, they attacked a posi- tion in order to get possession of a trench. Describes French Attack If they got themselves securely into one, they then tried to take another one a few hundred meters off, and then, by fighting along the sides, they triea to unite these two trenches, or else they used the captured trench as the spot for a masa attack, which had as its alm the making of a-breach, a thing which the division attack never tried to do. With these mass attacks, the French acted according to their well-known scheme for making breaches; a close line of defense as guard, a hundred meters behind them companies and columns in close mass formation. These attempts at attack, which they always used, meant a fearful loss for them. It Is probably no exaggera- tion to say that the losses of an attacking French regiment 40 to 50 per cent; p @ verified these ma Therefore the French seldom use the same regiment twice for making an attack. In this matter the mental effect produced on them by their being forced to go over the dead bodies of their comrades may have played a considerable role, (The last Instaliment§ of Prince Oscar's story of the Greatest of all defensive bat. tles In history will appear in thie paper ina day or two.) GOES TO HOSPITAL AND IS ARRESTED TACOMA, Feb. 16.—Sought for the past six weeks {n connection with the robbery of $500 worth of merchandise from Great Northern freight trains at Everett, Oscar Worthington i» under arrest here today, following his request at the police station to have a cut on his hand treated at the county hospi. tal. Acting Chief Geary recognized Worthington and locked him up. SA™@ MURRAY DEAD Samuel G, Murray, prominent at- torney, with offices in the Arcade buildkys. passed away Tuesday night in an ambulance on the way to the hospital, He had been {ll for some time é Refore coming to Seattle, Mr Murray resided in Missoula and was prominent in Montana polities He is survived by a widow Rose Abernathy Murray ter, Mrs. James Gillie, Roscoe Murray. Mr. [nvout 60 years of age. a daugh and a son Murray Mrs. | was } TELLS NEED OF - PACIFIC BASES i WASHINGTON,’ Feb. 16—Four | submarine bases, each with a flo- tila of 10 submarines, are needed today on the Pacific coast, accord. ' ing to testimony given by Admiral | | Albert W. Grant, commanding the submarine flotilla, before the house | committee on naval affairs, Admiral Grant said he would see} bases established at San Diego, San| | Francisco, mouth of the Columbia |river and Puget sound. Star Want Ads cover all the towns and cities of the Northwest. Supreme Queen of Emotion Seen in— Dramatic Action, That ~ 1 KNOW THAT for reliable Wasserman Blood Test. DR. DONAWAY Unies and Thi Office Hours: Bundays. | USE STAR WANT ADS FOR RESULTS Star of the Kreutzer Sonata NANCE O'NEILL A Woman’s Past A Sensational Production With Swift, Strong Sweeps Like a Tor rent to a Mighty Climax | BEST VAUDEVILLE AMERICA “race” | parce \ fimpress SULLIVAN: * + CONSIDINE | “ane HOUSE rt "exits" 10:20 Dally Matinee, 2:30 p. m. % Seven Features ‘PRINCE OF INDIA!! And His Royal Hindoo Troupe THR MOST GROUSLY ST. AND EXPENSIVE AC OF ITS KIND IN VAUD- EVILLE. A MARV ELOUS DEM- on . cul SEE the projection of the Astral Soul from the body Gor. see ~~ Emaar Ioeurctecesiaes eyee ere" ssere

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