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OPENING SALE avy Yard Lots Two Hundred at $125 to $300—Easy Terms Within Five Minutes’ Walk of Navy Yard Gate Exact Location Where the Big Ships Will Be Built at Navy Yard Well, we feel like telling you “we told you so.” At last the Government has appropriated SIX MILLION DOLLARS For the construction of shipping ways, etc., in order to build battleships at Government Navy Yards. The Puget Sound Navy Yard Will Be Equipped at Once nd Within one year the population of Bremerton Charles should double. Within one year real estate prices will be advanced at least 100 per cent. We have 200 more lots for sale at money by buyjng at once. We the old prices, $125 to $300 per lot. making money at above prices, These lots lie level, are right in when we sell 200 more lots our price the city limits, and must increase in will be doubled, as the lots are worth value as the population comes in to double, but until we do we will give do the work. you the greatest opportunity you have The press dispatches say: ever had for profitable and quick money-making. ed Navy Yard Bill will bring the P F Navy Yard one | Ord hs pang nd —_ Fair Call, write or wire. No lots held without cash deposit for any one. Our salesmen will be glad to show you the property. Free Pamphlet of Navy Yard view at our office. ton the + sl of 3,000 will employed, bringing a new $3,000,000.” low we want you to make some OLE HANSON & SON 316 Pike Street. Phone Elliott 2. Office open evenings until 9 p. m Thieves removed a window 18.—The Aug. WASHINGTON, | @4 the house today, 34 to 27. It is|from a bureau drawer a how ready for the president's signa- | escaped have been tn action on Gen. Bot {Sign Aquarius” will be the subject | They of a lecture by W. H. Scott on Sat jurday evening, at 8 o'clock, at 5000 | Arcade building Miss Merrtil| Cooper will sing DOES YOUR STOMACH ¢ repulsed Russian attacks. Hersford’s Acid Phospha Aids digestion, allays thiret and ts | eclally refreshing In hot weather ¥ & bottle. © made further raobeyna hill. BARGAINS in the Shoe The save i TURRELL’S DOWNSTAIRS DEPARTMENT best place money on city pur- to chase. in FRANK J. SEXTON, Manager _THE SUCCESS lor our business is fair treatment to every one. Witness Ladies’ White Duch Price $5.00. Now Ladies’ White Canvas Pumps, the regular price. Now os Growing Girls’ White Canvas Mary ‘Jane Pumps worth $3.00, but are .. . For children’s shoes now), with covered was $1.95 rubbe r soles; «$195 ‘school especially recommend Tan or Black Calf, Rub- heels; $3.60 Our skill in fittt lasses ber Sole Oxfords, $4.00 Shoes of this type are now .+-.... $2.45 Hl! .econd to none vices Also Children's Goodyear Welt, Gunmetal Calf Mary Jane Pumps, sf ape I yaad hcordbicg ERS ithe Aad Per Nara $1.45 We carefully examine your eye: hired 4 te "| vit For boys young men, we have an overweight sole shoo end: secnrately fit them with th which will outwear two ordinary soles. Very presentable style. Blasses you ought to have, Splendid \ines of Men's Work Shoes at TURRELL’S |: Downstairs Dept. || Eversole Optical Co. 120 MARION ST., OR 903 SECOND AVE, Est. 1889 1404 THIRD AVE, und prompt 4 Pe tot teed Va - Ouse PASSES BILL BURGLARS GET $6 TURK TROOPS GAIN Aug. screen and entered the home of} BERLIN, 18 Turki Philippine bill, granting an increas-| Mrs. G. E. Minard, 2515 Calhoun | troops, rushed into Galicia to re ed measure of independence, pass-| st, late Thursday. They took $6 |intoroa the Austro- jerman armies In the Carpathians, the Germans| progress near honesty and STAR—FRIDAY, AUG. 18, 1916. PAGE 2. \ BY ET “CHAPTE R TWO It broke heart to see my sweetheart h Away from mo by ma 4 girl whose only fascination lay in the fact « she Gould practice her little aire and graces, receive a surreptitious kiss or clasp of the band, without insulted All watch fair that should have been mine. | Ugrew thin and wan, and at last the winter I had progress of the love af consulted a physician A young man In his office seemed [to take great interest in my case. He brought over my medicine him. lnelf. 1 learned he, too, was alone in town He asked me if he could call; 1 sald yea The medicine the doctor pre seribed began to help me right away. 1 felt better immediately. | Spring bad come, not only to the | whole outofdoors, but to my heart Sight of the open lovemaking of my whilom lover Tom and the-giri jwhohad-eparior had no pain for { | The ‘Lrue Story of the Poor Girl Without a Home, Who’s Hunting a Husband ¢ bad a place where) to| \MY SUMMER SEARCH| FOR LOVE! HEL G. “H| RUSS ADVANCE IS NOW HALTED Turkish Troops Give | at Critical Time Aid BY ED L. KEENE United Press Staff Corseaponeime LONDON, = Aug. urkish troops shunted into Galicia after « round-about railway jour thru Serbia from Constantinople have stiffened the AustroGerman lines before Lemberg and at least tem porarily halted the Russian ad vance, The appearance of the Turks on Gen fie! war office this afternoon, in a re port of the repulse of further Rus sian attacks, That the Turks not only have stiffened the retreating! Austroderman lines, but have en abled Hothmer to take the offen sive is admitted in an offictal state ment from Petrograd, Stanisiau. Despite their reverses in this region, the Russians con tinue to advance in the pathian region and are now threatening to jinvade Hungary | Russians Approach Mountains The Petrograd official statement reported Russian troops approach ing the mountains of Koromero, at the Hungarian end of the Jablonit- ta mountain pass, and also report ed the capture of two villages southwest of Stanisiau. The Ger IT 1S SURPRIGING HOW DELICIOUS ARE tveN THE OdORS OF A CAPETERIA PILTERED THROUGH THE _PRAGRANCE_OF LOVE. - something about the bullt for the people.” “-. | tered being ° by the allies on the Western front | Slowly the red and gold in the/last night. The French announced | west turned to silver and gray @8|that the village is completely in! the pale crescent of th moon | possession of the attacking French amiled at us cen, tho erlin asserted the bat i there was no mi wanted to say | forward and just as our | We were jerked apart “Didn't I tell ye ye'd git mischief. run ye tnt med and struck out Not until my lover was almost pounded Into insensibill fight ended to the station . The next day I read my name under the headlines. The-girl-with-the-parior turned |me now | Harry was walking home me from work each night with we lunched together. | ising how delicious are * odors of a cafeteria filtered thru the fragranee of Jove. | | | was sure Marry loved me, altho he had never told me so. | He had never had a chance. | A man can’t tell a girl hy | loves her with two, three or | four people listening. | eee But in the last of May there] came one never-to-be-forgotten day.) The air was balmy and fragrant. | The trees bad on their beautiful) spring frocks of tenderest green “I'm coming around to take you to the park,” sald Harry I put on my white #kirt and my new pink sweater and tam, dear,” Harry we sat down on a red bench, “that 1/ “You are so sweet mured, a ewhat shelt almost afraid of you!” Here—here'” shouted a good natured Irish voice. ‘¢ two turtle doves better be takin’ yerstlves over there under the light Yell! be gittin’ into mischief over here! and then I'll have to run ye tn!*| 1 felt my s burn, and Harry turned We did not move, however Harry mut- chee pale nd PATROL AGENCY | ‘}tor the death of his son was de ave. N., when he filed sult in supe jrior court Friday against the F. H h ‘ | 8 y A > ture, having gone thru the senate ASTROLOGY LECTURE mer's front for the first time, It acto Beg ot te coe pare without roll call. “The Nature and Function of the| was officially announced today.| ents | The son, Carl Frisell, 17, was shot] and killed September 19 last, by A.| jouley, a merchants’ patrol police Agoncy trail a gang of young men who had engaged in a street brawl, Suppos ing Frisell, who was hurrying away | on & motorcycle driven by Edgar Moore, an acquaintance, was one of the gang, Gouley fired Frisell dropped from the tandem neat dead. Gouley was tried for Killing Frisell, but acquitted. Robert G. Saunders, Frisell's at-| torney, said he had included the agency's clients in the list of de! fendants, because of hia theory that| they were responsible indirectly for! the lad's 4: n | “They the | haz put he said mong clients are leading department stores. and other business establishments. | 81X BOY SCOUTS from the Mad- leon Park district will climb Mount Rainier this week-end several is - Where Acme Coal had or 1a) hundred now Buyers have have told friends until Acme Cc wok and corner of Seattle The reason these le like Ac er dollar, leaves le hes and dir no soot Acme prices at bunke are ; Run of Miné, $3.00. LET ACME BE Five thousand dollars retribution | manded by Charles Frieedl, 401 11th.‘ man in the employ of the Surrey | * Gouley was aiding city policem@h | ( banks | away her head when I tried to peak. The manager told me my ervices were no longer wanted Harry was sentenced for resist ing an officer. He seemed to feel I was in some way to blame for hin disgrace, I never saw him again (Mise G——wil! tell more of her experiences trying to be courted in The Star tomorrow and succeeding days.) DR. L, BR. CLARK | sont Read Mr. Drennan’s Experience With the Regal Dentists I ve after I got de a sad experience But you pr y at tor the three teeth did not hurt a@ bit ommend your need of dental °., |. DRENNAN O Sixth Ave. » do is tor rience carefu every vest wht have t dentintr thout pain to rin thie office tn a gistered dentist, who ifteate from the state rd hanging right on the ont of his dental chair, tn wall in fi plain We our at of materi weat—we nelad guaran with all work our $ tee of satisfaction, signed both by the operator who Aid the work and by LR. Clark, DD. 8, owner and manager of this office, who ts thor oughly responsible You take no chances come here for ye when you You ‘are atisfied—we r wor in Gouley’s!° you than it will coat Regal Dental Offices 1405 Thi ne friend last spring it has a told neighbors and neighbors val is now in demand in every ne {8 four-fold—it gives most heat t, makes no clinkers and produces Lump, $4.00; Furnace, $3.50; Nut t a load today 0, M, LATIMER, MGR. ACME COAL CO.—ELLIOTT 1400 West Seattle vy West 549-W—Leschi Heights Yard, Beacon 266 YOUR FRIEND parks | half miles northeast of Verdun, wae at once Marry turned to me king what he Irresistibly I bent lips met, into It's mestif has orders to ‘No lalagagg'ng in the park,’ says the chief.” 1 saw murder in my lover's eye, and spoke Harry, Harry!"—but jt too late. ur ugly bands off me,” ty was the Ho was dragged off) made a | mined to take! man and Austrian war offices, how . Claimed progress for thetr ar n the Carpathian fighting pture by the French of the village of Fleury, three and one |the most telling stroke delivered tle was unchanged at this point BIG BOND ISSUE FOR MEXICAN SITUATION An unexpected bond issue for $120 000,000 to carry the government tira the Mexican border situation until January was included in the report issued Thursday night to congress by the senate finance committee The proposed {esue fs included in the $205,000,000 revenue biil ond ts purely an emergency propo | sition BRITISH REPULSED BERLIN, Aug. 18.—British troops succeeded in pressing back the German first line southwest of Martinpuich on a narrow front in yesterday's fighting, but were com- pletely repulsed in attacks north of | Posieres and west of Foureaux wood, It was officially announced today Between Guillemont and Maure-| pas, British advances were re/ puleed with heavy enemy losses. Northeast of Hardecourt, bitter fighting occurred without any de-/ cision. 1332-34 Second Avenue 211 home: Street To Charge at the Eastern Costs Nothing Extra Open a charge ac- count with us. You will find that it is very convenient. A small payment down and the balance as you get paid will keep you in the best of clothes. “It’s an Accommodation’”’ | THIS IS THE shown in green, gray, advance garments. ACME COAL MAKES FRIENDS |GERMAN LINES STRONG) Bothmer’s front was first of-| Hy announced by the German reporting | strong hostile attacks northeast of Ww ASHINGTON, I D. C., Aug. 18.—! Largest Credit Apparel Institution in U. S. THEVERY LATES THE NEW VELOUR: COMING blue, med with seal and beaver, AUGUST Clearance Sale —OFr— Used Fumiture $9.75 $5.50 4.50 8.50 Daven- $42.50 5-00 $6.00 $4.50 $9.75 $16.50 SIX WILLIAM AND MARY Dining Room Chairs with genuine leather seats finished furned oak, for $27.50 Regular price $55.00 ywn Reed Chair for $12.50 Brown Reed Rocker for $30.00 Reed Baby Carriage f 27.50 English Perambulator $75.00 Mahogany, Velour port for o0ee One Carved Summer i} $25.00 Golden Oak Hall | $13.50 Early English Hall Seat for. $18.50 Brass Costumer for a $27.50 Solid Mahogany Sewing sO Bre for uphe Istered Mantel Seat fc Table Six Jacobean Dining Chairs and one Arm Chair with genuine Leather Seats for $27.50 Regular price $55.00 $50.00 Three-piece Tapestry Parlor Suite $22.50 Bedroom Couch for waa $12.50 Reed, Maple Top Stands, pone a tes $15.00 Waterpower Washing Machine. $13.50 Plate Glass Hall Mirror $15.00 Plate Glass Gilt Frame Mirror. $7.50 Plate Hall Mirror. $25.00 Oscillating Electric Fan ‘ $0.00 Roll Top Office Desk for... $50.00 Solid Oak Folding Bed for. $35.00 Solid Oak Folding Bed for Glass Nine Solid Oak Dining- Chairs, wood and leath- er pad seats, each $1.45 Regular price $3.50 Ten Arm Chairs with Leather Seats, fumed oak finish, each $4.95 Regular price up to $18 $17.50 Three-piece Porch Set f $50.00 Silk Damask Chair for.. $50.00 Silk Kep Sofa for $15.00 Gold Bedroom Chair for $25.00 Fumed Oak Chair for $25.00 Leather Upholstered Reed Chair $30.00 Early English Hall Seat and Mirror for $11.00 Early > $30.00 Combination Book Cases and ‘Desks for $15.00 Velour Upholstered Settees for $3.50 Reed Fire Screen for $4.50 Wood Fire Screen for G. 7-75 95 INLADIES’ --SUITS-- J season. Materials are Many modes are trim- are featured in these FABRIC for the Fall plum and burgundy. Several different sty es Prices from $30 to $60, MEN! BRADBUR SYSTEM CLOTHES —e $20 and Upward ARE THE KIND OF CLOTHES TO BUY. They make the wearer feel comfortable with the assurance that he is properly attired. They are cut and proportioned to fit any man.