The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 14, 1917, Page 7

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SE WIS FAREWELL NOTE 4} Fraser: Paterson Co sone Main Friday Close Out 50 Women’s Coats at $5.00 Each Formerly $15 to $25 | FINAL) CLEARANCE | A of certain odds broken lots of Coats — Silks, Taffetas, Poplins and Sat- and ends and Women's lins, in Navy, Black, Tans and Gray. Also Wom- en’s and Misses’ Wool | Coats in checks, mixtures land some solid colors— | Coverts, Corduroys, Vel- jours, Cheviots. While the H lot lasts, on Friday, your choice ...........$5.00 | Floor. | | t}e—_——— ———-@|tnched from practical affairs, as | Friday Clidrisine “a | * Continued | From m Page 1 preposterous private conceptions A —— 9 | of Gorman destiny, than as the ac- | ‘ A tral plans of responsible rulers ° | arms since the re but the rulers of Germany them | These are questions must|selves knew all the while what $4.50, $5, $5.75 Petticoats | jf, tes ete, aga Shs a rant " We, in our turn, s¢ America | intrigues lay back of what the pro-| t $3 75 ee can serve her with no private fessors and the writers were say- purpose ing and were glad to go forward a wes | “We must use her fing, as she! unmolested, filling the thrones of} ey Ihas always used ft. We are ac-|the Balkan states with German| ~ . + ‘ : . jeountable at ¢ bar of history|;rinces, putting German officers GROUP of Petticoats, representing the odds | Jfjand must plead in utter frankness|/a the service of Turkey to drill and-ends of several lines formeriy selling at | [ijwts pervcse % 1 we eesk to/her aomice nad mane eee ane above prices. All of excellent quality taffeta “Tt te plain enough how we were|cf sedition and rebellion in India silk, some with Jersey tops. | Hitereed into the war. The extraor ,and Egypt, setting thelr fires in| | “4 . jdinary sults and aggression of}iersia, The demands made by} ~ roa 2 , \ree ile the imperial German government | Austria upon Serbia were a mere —Colors include Brown, Green, Rose, Nile, left us no self-respecting choice |single step in a plan which com-| Tan, Sky, White, Lavender and Navy. but to take up arms in defense of || assed Europe and Ania, from Ber- our rights as a free people and of | lin Bagdad. They hoped these —Friday clearance at ......eeseeeeee $3.75 our honor as a sovereign govern-|cemands might not arouse Europe, 1 eo ol ean RE: OP aces eas, | ment. }but the meant to press them| ‘The military masters of Ger-| wheth they did or not, for they) lioany denied us the right to be|' ought themselves ready for the| — ————— | neutra final issues of arms. POSTS |" tatlors. ney filled our unsuspecting Absorb Austria-Hungary | | CONSTANTINE Other groups were sgheduled to|communities with vicious spies | “Their plan was to throw a select their officers Thursday, and/#nd conspirators and sought to broad belt of German military the group meetings will continue }until the members’ council is com- ‘THENS, June 18.—(Delayed.) CALL FEDERAL JURY rmer King Constantine's fare- well to Greece was posted tm all! Forty-six men have been called Athens streets today. for service during the May fede’ “Obeying the necessity of fulfill-|srand Jury term, which will begin ment of my duty toward Greece,” jJune 20 at 10 a. m the former ruler said, “I am de — parting from my beloved country| She flattered her rich lover, but with the heir to the throne, leav-/cared only for the impoverished ing my son, Alexander, on the young army offi in “Jane Eyre. throne. 1 beg all will accept this | 00 o-. Bowin 3 r 2: — decision calmly, as the slightest in- HIMSE LF cident may lead to @ great catas- |i te First Ay trophe.” SELECT DELEGATES Five groups of members of the Chamber of Commerce and Com- mercial Club selected delegates to Get a 33 | for $20.00, for $16.09 | Stade pale ora These pi the members’ council Wednesday “and many of our own people The groups which held the election ‘sere corrupted. Men began to] & were the life insurance men, print- tliook upon their own neighbors! ers, engravers and lithographe’ property owners, publicity men, | MAIN 1045 end retail ladi clothing and PAINLESS TEETH CORRECTION This Office Will Be Now that our Modern Sys- Open From 9 A. M. tem of Scientific Dentistry has ei a been perfected, we can treat patients without the slightest pain—without shocks — with out discomfort — without any after-effects without using dangerous drugs or sickly gases. Our methods are positively safe and harmless—each oper ation being conducted by duly qualified and efficient dental surgeons—men whose work and conscientious efforts are bringing us scores and scores of new A lt never With some The flame The flag on high And grips our Though it has pas Its provdest Now ‘tis That willing WILSON EXPOSES | corrupt the opinion of our people in their own behalf. When they foun they could * do that their agents diligently fpread sedition amongst ua and onght to draw our own citizens from their allegiance-—-and some of these agents were men connect German government Itself in own capital, They sought by vio lence to destroy our industry and arrest our commerce. “They tried to incite Mexico to take up arms against us and to draw Japan into a hestile alllance with her—and that not by indire tion, but by direct suggestion from the e in Berlin, They impudent n us the use of the high and repeatedly exe cuted their threats t would send to their death any of our peo ple who ventured to approach the Casts of Europe. wonder in and rise with suspicion and to their hot resentment ere Ww community |or upon the choice of its own peo-| ype: Pg seiiie tutti did act |ple, but at I dictation, ev sfore the Germ peo) the work | exan. Its will have 4 by force whs What great nation in such cir. », but cannot have|they promised to gain by it: Ar would not have taken leave In granted from Ber-|!tamense expansion of German up arms? | so-called central powers| Dower, an immense enlargement of Much as we desired peace, ft | ar n but single power,|German industr nl a comme og Jwas denied us and not of our| Se t ite « should {ts|opportunity. Their prestige wil choice. This flag under which we | har t for # . q.jsecure and with their prestine serve would have been dishonored} “Bulgaria has consented to ita|thelr political power if they fet had we withheld our hand Rumania is over-run their people will thr: nat them rap “But that onl part of the Turkish armies which Ger-|A Kovernment accoun ble to the story. We know now.as clearly trained, are serving Ger-| people themselves will be set ase ag we knew before we were our: | m™ nl not themselves,| Germany, & it has “gr? fa s- selves engaged that we were notjan f German war ships and, fn the nited gp the enemies of the German people harbor Constantt-| France, and in al the grea hs n and that they are not our enem emind Turkish statesmen|tries of modern time, except Ger “They did not originate or de-|¢ day that they have no choice | ™any sire this hideous war or wish that| but to take their orders from Ber | It's Gigantic Intrigue we should be drawn into it; and|lin. From Hamburg to the Per-| succeed they are safe we are vaguely conscious that we|sian gulf, the net Is spread Jon any and the world are lare fighting their cause, as they The Snare Is Sprung ; fail, Germany is will some day see it as well as our} “Is it not easy to u | and the world will be at | own y are themselves in the| eagerness for peace tha feace, If they succeed, America | oe same intater power | manifested fr rlin ill fall within the menac ” We re c t last stretched its | the bare F a nd all the rest of the world musi ers rote i: sen Gena: Siacs (Ben S Pence, peace dns Deen thelremain ecmed, se thay will 76 Above are the nurses of the first United States medical detachment, and an American enlisted from us jtalk of the foreign nations for » rain, and must make ready for t! ° man_in conversation with British “Tommi is Phat “ -|a year and m not peace upon|next step in thei ession; f sere etale’ teeta nthe tah o initiative but upon the th fail, the world may unite for ing = less activety penduaie are they more plainly s | initiative of the nations over which|peace and Germany may be of the} 1” this country than in Russia than in the United Stat grip of that power end is trying out the great battle which shall deter. | mine whether it is to be brought \ By Ber ton B orale y iw A N aingts the ‘skies looked so bri POy/ now it seems as if ib gleamg\ strange inner light; AS though each thread of white and red, Fach filament of Were spun of espiritval of that fine high desire, Which thrills the unfurled to ly we Ovr hves , ovr 4]1 to Liberty, That after we have The flag, Ahe flag may lives ed with the official embassy of the| our} lola Glory flies, ght, ’ blve-, fire, nation through. ib greets the eye hearts somehow, sed through stroggies vast, hovr is now; ' Show the world ive ceased to be, ower and political control actoss the very center of Europe and be} yond the Mediterranean into the rt of Asia and Austria-Hungary to be as much their tool and |pawn as Serbia or Bulgaria or Tur-| key or the ponderous states of the| east Austria-Hungary, indee Is to become part of the centr an empire, absorbed and dom { ated by the same forces and tn fluences that had originally ce rented the German states them selves. The dream had its heart t Berlin. It could have had a heart nowhere else! It rejected the Idea of solidarity of race en vrely | “The choice of peoples played no part in it at all, Hut the rman military statesman had reckoned all that and were ready to deal with it {n their own way And they have actually carried greater part of that amazing plan into execution, Look How Things Stand Look he things stand Au | tria t their mercy It bh acted, nc pon ita own initiat she antag deems herself to ho A little of the i the ad-| talk has STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1917. PAGE 7 Everything to Furnish SUMMER CAMP | AND COTTAGE ecded to make the comfortable T HIS store is ready with things Summer homes and camy and will ship OO or over) to the promptly, freight paid (when purchase is $ any steamboat landing or railroad station in State of Washington Furniture of the Inexpensive, Substantial Sort well that is particularly in demand for camp use, is rep resented in these stocks. Among the items are Drop-leaf * : | Folding Settees and Chairs Rawhide Chairs | Meat Safes Metal Beds | Sanitary Metal Cots and Pads Mattresses and Bed Springs Porch Furnishings Hickory and Maple Chairs and Rockers, attractive and long-lasting Swing Settees and Couch Hammocks, Porch Shade comfortable and Grass Rugs, Vudor Ventilated Cocoa Fiber Floor Coverings, Draperies, Linens Braided Rag Rugs, Grass‘and Fiber Rugs, Japanese and China Matting, Tapestry Art Squares, bright Cre- tonnes and airy Curtain Nets, Porch and Seat Cushions, Printed Japanese Luncheon Sets, low-priced Cotton Table Damasks, Blankets, Bedspreads, Sheets, Pillow Cases. Kitchen and Household Utilities Enameled Cooking Wares, Caloric Oil Ice Cream Freezers Fireless Cookers, Crockery, Glass and Silverware, Cookstoves Intelligent Telephone and Mail Order Service keeps the Puget Sound summer home in close and quick touch with this store’s varied stocks. We select carefully for y« the postage on parcel post shipments. Freight prepaid as above. Inquiries receive prompt attention printing aie u and pay shipments Quick service in Kodak developing and abroad. It is that mbling at their » fear has en They have but perpetuate their} even their con thetr power which is tr very fee and de tered thelr hearts. one chance to military power, « trolling politi power “If they car with the immens advantage in their hands, which they have ently gaine themselv a 1 p to this point they will have ) FREDERICK&NELSON An Exce -ptional Offe ring of Women’s Silk Parasols $2.95 $5.00 $7.50. “TheNorthland” Gurney Refrigerator Window Curtains, $1.25 $1.50 and$.175 | faved desirable F henberet R ATELY- 4 styles in the inex price Refrigerator, | e Curtains of Serim t of thoroughly Marquisette, Filet-mesb | seasoned hardwood, fin Net and Madra ished golden color, Heavy All are hemstitched walls, well insulate and trimmed lace, Enamel-lined food com- with the except f the partments, with remove Madra Net able non-rustable shelves. Curtains, and these are Dry-air system of refrig- finished with a woven eration pattern border Five sizes, with 15.4 4 They are in white, ivory | 20 50- and 75-pound ; and ecru color—all 2% | ice capacity, priced te : yards long. Prices— spectively at $10.00, $13.00, $16.00, $18.00 and $20.00. —Third Floor, and $1.25, $1.50 $1.75 pair —Firet Floor. In Pearl-Gray Kidskin With Cloth Top $6.50 GRACEFULLY- modeled Boot, as A pictured, with medium- length vamp, leather Louis heel and flex- ible welted sole. Price $6.50. Same model in Allover Pearl-gray Kidskin, $8.00 pair. | -First Floor. Basement Salesroom Silk and Woolen Remnants at Reduced Prices THE SILK REMNANTS include Taffeta, Silk Poplin, Satin, Pongee and Crepe de Chine in lengths for waists, skirts, dresses and linings. THE WOOLENS include Scotch Tweeds, Wool Taffeta, French Serge, Storm Serge, Panama, Burella, Epingle Poplin, Wool Crepe, Mohair and Challies in lengths from 1 to 6 yards. —Basement Salesroom. and in every country in Europe to which the agents and dupes of the imperial German gov- union j “Do you not now understand the continualiy master ling itself | been public, but most of it has t intrigue. the intrig s pettants tained Ba, CAO EE ins I | private. Thru all sorts of cha and why the master pained eee Many anu German Militarists Begin War | it has come to me and in all do not hesitate to use any) government has many spokes, Despite the present condition of your teeth and The war was begun by the mil-|of guises, but never with the terms promises effect feat Rains poe ae gums—despite those gaping cavities and abscesses lftary masters of Germ who | disclosed which the German gov |thetr the deceit o 2 eralien Pee ae ee we guarantee to restore your mouth to a clean, whole proved to be al tie masters of pment would be willing to a Hone? : : Bes “it eee eae heh abinlen they uitet some condition, and this while you sit and smile eed viattim as yp nie | ‘That government has other |(/ ruout the rid, stand for the wheal not ee a P| pmen and children like valuable pawns besides th rights of peop) and th f-20v he proclaim the liberal pur | The small cost of this important service will aston- Bieoe and ‘trans as Chadewalyeas{ iT chine. renitloneni alt tren, jermment of nations; for they see |poses of thelr masters, declare | ish you—come in for a free examination and estimate lor whom governments existed and holds a valuable part of France, |what immense strength the forces | this is « foreign war which ean No obligat whatever in whom governments had their| tho with slowly relaxing grasp of justice and of |tberalism are | tor hb America with no danger to ee Me | | gathe his w jeither her lands or her institu Life. and practically the whole of |sathering out of this wa Our “Natural” Teeth on our Double Suction Expres- | "They have regarded them mere-| Belgium. Its armies press They Employ Spurned Men a (tion set England at the center of a 0 e izattons,| close upon Russia and ov “They are employ erale in| the and ts of he: ‘ Full upper or lower’ set, eee $10 trigue bend or corrupt to their| cannot go further; it dare not jmen, in Germany, as thelr spokes-|out the world; appeal to our an for 10 years ......---- : Recht ye sses ta own purpose go back. It wishes to close |men, whom they have hitherto jlent tr adition ‘of our ‘solation in| " ay p re 6 6 Cy i sought to silence a hem once e poll o e jons a | ieee Pistes a7 a qeagehctey Seb ined thle ites. eg caniii ‘ul i Se ine see Heb ey it Hast nei ie Tudeoed and these men, now their | seek to u nine the government | aoe ee oeyuld. be overwhelmed | offer for the pound of flesh it |tools, will be ground to powder be-| with false professions of loyalty E] ECTRO PAINLESS hy s their natural tools and| will demand. neath the weight of the great mill-|to its principles jnstruments of domination, Their Masters Are Fearfull tary empire they will have set up; “But they will make no purpose has been long avowed oppo milltary masters under|the revolutionists in Russia will ba| headway, The falslY betray 4 DENTISTS veiThe statesmen of other nations,|whom Germany is bleeding, see! cut off from all succor or co-op themselves always in every ‘ to whom that purpose was increa-| very clearly to what point fate has|tion in she Ay pag “er : pate eae eg Panag pa i i pac e attentio 4, » o they fall back or|counter revolution foster anc par ,. a Southeast Corner First and Pike tole, paid little attention: Tear. oro ced back “an inch, thelr|supported; Germany herself will] ernment whom we have al or Ten Years in Same Location Disgonally Agroee to unded in their class rooms and | power abroad and at home will fall|lose her chance of freedom; and} ready Identified whe utter ¢ Market. Laboring People’s Dentist. Ail Wor man writers set forth to the|to pieces like a house of cards, H{all Europe will arm fo rthe next these thinly disguised disloy- Lady Attendant. J. R, VAN AUKEN, Mer orld as the goal of German policy |ix their power at home they are|the final—strugele alties. The facts are patent rather the dream of mindy de- thinking about now, more than’ The sinister Intrigue is be to all the world, and nowhere where we are accustomed to deal with facts and not sophis- tries; and the great fact that stands out above all the rest is | | SHORT NEWS The National hotel, in Port At | geles, was totally destroyed by fire | Wednesday night, with a loss of | about $15,000, | Crushed under a heavy roller on his father's farm at the Lummi In- dian reservation, Morris Woods, 5, | died near Bellingham Wednesday, | Mrs. M. M. Garwood was acquit | ted of a charge of grand lareeny in Medford, Ore., Wednesda where {she was arraigned for the burning of a house in Ashland, Ore, in an alleged effort to get the $5,000 in- surance, She was arrested in Seat tle. | The funeral of Alexander Hutt, 43, owner of the Alastair apartments, who died Tuesday evening, will be held Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock, at Butterworth’s chapel. Adolph Oyen, a painter at the — navy yard, was caught by a swing+ ing crane while he was putting up — a window about 60 feet above the She flattered her rich lover, but/ ground Wodnesday, and hurled to cared only for the impoverished|the pavement. He was Instantly young army officer, in “Jane Eyre.” killed, that this is a peoples’ war, a war for fregdom, and justice and self government amongst all the nations of the world, a war to make the world safe for the people who live upon it and have made it their own, the German peoples include and that with us rests the choice to break thru all these hypocrisies and patent cheats and masks of brute force and help set the world free, or else stand aside and let it be dom- inated by a long age thru sheer weight of arms and the arbitrary choices of self-con- stituted masters, by the na- tion which can: maintain the biggest army and the most ir- reaistible armaments—a power to which the world has afford. ed no parallel, and In the face of which political freedom must wither and perish.”

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