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STAR HOW NEUTRALS’ Importations of wheat HOMEFURNISHERS TO THE PEOPLE 0F THE NORTHWEST ]]| ee; — 28 Switzerland x Total 7,191,000 EMBARGO WILL WEAKEN KAISER MOST DIRECTLY BY HARRY 8B, HUNT “NO CASH DOWN!” ‘ADD TO YOUR! trunks, war' drobe trunks, suitcases and bags at special prices~ to go to any nation not at war with Germany without directly weaken-| ing our fighting strength | | Pvery pound of food we can grow} or save will be needed to supply our own people and those of our al- lies—even then the ration will be/ short. The demands of munttions land other factories engaged tn di rect war work, of ratiroads mov ing war supplies, and of our navy/ ond merchant ships engaged In war) service, will strain our facilities for fue! production to the utmost. And large size; reg. price $47.50; special for the week $39.75 50 regular price $ special for the week 8®,! exceptional values in table linen— 50c to $2— yard 100 Congoleum rugs at half price— of practical just 1 { mg rood ra : nele Rew shipment of linen table cov- the need of ateel for munitions select from, ¢ e 4 damask * covering, | . values. tn fine cotton damask, cotton guns, ebipes, railroad equipment nec | at ote .s and linen mix and all pure jeasary for war purposes. both here | - sine linen: exceptional values at »( c tee!) de, 0c, $1.45 and Ot per yard and in France, will work our plants day and night. Germany Gete U. 8. Goods | Business done with neutral na-| itlons tn these essential war prod-| braided felt rugs: special $2.25— regular price $3.75 —very peacticn! and serviceable rug: } iuach cloths $1.50 to $8— owing of fine lunch cloths } ded tell 21x64 inches. reeu- 1% yards M lar price $3.77 epectal Sat $13, Sr.) [lucts, then, conflicts directly with for the week . $2.25 . our prime business of making war,! ar ery dollar of profit that could be made by individuals thra such transactions would, in» reality, be {paid by this nation In the cost of = war. EMPRESS MODEL adjustable dress form—automatic and collapsible, $12.50 —it makes perfect dressmaking feasible at home, as form can be adjusted to every size, form and height; when collapsed, it takes up little space. Credit to Out-of Town Folk! COUPON There is another reason, how- ever, perative a anembargo on ‘Shipments to neutral nations of Eurdpe adja cent to Germany. Shipments to them may not merely weaken our strength against Germany. They may actualy strengthen Germany against us, We know imports into Norway, Sweden, Denmark and the Netherlands — have doubled id quadrupled | since the outbreak of the war. We know that these countries have sold heavily of their own products—and probably also of their Importe—to Germany. And without an embargo by which we can regulate or prevent shipments to these nations, we may, by attempting to keep foreign “business as usual,” ac tualy be feeding and supplying the kaiser’s armies. Race Car Kills 12) | WINONA, Minn., July 2—A high powered racing car, driven by King } FILL OUT THIS —mail it to us today and we wil! send you free our new 140-page 1917 catalogue and credit terms! ADDED TO ACCOUNTS WITHOUT ADDITIONAL PAYMENT! —automatic, collapsible and adjustable dress forms; usually sold for $17.50 to $26—, and this is the only article of its kind ever of- fered at this low price, $12.50. FREE! TO OUR LITTLE } reed fern stand: speclal— $7.90 MONDAY, JULY and neutral Buropean countries for periods before and since the war. at “make your own terms!” WASHINGTON, D. C,, July 2—~ a hee | make your own terms!” |B weiner. te nscearyt without a cash payment at time of purchase Pel ye alesse! GL Sau, Have bh aesount here we invite you, the Seattle homefurnisher, to “make your De Vernmens your additional purchases will be own term our well-known Hberal credit servjce will p Brclidedh iets added without initial payment. fit your individual need ‘as usual” polloy with regard to her foreign trade? Why can we not, even tho 2 PAGE 2 1917, IMPORTS GROW flour, on wheat basis, into 1912. 1915. 1916, 6,561,000 39,633,000 22,103,000 77,000 4,633,000 ‘8,233,000 629,000 7,053,000 6,128,000 1,518,000 6,046,000 9,000 7,264,000 626,000 183,000 9,057,000 64,185,000 'SLAV GENER 43,880,000 AL | THRU INTRIGU BY WM. G. SHEPHERD United Presa Ataff Correspondent PETROGRAD, July 2 Propaganda by the powers in Rusela te reaching more unbearable |im its. | wlan centra Gen. Nogin was charged to Ger trl today. | . poston of ather Instantss, ibe graduate fresh from school, is a case hee, oe eee of misplaced confidence, for while he at war, keep our In the case oon = — markets open to known that the Austrian general . . Mcovered trunk; s4 # the world and/oppoxing him on the front had of poor in practice. —medium - sized wardrobe nes en a” por port 9 4 reap some of the| fered « prize of 15,000 roubles freee, rectwnny artanged to Sraey ene ial for week 86.4 ‘iaeey B HUNT. high prices for) (roughly $7,500) his Hfe. terior; remular price $24 50 $7.5) _enanatnst x our products the world is now will! Shortly after this Gen. Noxin sum special for the week. $17.50) noavy steel- covered trunk ing to pay? famoned two loyal companies and) i7-inch traveling bag; Ken- 3.ply veneer; S4inch size; reg These questions are being raised addressed them on his plans for uine leather: reg. price $ ular $16.50; special for} against the laying of embargo by an offensive special for the week...$7.95 the week 813.75. | the president on all shipments of _ Shot While Speaking | ut eep our yes nm heavy i7inch leather bag black fiber trunk, brass food, fuel, steel and similar neces-| While he was speaking, an ex- OR. L. R. CLARK leather lined, pr trimmed, heavily bound; 36 sarles. ; 2 biosive oe struck him in the ners; regular price $10.50 “ hae oe $24.50. The answer ts simple jecause| plosive bullet struck him in the : Special for the week 6m45| 200 tue! fee Pt Toa, all the food we ean grow, all the| Kharkov Wednenday, At Moscow Use your eyes in your own and our behalf. Use them to special for the week $19.95 1 N eaine, ali the steel we|A man with « strong German ac| t splendidly modern plant and i a case, Bel » leather; | fuel we cai p ¢ h jerm ac : are weights brage tctiamtngs ear brown pores ine can produce, are needed jeday in cent had the effrontery to attempt] see our most splendidly plant and equipment 5 nial Tounded corners; fully guaran the one vital business of making) street speeches, urging the popu 5 . ° Bee ee rey. te | teed; Sétnch eine; repay war on Germany. |iace to make a separate peace with| Use them hese gfe dog ot oo see the License (issued : ~ <P>. $34.50; spel. for w 28.00 Mustn't Weaken United States OFAN Y ic a ibove the pe: ati i ea 5 TO arbeen coer best made wardrobe trunk; None of these may be permitted) He was promptly arrested A years ago) wo ngs @ ° - oper ng chair of ich nic ; friend of the speaker followed the one of our many expert assistants. police, declaring, in German zens Crowd Beats Germans Both Germans we fore they arrived at the jail. Th later were transferred to prison. Dispatches from Jansy, where t Rumanian government in now ted, detailed the arrest there ficer’s uniform and carrying t credentials of s Rumanian gen- oral The “general” had been lIivi on @ special train, moving about ° My and blocking traffic. Another) function on the theory that pleased patients mean more German, bearing forged creden- . tials, took control of a large nec patients. tion of railroad tn that part of Rus-| sia, directing the movements of the “ peral’s” train. At ff an Austrian was arres ed for addressing street crowds, urging ® separate peace. -—--____—_ —__ -___ | She Drops Note Pad | to Take $1,000,000 (See eee Ia BOY FRNENDS ese Kelley, Chicago sportsman, crashed thru a fence yesterday and injured a score of spactators Nab —teed fern stand; exactly like pto~ ture; tvory finteh; Kalvanized inset 24 inches high, 22 Booze Suitcase come in and get one inches lo’ 10 - of these dandy red, seahaa ‘Sider tom Bre igthgge cp ensiler Pry Pad iy Northern Pacific FY ed Sun- wh ooo and blue caps 4 - $10 net day by 16 deputies, who confiscated ree to our little ” A 4 beer and whiskey in passengers’ friends! $7.90 ait Gaaek | BREMERTON BOOMS | BREMERTON, July An un-| in in bank circles Deposits show a May 1. [Ath of July EXCURSION precedented is reported here | jOSMFLLO~ $2.79, regular price $2.50 —cotton-covered rubber hose; 26 ft.; special for the week *: —same quai at WELLS IS GIVEN | | noon, cue PHONE STRIKE ral Judge Neterer |morning sentenced four slackers. | | Carl F. Gilliam, a German; Charles | | BRE iG and David Anderson, each} drawing elght months in jafl for Round Round falling to seaister, Bernhardt Whether a strike of 6,000 elec- Trip 50c Trip | fl it was given three. mouths. trical workers and several r | ; thousand Operators, which Te as Fr Hulet M. Wells, indicted sate |One-Armed Officer | Would, demoralize telephone Mion Wicay amtscheen ty the foders) | Teesdins Canadinne communication on the Pacific grand jury on charges of sedi- | eading Canadians! coast, will be called, will be tious conspiracy, will not re- LONDON, Ju When a Ger.| decided Thursday night. A turn to his work in the city [men explosive bullet, near Ypres| Conference held by delegates light department until he is lent m r, blew aw Lient. A of the 10 locals of Washington, tried by a federal court: Wells | A. I. Bate «left arm, the 8 in Tacoma, Sunday, called for * applied Saturday morning for a | katoon boys up his bat a strike vote in every local on leave of absence, which was |talion, said good-bye to him, as oe Coast for Thursday. ranted by Supt. Ross. Ross |they thought, for good. Today| The strike talk has been in the ue only grant a leave of 30 | Lieut. Batchelor is on his way back|#r for some weeks and started | Navy Yard to his battalion, wearing an artifi-| ith the strike of 28 telephone op-| days, but it is probable that the civil servi: commission will extend this time, Wells, who once was head of the | Central ‘Labor council, was indicted | celal arm. The task of convincing |°T@tors in Aberde The girls, it} the war office he could handle his |!" said, wanted the right to unton- | old job, he sald, was the hardest |'z¢ and certatn changes {n wages. | thing he has had to do since the|The demands were refused by the} Route S. 6 H. B. KENNEDY TOURIST J) KITSAP II. on five counts, with Sam Sadler, |war began. Pacific Telephone & Telegraph Co. ipl a > head of the [gngshoreman’s union, ——-—_-—--— Vice President Grasser, of the in LEAVE COLMAN DOCK |} Aaron Fislerm&n, secretar: Lieut nory has heen recalled! ternational ization, went to | 8 10:30, 11:30 A, M,, 1:30, 3,7! King county socialist party i |from the retired Mst to replace|Aberdeen and made an exhaustive 5:30 P. M. %, Rice, a dyer and cleane rhe | Lieut. Commander A. C, Kail as re-|investigation of the situation. I men are charged with ine as. crulting officer here called the meeting” I. ‘Taconn | One Hour's Ride assination and murde nd for hich resulted in the order for the aination and murder ANd f0F| swncras, monice — AUA-Nivere ies Yon rt on Sound wad ee iat ee Ish ‘assing Alki Bathing Beach sethey. hold hat their connect , minh, Country Club, Fort — Ward, }] ey hold that sir connection < pent ’ y » eac! ‘oldiers’ || SeGdie tactile Branch of “Nocan| 2 Carlin'n Orehenten Clearings Go | p Pleasant Beach, Old Soldiers fer the ocen-~ foot of | Seattle bank clearings for June, at 6115, 6:15 and 7:20|1917, show a gain of more than gentiomen 91.00,! $50,000,000 over the same month a 1D 1916, Home, ete. BRING YOUR LUNCH AND SPEND AN ENJOYABLE DAY scription league” was before the| passage af the law, and therefore ) legal. \ The grand jury returned 22 true | Dropping her shorthand note|bdattle fields of Europe, then the ny la Golng Concern «“but it will be war business— book, Signa Applegren, 22, an-|deadly conflict with her world am- Germany is still a going com there will be work enough for all, swerod the phone in Sioux City, Ia.,|bition must be fought out on our|cern. The emptre is full of fight,| but it will be war work. the other day, to discover she was own shores end America’s war job {is cut out This nation is now in the bust heiress to $1,000,000. | “A huge American army in Eu-|for her, The sooner we realize it as of war and everything from Signa is going to Teheran, Per-|rope is the best insurance against | the quicker it will be finished th kitchen of the humblest home sia, to get the million, she says the crimsoning of our own land “England saw the error of het) to the largest munition plant must Twenty years ago Chris Apple-| “The war today has a message mpathetic ‘business as usual,’ but! be ran on a war basis. gren, Signa’s great uncle, left{of meaning for every American cit-|{inally bucked up to her responst | Be sure you feed your family ad- America. Wandering thru South|{zen, be he banker in New York ilit with an energy that hap/equately, but let there no Waste America, Africa, Europe and Asia, or a street car ven Great Britain a rebirth of it io ae preparing or serving he accumulated a fortune. of his death just City, na’s father, but he ts dead and she’ his sole heir, MA Y DENY USE OF OLD PIPES Because the company won't grant the city car line universal transfer rights, council may refuse the traction company @ franchise to serve steam heat to downtown buildings. Tho original franchise expired two years ago. Council passed a resolution some | ment po time ago, announcing that the com-|Against Waste, organized by The pany could not have a franchise|gtar in co-operation with 200 other until it ave transfers to the city] \ewapapers thruout the United| egge and potatoes in all Eaet gh s ‘ States, the department of agricul-| ern markets and one conserva may 1 cant on iS Rha he | tur and Herbert ©. Hoover, nation tive dealer said yesterdy, “I CI ASS “Aa” . al food administrator, is going] fear this is only the be 5 Monday {o consider an ordinance)! (ty ‘but effectively on ET a GAtSTaL Peoctlenetonenh Gladys Hulette denying the company streets for pipes any longer. other ordinance, compelling the r moval of the pipes, may be passed |food-conservation her special duty later, | See Native Alaskan Will op, itt! e work of preventin| : | I'm th@ fret Alaska-born citi-/ornment in the P ®) Mtr Frank Vanderlip sail before || If the uitnen ane daiink zen to joln the United States | food-waste. the New York Woman's Cky club, |] gyi « pesedialy og me 4 bbls, 7 A LS eee Geclared hee ase 19! phese soldiers will find ammuni-/at a meeting called to dishes the || GE: ARS wehbe as he enlisted with tion for their campaign in a depart-| financing of the war, “I af& inclin regulars here ment to be published once or twice|}ed to think and feel fred to sa week in The Star, which will con-jthat if this war inculeate less oT , + 1 tain suggestions by famous ex-/of thrift upon this mosttextray He look Wrong Side }\, how to save food with-|gant and wasteful natbn, then John V, Applequist, native of/cut undernourishing ourselves; even the great price we la had Sweden, cursed the American flag| what further measures the govern- and said Germany could lick Uncle|rent proposes to take; and other Sam. $10 and costs Monday, = ASSASSINATED dally Assassination of the Rue | Nogin, Mt Resist “Olt | in new Russia ts {t not pa liamentary to interrupt speakers.| You ought at least to give the Ger-| {mans a hearing.” badly beat- on ty the ceeed cet they ott! — every-day business. a German wearing a Rumanian of-| ——? APPLEGREN News| reached Sioux The fortune was left to Sig- right to use! An Fight With Regulars'¢ Justice Brinker fined him|information useful in the work un-lreprehensible at the $$$ LT FAI Like the tongues of Aesop, may’ be the best or the worst thing on earth, ac- cording to whether it is well or mis- placed. Faith may remove a mountain, but it takes a dentist to pull teeth. The Theory of dentistry alone is worthless. It is the Actual Experience, born of long practice, which counts. E Your faith, placed in an unlicensed may be earnest, he is rich in theory but an We do not ask for faith, but we do ask that in fairness all prospective dental patients use in our behalf that good American common sense which is a matter of routine in rd Let us present the evidence which will convince you that nei we, of all dental surgeons, are best qualified to do your | work for the very lowest price consistent with the highest grade of material, skill and service. | Adherence to plain Honesty and Business Common Sense has made us the leading practitioners of the state, and we | ng Regal Dental Offices 1405 Third Avenue N. W. Corner Third aid Union, Diagonally across from the Postoffice. Be sure to get to the right place. In every respect Seattle’s leading dentists. NOT OPEN EVENINGS OR SUNDAYS America Must Do More bage, cere: or onfons just be, cause you can afford to pay for! them. These are the foods which, we must conserve. And it speaks4 well for the housewives of Amer-| fea that they are heing conserved, s + ie already the “slow buying has é |beared the market” is one Wall st. j report | We must make it possible for i those of small means to buy sta- j jples. We must send them abroad “This fa one definite reason why “The Germans are far from) for ours and the allied armies and it is up to the whole American |}heaten, In Sweden, the other day,|we who have made a living by ca- people to regard the war as Lage ol Bie my way home from Russia, | tering to the luxury-loving and ex- to feel that every advance by |saw shipload after shipload of food travarant must expect to have our wa the allied armies is one more step | going into Germany. I saw scores incomes greatly curtailed. lin the direction of their own na-jof German commercial travelers “We are going to have the big. goods thruout/ gest business we have ever had in \ttonal security. selling German : jthis country,” said Mr. Vanderlip, “If Germany {# not beaten on the | Scandinavia. eS dustrial efficiency a are Ke cheaper Must Be Deeds jAll the time and a splendid dinner To watch England today ts fo | dish, containing a balanced ration, get an inspiring lesson in sacrifice | is fresh beef tongue that has been and endeavor, boiled, sliced and browned tn but- “America must undergo the | ter, scrambled eggs and fried pep- pattle Far From Beaten Buccess of the allied arms in Burope this year means peace and security for the free nations of the earth for years to come. “Failure means the con fame thrilling transformation. he: stant threat and ultimately the She must find herself naturally | Slice tho peppers thin and put effort to Impose autocratic just as long a ehe found her. (them, after frying in butter, about. German Id upon every self industrial. the scrambled eggs with a border democracy In the Western “But her patriotism mustbe (of the slices of tongue. Good democracy decua Het CHRIOR: enough for a company dish—and fess scishiueattaiaiabian - |contains nothing that is necessary jto the upkeep of our soldiers, The Woman's Army Against TODAY'S WASTOGRAM * | —Prepare your meals in | your mind before you start | The Business of War || to prepare them’ for the | { |, table, The work of the Seattle Rogi-, Against Waste. ARR CRISP TIE —i ; Toman's ATM! Watch The Star for your supply | of the Worn 7 Jot ammunition Vaat Horsterde acid Phapnee | ‘ } | When nervous, tired or restles: restores: | the system and induces refreshing sleep.— There is a break In better, | Advertisement, artificial level of prices.” Why this man should “fear” such a condition |, as a Muse- keeper, fall to t present,” sald thiedeal- er, “the spirit of economy is in the air and whether or n@ peo- re able to afford high they are not dispoled to pay them unnecessaril As was the intention, each sol herself to make “Prudence the Pirate” Near Pike e-|dier who pled and service to her country during the war, is now a center of influ. ence, spreading the understanding of the food situation wherever she goes, and stirring her community ‘© loyal co-operation with the gov- TRAITORS For the present Iab: Under the 1. W. W.'s rou! nam, ie. to pay will not be too mie! It is not only unpatgotic but | | préent »dertaken by the Woman’s.Army ment to waste fats, potaben, an } At the FLO! “e oUP! CMORORENCE UrsTams SECOND AND UNION