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starts 10 A. M. Here are a cut to $16, Special cut from, T5¢ prices. ality High Grade Ladies’ Gem Safety No trouble Gold-filled Watch Bracelet, Gold-filled SCARF PINS, WALTHAM, gold-filled or solid gold cases, at greatly reduced Pin Seal Pocketbooks Pocketbooks $ genuine MS cc s,s, : Gillett Safety Razors...... Cigarette Cases; regular Big Ben Alarm Clock. . Many other bargains. ge > Jewelry Reduction Sale We are overstocked with jewelry. Our cut prices will doit. stock, into cash. tinuing leather goods. to the public. to buy for Christmas. So the Note the prices, A small deposit will secure any Our aim is to turn Also discon- entire stock will be thrown Now is your opportunity article and will hold for you until called for. Saturday, September few of our prices: 50. warranted for 1 to $10.50. 1,000 designs t each, ELGIN, HAMILTON WATCI Genuine pure white Diamond $15.00 and up. Solid gold white Sapphire Solid Gold Lavallieres, $5.50. Solid Gold Brooches, $3.00. Solid Gold Wedding Rings (14k), Leather Card Cases; kegiler CUt BO. .crcccceess ‘ae Card Cases; regular $9.00 > eut 500 Pocketbooks at, each....... to show goods. ] vather re Come and ste for yourself, NO! We are not going out of business, but sale tomorrow, on 27, at Gold-filled Watch, warranted 17 jewel movement, 0 yedrs ete, 0 select {ES—in Rings, tings, $4.50 $1.00; .50¢ to whether you buy or not. « Baum’s Jewelry Store 1411 THIRD AVENUE Next to Buster Brown Shoo BRING THIS AD Win repair any American watch, no matter how $2 ly Gamaged, for ‘Geod Until October 1 LUCIO'S JEWELRY CO. 613 Second Ave. fr og sea Curly Hair 4 ina Single Night and brittle, as-so many know from id experience. It's far more sensible ‘use plain liquid silmerine, which ‘G0 ho harm, and which produces s much pretties, and more ee of ag ie th creases | and tone to all the —— and fune- oe estabi. scalp. A convenient way to it is to pour a little into @ rand then, with a clean tooth ppiy evenly to the hale from If this in done before le, naded Flory to, one's sa wifi be quite in inthe morning. The hair nies and fluffy when combed ertisement. POISON IN POTATOES | FATAL TO HORSES} LONDON, Sept. 26. — The mys) tertous malady which has been kill- ing horses in South Lincolnshire, and which puzaled veterinarians, is) |now diagnosed as somonine poison.) jing. It was caused by the alkalold| lin the eyes of potatoes eaten by the} ~~ PEPTIRON Agreeable to the Taste, Acceptable to the Stomach, Readily Assimilated ‘Thie real tron tonic gives vigor) the conditions and and faended tort ‘ects on the nervous) and digestive systems, creating & normal appetite, perfecting nutri- have taken ‘4id, and my appetite és P. Winkley, 1103, Hood Co, Lowell, MIXE Newcastle Pea Coal South Prairie Coal $6.25 at the Bunkers Here’s a fuel mixture we can recommend right down the line. and for apartment heating plants. Mix good old Newcastle Pea Coal with the famous South Prairie product—50-50—and you have a winner for heat, for economy, for all around satisfaction. we can furnish this mixture on such a favorable basis you can’t beat it—$6.25 Better act NOW and get your order in, for we can’t tell how long the supply will last. buying rush on. People waited too long to buy—now they’re crowding in fast before the weather gets 6 nippy. You can get this economy mixture from your regular dealer, or phone Main 5080, the general office, 563 Railroad avenue south. PACIFIC COAST COAL COMPANY It’s great for household a ton at candlelight. There’s a big fuel- Store |BATTLEFIELD GHOULS REAP RICH PROFITS PARIS, Sept, 26—Officials are taking steps to end the rich profit- ering of battle field ghouls In the war torn regions of France. These Profiteers, working at night for fab- ulous fees, have been removing bodies from the battle fields and re- burying them elsewhere, at the di rection of relatives of the deceased. The unscrupulous men engaged in the business have been distoterring bodies without taking the trouble to identify them, thereby decetving the families and disturbing the last rest- ing place of another man. One of the profiteers arrested by the authorities at Lyons charged | from $600 to $800 for each disinter- ment. GIRL LIKES GRAVE DIGGING AT NIGHT LONDON, Sept. 26.— Mies Janie Beeching, grave digger of Lewes, pre fers to work at night, instead of by | daylight ne Foes to the ceme ‘after dinner and digs graves ry by furnace use, Just now the bunkers. sales (PALACE HIP re = BE} 17 ~ Zz: am ” Continued From Page 13 | Firat Page, 2nd Section ‘x - . It in only later, however, when the divease comes to a head that the wi nificance of the preliminary manifew tations can be fully realised The process of disintegration at work in many parts of the army With all {ts serous consequences, was | as incomprehensible to me as the [disintegration of the nation, whieh |revealed itself in such a surprising |fanhion on November 9, waa to mil lions of Germans 1 communicated my anxiety again and again to those gentlemen who. with me, were called upon to diag nose these aymptoms and provide a rem But 1 ep to deaf earn The German nation, itself not with out guilt, has now to pay the pen alty with its very life, DEMANDS CANNON FODDER The question of reserves was a constant anxiety to us I had the opportunity of impreasing og his majesty the gravity of the situa tion, The desire had been expresned that the so-called Asiatic contin gent should be reinforced, no that 'Jerusalem might be retaken, where as, taking Into consideration th question of our reserves, [ had agreed with Enver upon a reduction of the German troops and had pre vented the dispatch of more men to Palestine. e supreme command had ag approached the imperial cha with those old demands of the au tumn of 1916 and 1917 for an in crease of the quota of recruits. 1 sent Col Bauer to the meetings jcalled In Berlin to consider the mat ter. Hut we found that we were |without the necessary support of jthe war ministry. At the end of June @iscusstons on all the abovementioned questions were resumed at Spa between the impertal chancellor, the field mar shal, the war ministers and myvelf | 1 referred to the conferences in |Berlin with Col. Bauer, and once more emphasized as gravely as I could the neceanity of obtaining 1 equate reserves, of adopting th most severe measures agalnat whirk ers and deserters in the homeland Oo people a determination to fight, with regard to which I again drew att tion to the dangerous influence of a section of our press, enemy propa ganda and Bolshevism. CABINET GIVES NO MEN I poke my*mind on these points far more often than I have recorded in these pages. Once more I was promised « great deal. however, remained unchanged. I do| not know whether thoae gentlemen | thought that my reports were exag kerated or that they were merely the fruit of my “militarism.” Neither would the war office accede to my re quest for a general conference of em- ployers and employer, to come to an understanding with regard necessity of drawing upon the ex empted men Meanwhile T tried again to exploit ean in order to further the peace movement tn enemy countries. Another memorandum on this sub ject wan sent to the imperial char the Our rooms are all outside, with plenty of light and air Call now and get located for the winter. - Rooms, single or en suite, very reasonable ra Waldorf Hotel Main 2567 AMUSEMENTS Seventh and Pike Continuous Dally, 1 to 12 SIX BIG ACTS OF ROME VAUDEVILLE Feature Photoplay nim ORPHEUM VAUDEVIL Amelia stone Gene Mug Honey ell 9 Mat Ayn Whoa Ibe t rygth at Pine Elliot his Week—Matines Sat “THE » 8’ (Sunday), Cc; Mate. (oxeept Mondays), Ladies’ M (except Sundays), 100, Mats. Nights 7:15 an 15. Thin Week METROPOLITAN Norman Friedenwald Prese “MY HOKOLULD GIRL” | Nights 60¢ to $1.50. Bat, 500 to $1 cow Mat Plus War Tax, oe | Hone. and, above all, of encouraging in the! The situation, | to the! collor. On June 19 he sent for Cot von Haeften. After long consulta-| uon conentials of much propa LONDON, Sept. 25 Fall in the val of British money In New! | York ts costing English film dis-| ltributors $20,000 a week They | must pay the contract price to the| American motion picture @irms making Op the loss in exchange And thore American producers never neglect sto take all that —jcoming to them! |LONDON BREWERY | |cense duties and ot TRE |crormous sum of $2 | ‘WILKES PUTER |than $11,000,000 for the period, $4, | 900.000 higher than that for the last THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, eee 26, 1919., wanda were decided on Viee Chan ool von re in rucular, showed a lively interest in these q During the discussions at Spa L again begged the imperial chancel lor to appoint & minister for propy ganda. Beyond this we did not refer to the prospects of peace In view of Clemene we were compelled, inn continue the war or submit speechen. inion, to » humili ation. I must assume that the re sponsible statesmen theld the same | view, for even tho T always hoped | for success, they could have had no} doubt of the gravity of my view of | | the situation | concu N | AS TO BELGIUM | In May and June Col, von Haeft quite ina 1 with my yiews, urged the for lee to make a concilia declaration concerning Belgium Seore f State von Kuhimar however, declined to take any initia jtive in the matter, THe was well! aware of the Imponsihity of any ex change of ideas with the enemy gov rnments. 86 much he frankly and| openly stated. On June 24, basing his remarkmon » Mr. Aaquith’s May 16, n favor of peace, he spoke in the relehstag to the following effect opening In ac epted by Uhe other side as a peace aa trap, a# untrust aloulated to sow diasen and #0 long a ep sion between the allies, as every advange is violently de nounced by the opponente of a rapproachment, it i# imponsiblé to foresee how any exchange of ideas that might lead up to peace is to be brought about The imperial ‘chancélior adopted the same attitude in hia speech of July 12, He gave expression to our constant readiness for peace, but so long am the enemies willed deatruc | Uon, persisted we must carry on; tho |an soon an the enemy evinced any se rious Inclination to pave the way to peace we should at once prepare to meet him. 1 mi of 4 also tell you that this point not confined to mynelf, but in shared by the leaders of the army fort are not carrying on the war | for its own sake, but told me #0 noon earnest desire for pence shows twelf on the other side we must not be behindhand.” The rately Imperial chancellor has accu represented the view of the hal and mynelf | I now reflect on the poss bility and prospect of a peace move |had it been undertaken by the gov jernment, I am firmly convinesd that jwe silould have been granted an armistice and peace only on the con-| ditions that @e are now compelled to| sept. We should not have takén| PON ourNelves thin reaponmibility indeed in October we ought not to |have done, despite the gravity of our | situation. Whether I was right or wrong in my view of the conditions then ex | inting, only Clemenceau, Wilson aad yd George can decide. England nd the United States wished for our | conomic destruction; England, in ad. | }dition, wanted to rend Un power and Fr to bleed us white. Common t our the desire to inflict the deepest hu miliation on their hated enemy be- fore the world and to impede the elopment of the German pe all time The entente only pursued ideals for the betterment of the world in so far they wert compatible with a strong national policy. This was the | motive of all its actions; all else was | but a means to the mame end. It was | jthe very reverse with us, our first) ideal being universal happiness, our | |necond the security of the Father land. The war once begun, ita con clusion did not rest with us alone. /FILM MEN LOSERS AS | | BRITISH MONEY FALLS GERMAN GOLD TO HELP BRITISH EXCHANGE NEW YORK, Sept. 26—~German gold will help to strengthen British jexchange by paying British indebt edness in America. ‘Tho first $15 000.000 of indemnity paid in gold by Germany to Belgium was passed | along to the Rank of England, thence shipped to Ottawa, and then to New York. PAYS LARGE TAX} Sept. 26. ners paid to the gc LONDON ewery bu ment in the orn past year in excise ‘li r taxation, the 0,000, accord | The | were more ing to official announcement. company’s net profits complete year before the war. FALLS 80 FEET AND | BREAKS HIS TOE| LONDON, Sept. 26. Jacob Brown ja winding engineman, fell 80 feet when the 00m floor collapsed at the , sustaining a broken toe has been seeing everything | since the accident, but physi that he will recover | normal vision RUSS REDS BAR OUT | LANGUAGE OF JEWS) LONDON, Sept. 26—The Holshe- vist government of Russia hag for-| |bidden the use of the Hebrew lan. kuage as reactionary and has pro: | claimed the offictal language for | Jews to be the mixed German-He- | spoken by Jews in Lithuania and and Southeast OWES $1.50 IN RENT: _ TAKES HER OWN LIFE ty Lilley, a wid of Forest a letter left in the room Where she committed suicide, machin ntagoniats was | ¢ You'll say Sunrise Heights is the place you've | ‘“*The Place for ek Home’’ IS IT A HOME YOU WANT? O YOU And wher Sunrise Heights—Se: EASY PAYMEN TWO NEW HOMES RECENTLY BUILT IN THIS DISTRICT BE ONE OF THE EARLY PURCHASERS. GET THE BEST want to establish a home on easy monthly payments? dependence from the rent hogs—s every married couple doe moderate means most desired in a homesite QUARTER ACRES AT $400 LARGE LOTS AT $350 and at A Do you want in- 1 place you can call your very own? Yes, 1 you choose, choose w: To the man of attle’s newest subdivision—offers everything PRICE YOU CAN AFFORD. NO“TAXES UNTIL 1921 ey aoe EXxxcelient transportation is provided over the been looking for, Located in beautiful West new elevated raflway and via bus line. Only : Seattle, on the highest plateau in Seattle, this | 20 minutes from downtown by motor. The fine | addition is high, sightly, healthful. The land concrete boulevard on 35th Avenue 8. W. runs is Iggel and wonderfully rich. firectly in front of Sunrise Heights.” Come, ride out with us tomorrow, or any day. downtown office, line to the property. Or take Fauntleroy cw To drive out, go ow the boulevai Our autos run at all times week days. |ALASKAN INVENTS MOVIE PHONOGRAPH FAIRBANKS, Sept. Edison must look to his laurelg, G M. Landerking, |has perfe the reproducer. Union Street G. H. BROCKMAN & CO. 314 New York Block Branch Office “THE PLACE Make appointment, if possible, at our r am) ride to Alaska street, there taking bus Way to 35th 8S. W., thence south on 1° property. At 10 a. m., 1 and 3 p. m. on Sundays it Aval rd to at Sunrise Heights Elliott 3923 Fon YOUR HOME” 26.—-Thomas | fort to break in employed the Miss FE. Barton covered the dis-/| Fairbanks bureau of mines station, |iance in 12 seconds fiat, making a ed a loud toned talking | new ladies’ record * for England 4 he says will cyn-|She fell ont second short of the tion pictur mark set by Miss Marie Thornton. * m working or Lak Erie college, Ohio, and + talking movies anderking gets| Mins M. ¢ rgan, of Bryn Mawr, Jones Is Always Right the Increased yolume of wound by | E ania, who covered the dis- Telephone Elliott 2607 pressure thru reed plates in| tance in 12. sec flat in 1910 1329 FOURTH AVENUE and 1912, respe i ~ /ENGLISH GIRL TRIES - FOR YANKEE RESORD LONDON, Sept en's record for the 100-yard dash, 26.—In an ef- the American Wom-| DE NTISTS | THIRO AND UP 211 The Big Point About a Bradbury Suit is the fact that it STAY* good looking. will Hundreds of Seattle's best dressed men have found clothes satisfaction in “Bradbury” Suits, and at prices ranging from $35 they certainly touch the limit in true value, And you can choose one today, because we offer you “CREDIT GLADLY” LATEST STYLES” OF COURSE but much more than that is offered to the woman ‘ who makes her choice at the “Eastern.” She is also offered a Dress Distinction which will afford that “Well Dressed” feeling in any Society under any condi- tions, ‘ Women of Stout Figure, too, will find a full range of styles and fabrics, And to all we offer “CREDIT GLADLY” 1332-34 Second Avenue