The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 27, 1915, Page 3

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POOR FITZ! HE “ASSERTS HE'S PERSECUTED! James Fitepatrick, handsome a | Greek god, fashionable as a pletor . jelothing advertisement, dashing as a matinee idol--what sort of & man is he? Tho police and the Bel! Telephone | |} Co, say he is the slickest pay tele-| |phone thief tn the world, | Fitspatrick says he is no thief,! | but a victim of pollce persecution. | This man of mystery was found \not guilty of being @ vagrant by a jury in police court yesterday, Parly }in the morning of December 80, {t Ke testified, two detectives | | | Talking Machin Terms Cut in H No Interest This Superb Victrola, built in fumed, weathered or Flemish oak or ma- hogany, fully equipped with automatic brake, complete set of Record Albums, a very powerful motor and a wonderful shadowed him, but lost him in the tives thought it was Fitzpatrick. ThTey didn't see) how they could be mistaken, But one was under the impression that the man they shadowed wore a Wee IK a slicker, The other detective TERMS CUT IN HALF THIS WEEK. Jcouldn’t remember @ slicker. NO INTEREST. | eee | | Fitzpatrick, tall, erect, lithe and muscular, walked briskly to the stand, with an easy stride that a movie actor might envy; placed the tips of his beautifully-manteured fingers together with nice exact- ness; flashed a charming smile jupon the jury, showing two rows of perfect white teeth, and declared in a volce well modulated and must- eal, that on the night tn question he was snug in bed, having retired early that night, as was his cus- tom. The Victrola illustrated here is a splendid instru- ment, with a triple spring motor, automatic brake, six Record Albums, Rec- ord Index and a good supply of needles. Built . And th fe a ht in fumed oak or mahog-| | wine °°" Reacts GV, ~ Pri 1 at... . $150 Four times have the police gone to the mat fn court with Fitzpatrick, | and four times Fitzpatrick has beaten them. All they have “on” him ts that in 1905 a California jury found him guilty of breaking into a telephone box, and he was sentenced to the penitentiary. The governor com- TERMS CUT IN HALF THIS WEEK. NO INTEREST. The Columbia Grafonola : . muted the sentence after five! here pictured is one of the desea | Detective Mark Hubbard, veteran latest models, has the new No. 6 Reproducer, the new steel-plate unit Motor, a load, brilliant tone. Great for dancing. Certain that higher soon prevail, dealers in butter are ‘holding onto their stock, few de- sirtng to sel! at the present quota | itions. Holders regard their stocks as good property The ese market Storage stocks have jup, leaving Chinese ¢ the {sole survivor in the competition against the fresh rarch stock fe stil) firm been cleane Cal. celery, per or Cal. celery, dom Parsiey . Rhubarh, local, hothouse. Cal. tomatoes Maymen Winesape ... Rome Beauties .... i o te oie @ ite @ito iis ie 1519 Third Ave., Between Pike and Pine. 0 VICTOR—EDISON DIAMOND DISC—COLUMBIA RECORDS. Bf sprourn se Sciling Prices to Ketaller tor bd i Batter, Kane and & fnecse | by the Mradaer Co. ‘Corrected daily UOK | JEROME QUITS NEW YORK, Jan. 27.—William nn CHICAGO, Jan. 27.—Direc- | T. Jerome declined today to com- tors of the mail order house | ment on the dispatches from Al- cof ef Sears, Roebuck & Co. ar- |bany announcing that he had been|™**'*"™ *r'* : ranged to “cut a melon” Satur- | dismissed by Attorney General) Oregon triplets as Limburger Domestic wheel . Young America Local creamery day. A 25 per cent dividend, amounting to $10,000,000, will be declared. Woodbury eral. The former New York prosecu- tor is said to have desired for some time to sever his connection with the prosecution of Harry Thaw. He has been so intimately con nected with the case and has fought Thaw so relentlessly that he ha been commonly known as Thaws vemesis. A Message to Thin, |‘ Weak, Scrawny Folks|2* ‘DOUBLE FUNERAL deputy attorney gen- Prices Paid Producers Poultry, Veal and ‘The Pen Speciatixt 117 Madison st. | James st prices will) STAR—WEDNESDAY, JAN, 27, 1915. thief-catcher, has for Mitzpatrick a fort of admiration which verges on reapect I'll get you get, bard bluntly And Fitzpatrick Bughs. “Thia I know," saya °Wubbard, “that when Fita ta tn jatl, the pay telephones are safe, When Fits ts at large the telephon ympany roars in pain as the reports come p of looted boxe 4.” . When Fitspatric k was fn durance time before last, noteone pay telephone was robbed. He was liberated November was rearrested December During this time, when “ was at large, the pay-telephones were robbed at the rate of aix and eight a day and the company lost 700. Fitz,” says Hub Since December 80 no “Jobs” of this kind have been reported. oe Whoover the thief fs, hg makes play of opening th outest double box fn less than The telephone police say Fitzpatrick has operated in every city on the coast and that he costs the company thousands of dollars a year, Fitzpatrick smiles a slow, aad smile and says he finds annoying these police interruptions of the otherwise smooth course of a blame- less life. SAVE S.R. S. CAR FROM DISASTER Presence of mind of Gill Swets, toamater, 1701 20th ave, 8., averted an accident on the &., R. & 8. line Tuesday, which might have result ed in a heavy loss of life. The brake on car No, 106, south- | bound, heavily loaded, got out of or. der as the car proceeded acrons Swets was alongside with his team and heard the brake snap. Jumping down, he selzed a big timber from the courthouse site, raced back and threw the block under the trucks. Although the car had gathered considerable momentum, the wood jammed un- der the Juice box, and the wheels stopped Fourth ave, at that point has a grade of 15 per cent MARKET REPORT | ar | eu ‘or @ 0% | Pork, 4 oe ° Aifaita, No not Puget sound oats Harley MY TIRED FEET ACHED FOR “TIZ” Let your sore, swollen, aching feet spread out in a bath of “TIZ” Just take your shoes off and then put those weary, shoe-crin kled, aching, burning, corn-pes the only remedy that draws out all the poisonous exudations which puff up your feet and cause foot torture. Get a 25-cent box of “TIZ” any drug or department store don't wait. Ah! how glad your feet get; how comfortable your shoes feel. You can wear shoes a size smaller if you desire HOW GOOD THAT at It Gets to That Sore Spot Like Magic An Easy Way to Gain 10 to 30 ibs.! of Solid, Healthy, Permanent ih Fi ‘Thin, nervous, undeveloped men and! women everywhere ate heard to say, “| nb con't endoretand why 1 do not eet fat. t| KENT, Jan, 37—It has been de 30 DA Y Ss just thin - "| ecided to hold joint funeral services | for Elien Waag of Kent and Anders «|Tefgen of Tacoma, who were drown ed while skating Monday night on tiy| Clark lake. The bodies were recov *lered yesterday. "l'rhe accident occurred when Tel CUT PRICES FREE EXAMINATION etions or urging the stomach # nd fats and hand them over to the bic intestines to 1 to take ther alive. 5.00 3.50 Full Set of Teeth.... Porcelain Crown..... Gold Fillings .. -81.00 Q T ANAMA Silver Fillings ++. SOG UAKE A P, Seige Serreril Ran ts toe pict ite race mveel ame mates | PANAMA, Jen, 27-—An earth- ‘All work guaranteed 15 years. tym. be thy flesh are ie ed over|quake, the third in three days, Lene point, Bartell Dene Ce tawteta| frightened the Inbabltants, but did Pharmacy and other good druggists have| no damage. He whole-| in “STEAMER DISABLED 4 on ELECTRO PAINLESS NTISTS oun, Opp. Public Market People’s ventists HALIFAX, N. rs Jan, 27,.—The Saf Francisco Belgian relief steam er Camino was towednto port by the steamer Lady Laurier, She was disabled. remarkable results in overcoming nervy dyspepela and general stomach trouble it should not be taken unless you are willing to gain 10 pounds or more, for It ts & wonderful flesh bullder—advertise- meat, | FOR LAKE VICTIMS 25¢ Cent Reductio where they may reach the starved.|gen'sskate came loose and he fell, fi Per C regular prices. . shrunken, run-down tissues and bulid| breaking the ice. The girl tripped ag si ——. FP mae {nin person's body Is lik and the two of them and two others | ‘ 22K Gold Crow’ 5.00) nis of which ft te being ae.) went through. The bodies of Miss| Bridgework ... . 85.00 a by the failure of the alimentary) Waag and Telgan never came up| A-a-h! That's delicious relief foritaking a Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablet {that ‘tame muscles, those stiff Joints, after meals you will relieve the gee Broce clean, White/ stomach of its chief duty and al-| | ointment, made with the oll of mus-|1oW It the rest it needs to recuper tard and’ pther home simples ate. One g etive prin | ‘It does the work ‘a the old-fash-|ciple in a & t's Dyspepsia Tab |foned mustard plaster, minus the/let digests 3,000 grains of food, plaster and minus the blister! |whether you’ place it in a glass You simply rub MUSTHROLE on) jar with cooked food or in your the spot where the pain is—rub it on briskly—and the pain is gone. ‘colness. And best of all, no blisters like the old-fashioned mustard plas | ter used to make. Bronchitis, Tonal for Sore Throat |iltis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma Neuralgia, Heads |Pleuriay, — Rheum and Aches Paeumonia) At your druggist’s, in jars, and a apecia |for $2.60 Re sure you get the genuine MUS Refuse imitations for, The Muste land, OF and boc SING RAGTIME; . bunion-tortured feet of yours | tere in a “TIZ" bath. Your toes will] wriggle with joy: they'll look up at you and almost talk and then they'll take another dive in that TIZ” bath. When your feet feel Ike lumps of lead—all tired out—Jjust try “T1Z." It's grand—it's glorious Your feet will dance with joy; also you will find all pain gone from corna, callouses and bunions. There's nothing like “TIZ.” It's MUSTEROLE FEELS! : There is nothing Ike MUSTEROLE large hompital size PAGE 3. DOMINIONMEN SHOOT CRAPS By William G. Shepherd LONDON, Jan, 13-—-(By Mall to New York,)—The Canadian army le thoroughly American, Not only does it use American siang, sing American songs and use emphatic American cuse words, but th irit of the men le America’ nd independ- ent. It Ie because of thie fact that the Canadians hav eon held In Salisbury plains. This Is best shown by # quar rel overheard between an: Eng lish major and a Canadian fel- low officer, “It was terrible,” the Rnglishman declared, “the way you Canadians came into. London, Your officers and privates gathered together in the bars and drank together. You ean't build up an army with such familiarity.” “But that ts the way wo have to build it up,” replied the Ca nadian with a show of heat. “A Canadian soldier has no tilusion about his officers. He knew them in private life and he knows what they are worth.” “You haven't got our idea at all,” | said the Briton, “It's paternalism in our army. I am the father of my men. They ask advice and they have confidence in me. If I was familiar with them they would not do so, A soldier in not expected to have any individuality, His only duty {s blindly to obey his supe riors,” “Well, none of that stuff would go with us,” replied the Canadian “Our men are from Missourt and must be shown. Then it took half an hour for the Canadian to explain what “from Missouri” meant Out in the corrugated metal huts, where the Canadians live when not drilling, the great game is craps Recause play hours are short, poker cannot be tndulged in to any extent, The Canadians were astonished to find that they could not buy dice in London They had to draw epocitiantions/ to have then made. | | ANOTHER LETTER TO DICK (Copyright, 1915, by the Newspaper Enterprise Association.) It doen seem to me, dear Dick, that the Waverly family have got ten thelr affairs Into a most awful snarl and I do hope you can come bome very soon. I called up Mr. Selwin left you were expecting to be home before this, I suppose some other you will be with me as soon as Help Your Instant Rellef from Gai and Pains Quickly Comes from the Use of Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets FREE SAMPLE PACKAGE TO ALL this) bome. morning and he said that when he/ complications have arisen and that) Stomach: Indigestion | 9c Pair, Men's Merino Wool Sox, worth 200, In natural, Oxford and black, $4.98 DRESS SKIRTS $1.98 Just 26 of these Skirts, which had been selling at $3.98, $4.98, to close out, ‘your pick $1.98. $4.50 Silk Waists Silk and Messaline Waists to clone out be fore Inventory. Satl Serge Women’s 75¢ Union Suits cut to .... 48¢ Misses’ 75c Union Suits cut to 49c Women’s $2.00 Union Misses’ $1.00 Union pony Of Women’s $1.50 Union So... 9Be cut to Misses’ 75c Vests and Pants cut to .. .49c Women’s $1.25 Union cut to for possible. I want you, dear, all myself, 1 also want you to straighten things over at your mother’s. 1 know how you hate a fuss and a turmot! (doesn't any man run rather than to get into a family row?) but it seems to me that only you can straighten things out at While I think, dear, that you did the very best possible thing in putting Mary in the book- shop, it is going to make a lot of| trouble before you can convince |your mother and Jack that it ts/ right } Your mother is chafing because/ she thought she could have money) whenever she asked for it, and) Jack is furious because Mary will! not let him rob the cash drawer after every sale. I feel very sorry for your mother, | Dick, but unless something is done to straighten things out she Is go- Jing to make us all miserable, and| i am sure it is not right for alll of us to be at swords’ points just but out Feeling in the stomach is not nat- ural. When you know you have a stomach it Is time.to help it. Gas, fern tation, foul breath, ete. ind. jeate this, Accept the warning and act at once T is no. occasion to suffer from indigestion or any similar stomach trouble when you can so easily get Stuart's Dyspepsia Tab lets There is scarcely a well-stocked or general store in the United States, but what considers these tablets part of their staple stock Do not suffer in silence. Try} | |Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets and do » quickly so that you may pme r old self as soon as possible. The reasons why Stuart's Dys pepsia Tablets are such a widely used remedy are derstand, These tablets contain al- most the same elements as the gas. © julees of the stomach, And} | working just right, It does not give jout enough of the natural digestive | |julces to properly take care of the |food you eat. So if you will only |give the stomach a Iittle help by {stomach after you have eaten the 7, | food. No muss, no bother, Just comfort- - ino’ doothing rellet-first a gontle| All druggists sell Stuart's Dys- lyiow, then ® delightful sense of|pepsia Tablets, and once you try them you will never again wonder what to do for a disordered, weak, sour and gassy stomach Stuart's Dyspepsi for sale at all duiggists at box Send coupon below today and |we will at once send you by mall, a sample free. Free Trial Coupon F. A, Stuart Co, 150 Stuart Building, Marshall, Mich. send me at once, by return mail, a free trial rkage of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets 50e a Name Street city very easy to un when your stomach {s sick and not| ablets are | because we cannot allow one bigot-| ed old woman to run our entire \affairs. You know I am not saying] {this in anger or in anything but| |the kindest feelings toward your mother, but she has already made jall of us very unhappy. 1 am afraid for Mollie. Dick, Mollie has her life to live, Her | happiness ts before her, Your moth- er has lived hers. We must pro- tect your sister from constant and uncalled-for fault-finding. 1 do not think any one but you, her oldest son, can get matters straight. T) Pre-Inventory Sale! Stock taking will wind up February 1st. remarkable for the bargai $12. $2.69 | $5.65 out before Inventory. CLEAN-UP SALE Boys’ $2.50 Schoo Shoes at hrs ih box calf, kangaroo grain leather, with good heavy soles; sizes 2 to 5%. 29c 9c aad An Norfolk $3. .29 Suits at.... A big clean-up before Inventory in Nor folk and Double-breasted Suits; splendid less than $5.00. (ed at 8:15 Wednesday night in the! on @ guaran teed spring roller, for Wednesday, each The remainder of this week will be ins we will offer in all departments. $1.98 HOUSE DRESSES 68c 10 dozen of these Dresses, which had been $1.00, $1 $1.50 and $1.98, to close now 68¢ each, For Dollar Petticoats Several dozen to close out, 48e each. About $20.00 Dresses $9.75 Elegant Motre, saline, Poplin ina Serge Dresses to close out before Inventory. 50 Dresses $7.50 Waists $3.98 Reautiful Lace, Chif- fon and Satin Watsts; $6.50 and $7.50; to close out before Inventory, in, Pongee and Dresses to close A Great Opportunity to Buy Small Lots of Good Merchandise at a Frac- tion of their Actual Value Before Inventory. 84 Splendid Huck C Towels, size 18x36; worth 15c; good, heavy, even weave huck, with red borders, 25 yard, Tennis Fian- C nels, regular 500 grade, 80 inches wide. Col- ors, gray, pink, blue, green and lavender, in plain stripes suitable for ladies’ and chil- dren’s waists and men’s shirts, Dressee for chil- $1.48 sonia” woot serge and corduroy, tailored; worth $2.50; 2 to 6 years. Half price on remnants of Laces, Ribbons and Em- broideries, on tables, Center Aisle, Main Floor. 39¢ Beretta ag length, all sises; just for a clean sweep, 89. $1.98 sturdy Shoes, with plenty of Each—Bed Sheets, worth 50c; full size, nice quality sheeting. » worth 12%c; 42x36, Pillow Cai quality sheeting; school wear; not one of them worth afraid that I'll get used to your absence? Wives have been known to forget as well as husbands, you know. There, dear, I did not mean to write that, but, having written it, I am going to let it stay. Aunt Mary said to me the other day that if one only forgot one did not need to forgive. Perhaps some day [ will forget you and then I won't have to forgive you for not writing to your Ww (To be continued tomorrow.) ORCHESTRA TO PLAY A musical evening will be enjoy- of $1.00 or more. Plant and Office, 10th Ave. and E. Union. E. 849—Phonee—E. 1164. We Cali and Deliver Promptly. Y. M. C, A. auditorium, when the 25- | piece “Y.” orchestra, conducted by Harry C. Gardner, a local young business man, will give its first re- cital. List your vacant rooms in May fix schedule for opening of opening °f' Star Want Ads. Spokane drawbridge. WE ARE THE UNDERTAKERS And the only ones today in Seattle who stand for a decent cost on all funerals, The trust undertakers are doing everything in their power to retard our truly marvelous growth—but the public are with us heart and soul, We are fighting the just fight—and we believe the day has passed for the hundreds of undertakers who take advan- tage of the hour of grief to prey upon those who at that time | |and come home as soon as you can, Without Dad's restraining hand |the expenses In the old house will be so large that the profits of the! bookshop cannot take care of them, | Already your mother has spent the hundred and fifty dollars ap: |portioned her monthly for new | mourning gowns, Aunt Mary says. You see, she has no idea of the value of mone | Mollie could rent the home, furn- I think if she and! fail to consider the justice of “the funeral bill.” This Beautiful Black Broadcloth Casket trimmed with six sil- lished, and board somewhere, per- haps modestly furnishing their own| rooms, you could get at a battery | basis of expenses, Your mother is very much censed at Mary, and I think, Dic jyou will have to tell her that it | was at your instigation that Mary was made co-trustee with you, Mary is doing wonderfully well, I think the shop was never so prosperous. She {s very anxious to add to the “old book” section, It seems that she knows something of the value of first editions, etc., and she says that is where |money {s made. You can talk this over when you get home, but I think, my dear, it is hardly fair is elate her in any particular, Jack is positively unkind to her, not understand how two brothers can be so different from each oth- er, And here you have been gone had one letter from you, Ali the news that I have had is when T have called up the office. T have not done this very often, Dick, dear, for it has hurt my pride to let have not heard from you, Aren't you sometimes a little tne| the) to make Mary work as hard as she! does for people who do’ not appre-| T can-| from me six weeks and I have not; your stenographer know that 1} ver and cloth handles, silver name plate, engraved, satin lined. Trust price $75 to $100, Our independent $30 price seeeeeee d OUR SPECIAL $75 FUNERAL The above casket, as described, strong outside box, laying out, shaving, bathing and dressipg remains, embalming, pedestals, rugs, chairs, floral piece or crepe for door, candlestick and candles, when required, elegant auto hearse, ¢wo autos, advertising death in news- Paper, personal services in arranging and conducting funeral, with attendants, and free use of parlors, This funeral duplicated by any othor nudertaker would cost not less than $150, Our price $73. | | We are as close to you al your phone, and closer in quick service than the undertaker nearest you. All calls answered immediately by quiet auto service, witho tra charge, regardless of distance. anerals conducted in alk parts of the cit suba with extension handles, price $100, Massive oak and mahogany caskets by other undertakers from $200 to $400 Cremation—Prices Charged by Other Under- takers, $20 to $35. Our Price $10 No ong dares dispute the truth of thafabove statements, We giv « man @ square deal whem he needs a equare deal, and he surely needs It when a funeral Is necessary, Children’s funeral rateg omp-half that charged by ether undertakers, FREMONT UNDERTAKING COMPANY Cafton & Finnegan, 3515 FRemont Ave. Auto Ambulance Service ne North 220, Day or Night Cheaper Funerals, if Deaited, for $20, $40 and $60. PLEASE NOTE NAME AND PHONE NUMBER We are as close to you as your nearest telephone. Calls answered tly to every part of the city and subarbs, sold |

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