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> a ee eee SEATTLE MARKET OCCIDENTAL Big Saturday Specials | MEATS (Stalls 1-9) Steer Pot Roast ..... ‘< Spare Ribs Steer Boiling Beet . Loin Pork Roast Fancy Sugar Cured Strips, Ib. . BUTTER & EGGS §, (Stall 18) | Butter, 2 Fancy Tos. ..... Fresh Ranch Creamery (Stall 11) Halibut, 4 Ibs. Solmon Trout, BAKERY (Stall 12) 2 10cent loaves bread 13 dozen cookies ..... @ tbs. Demonstration of Magnet Coffee B35¢ per ib. None better. Snider's Catsup, bottle. .15¢ (With other purchases.) ‘2 large cans ea ate 25e¢ Peanut Butter, Ib. -.10¢ E. C. Cornflakes, pkg. Te 1 Ib. can Auto Club Baking Powder ze Two Ic bores Shaker Salt (With other purchases.) 20¢ sack salt --Ide GF) ® 5c rolls Toflet Paper..25¢ ff) Macaroni, Ib. se Gold Leat Catsup, bottle. ‘Se ‘Washington Milk, can ...5¢ 20¢ pkg. Farinose .. se Onequart can California Ripe BREE Aikiedccwssecate 15¢ FRUITS (Stall 10) 5e Lemons and Oranges, ei dozen Fancy “Apples, box Soft-ehelied Walnut: 3 Ibe. Florida Grapefrutt, 4 ‘tor Poo California Grapefruit 6 for | | { (Stall 17) | Tells | motive Engineers, conc! dh dreas to the arbitration board sit Hton by jn asserted Sto }counsel for the b }man commits a ert |makes a mistake, « lof cireumstnees, } }ceeds in getting a job at a! |a warrant for her mother’s arre '65,000 MEN ARE ‘WAITING RESULT OF ARBITRATION Engineers’ Counsel Denounces as Board Retires Decision ‘Blacklist’ for |HAS ELOQUENT PLEA Arbiters Freight Men 70 Hours Without Sleep. Work 1 9. em in vogue on Denouncing as nothing than a Warren & § f of the Brotherho: grand ting tm the federal buliding, and the doard with binding retired the promise that it would reach a dects-| April 30 on the differences between 95 Wea! rn railway compa nies and 06 employes and is pun-| ished, but always has a chance to} redeem himself Dogged by Employers “An engineer, who ts only human, under stress his head and talks back to an offictal, and | pron tly discharged © loss of his position ts pun | tahm ent many times over for one mistake But the roads do not stop there; he ts placed on the undesirable list; jhe goes to some other road and if he suc . takes up the broken threads of life aud starts In at the bottom, | starts atl over again “He works two, three or four told that satisfactory? “No; he is told his service is everything to be red, but hie reference is unsatisfactory and his services are no longer required. “Once the roads get it in for a man, they never quit dogging bim until they make his wife and chil-| dren hungry and the man a tramp." Work Inhuman Hours The chief executive of the en gineers declared that freight men toll hours that are inhu- je offered evidence to prove that men being on duty 20, 30 and 40 consecutive houre were common, and that even 60 and 70 hours were not unusual! Judge P. C. Pritchard of Ashe ville, N. C., is chairman of the ar bitration board. The other neutral member | Charles Nagel of Bt Loch ts MRS, TREVELYAN Well, It’s Here! Seattle Boy (LET 'EM TAG YOU, | IS PROSECUTED | Composes ‘Jitney Bus Rag’! FOLKS! IT’S FOR sors MOTHER RYTHER Mrs. Sarah Trevelyan, who won a long-fought legal battle Wednes- day and thereby proved her sanity jis now defendant in a charge of| | alleged slander brought by her daughter, Mra. Ada Bennett of 714 | Seventh ave. Through the prosecuting attor. ney's office, Mrs. Bennett secured Mrs. Trevelyan, who is 63 y old and well known fn Seattle NOTICE Every Article as Adver tised, Nothing ved. | Fixtures for Money Back, If Desired. oY Men’s Hats 1,000 Hats, Cased a 9B Note Location Faithful investigation does not | |reveal the young lady's name. Hut she's young, we're sure. And laweet. And intelligent—for she's thrifty She has a tame is Gua. | Now put yourself in her place for She's singing to Gus, to the moment and she must rhyme with Gus have a word all] $1.00 Boys’ Pants shapes and styles; val.| ordered sold at NEXT DOOR TO LIBERTY THEATRE sweetheart—and his STAR—FRIDAY, APRIL 9, 1915. $2.00 Cluett and Ide Dress Shirts ordered sold at at $1.00 Heavy Ribbed Under- wear ordered sold @Q@Qal mieten : 3.00 Boys’ Sh RETR RAS eit Lot 187 Men’s Suits, ne tlh od tee wag 98c ordered sold at.. 4c 10c C. Glo values to $15.00, ? 89 A Men’s Sweaters, values to poe Bs: phir! at. paps ordered sold at ......... a oe yee SI 39 $5.00, ordered sold 76¢ $1.00 Monarch and Lot 161 Men's Suits, $5.00 Men's H Work Me Cac cigmen seme Dress Shirts values to $18.00, Boat work age * 25c E. & W. Collars Oe ordered sold at..... ordered sold at Sedan a a “tpl $1 98 ordered sold at.. < $2.00 Wool Underwear _or-| nen’, $20.00 Suits and “sai Hi si ime? Calf Dress S it C ‘ e leavy al i = an ars By] C | Overconts, heavy Fal 6 68 Shoes ordered 9 ult Gases @ 35 Wool Sox age. | weights ordered sold at. DUO ica (AB 2.00 su a 89c 8 iced old ai Qc $2.50 Dress $7.50 Guaranteed — Work maar rg at eee at 4 ie, oil ‘ants Shoes, ordered x uit Cases | 5c Work Shirts BG) ecld avons eses. TH Bald at $2.98 |oricred sia =... 91.68 ff A Boys’ Suits $4.00 Boys’ Suits ordered sold at... $5.00 Boys’ Suits ordered sold at... $1.89 $2.48 aml ‘PAGE 11, to $7.50, ordered sold at ..... Hand-tailored $25 to Suits, all-wool garments; all sizes; ordered sold at. ORDERED SOLD! This Great $40,000 Stock of Men’s and Boys’ New Spring Cloth- ing, Shoes, Hats and Furnishings Ordered Sacrificed At a Great Loss Any reasonable offer accepted. Fixtures and all for sale. event ever attempted. Price no object. 8c $30 $8.85 ordered NOTICE—Doors Open at 10 A. M. Sharp Come early and take first pick. You will find every article strictly as advertised. RED FRONT CLOTHING COMPANY 1510 FIRST AVENUE The closing out of this immense stock will mark the greatest price-cutting T his entire stock has been ordered sold, and it will be, regardless of the loss entailed thereby. Sale Starts Saturday, April 10, at 10 A. M. Behold These Ridiculous Prices Ordered Men’s Clothing Men’s Slip-ons, values Walk-Overs, Gotzian’s, Chip- pewa, Florsheim, Selz, the Big Z and Dry Sox, all included in the following items: Lot Reincoats ‘dae Slip-ons, values to $15.00, 50c President style Suspenders ordered sold 11 c at 89¢c SHOES $2.50 Flannel Shirts ordered sold at 25c Men’s Sox $10.00 and $12.00 Trunks, : clearance q at a $2.98 Jurt Above Pike Street Opporite the Public Market —— declared a and kindred epi- public officials and doors, able good it is doing, funds. And Saturday, Aoril 17, you will have an opportunity to play the old-fashioned game of tag in downtown streets and office buildings. It will prob- ably be the liveliest game of jelety, is charged with uttering} if she were quarreling with him, jfalse and slanderons remarks in|she could find the word easily. She {the presence of Mrs. Mary B. Mar Jeoutd use “cuss.” or “fuss,” or jtin of the ¥. W. C. A. and Mrs./“muns,” depending on the size, na | Catherine Cox of 226 Third ave. {ture, complexion, and age of the |quarrel. But she fan't quarreling BOY RISKS LIFE FOR [GNORES QUARANTINE °° v0. 'i>-'sessic vette oe THIRTY-FIVE CENTS 6 5 still to chime, you know \e | So what is the young lady to \CARD; HE’S ‘PINCHED? ...°: Without keeping you further to we hasten to quote her. » not her words literally effect and substance, she thusly yme on, Gus, let's ride In a jit ney bus. Thus she proves she's thrifty, heretofore remarked go jitney joyriding? Or ttle Electric Co, motor WEBB CITY, Mo. April 9—| While Lee Mills, 19 years oid, wasithe city health department are on| returning to his home from a “mo-|the verge of war as a result of the x arrest of Deputy Assessor W. H vie” show, at a late hour, tw0/ sngevine at the instigation of a rough-bearded men stepped from be- | health officer. hind the corner of a building, each| Angevine ts charged with enter. holding an automatic revolver, and a a house under quarantine, de- “ ” |spite Ahe warning contained in a commanded, “Hands up.” Insteud) crise tever placard on the front of complying. young Mills, who was carrying an umbrella, used the lat- of the house. Angevine was released on his per- ter as a “spear” and attacked the) two hold-up men. |sonal recognizance. They fired and one shot took ef tect RESERVISTS LEAVE When young Mills was taken to a/ iwspital for treatment the doctur,; When the Jap liner Awa Maru thinking his patient must have 4/cleared at Smith's cove for the considerable sum of money with | East Friday morning she carried 26 him to have put up so fierce a Russian reservists bound for the front. The county assessor's office and | suapens These but in as man? But that's os far as Bernard B Brin goes this trip. Brin? He's the fellow who sur- rounded the story just related with words and music, He has named it “The Jitney Rus Rag.” “The Jitney Bus Rag” has been ing rapid headway, and before long Wetmore Whiskey Pebbleford full pint 4&@, full 4 pint Wine Muecatel, High-grade %, at T gallon, wi h LOEW'S EMPRESS BLOOD PORT, a TONIGHT SECOND SHOW THE BIG DANCING CONTEST Ir tion With OUR REC show Beer, care of. lestimated that the Northwest has| . > NT Te | AMUSEMENTS | TONIGH ONIGHT World's Biggest and Bost PEG O’ MY HEART) 100—ZIEGFELD BEAUTIES—100 sence ED REYNARD night, April In “FATHER'S WAY” SPATTLE KNOWS THIS ONE! Rainier fight against such odds, asked him) During the past three months it {s| “Oh, no,” replied Mills, “It isn't] contributed nearly 5,000 men to the| Js iL IT, ALL NEXT METROPOLITAN “Wark M 0 0 R ALL WEEK| FOLLIES ZIEGFELD With PEGGY O’NEIL ———— In ® Big Production ROCK abd | FULTON 100 and 200. Same Brilliant Cast—Production. if he wanted his valuables taken) necessary, as I only have 35 cents."|czar's fighting ength | nd SEATS NOW Matinee Saturday Stag [oon Errol pond apLag one | Mish, 26e,to $2, Mat. Sat., 256 Ww 81.50. The Great Ventriloguist All next week sterting Sunday A. BURT WEBNER & CO, Song Hits Olympia Lager, 4 50¢ German bottle Beer njunc An MIG Star Wants Ads find the lost articles. out only a few days, but it's mak-! arrangement, KEYSTONE LIQUOR CO. | CLOSING OUT Cumberland Whiskey Tramport Rye Whiskey Old Bourbon Whiskey BOTTLED IN BOND, PINT AND % CIAL—SATURDAY ONLY Guekenheimer, Foreign and Domestic worth from $1.50 to $5.50 KEYSTONE LIQUOR CO. 1123 First Ave., Corner Seneca | big on ‘the “tryouts” in local cafes, jand it will be one of the numbers on the Empress bill next week. It's | @ made-tin-Seattle song. Brin is well known here as a@ teacher of popular music. R. V. Knuppe, a piano player at a local cafe, assisted Brin with the music and a Seattle house published the song. } Per Bottle | 50c PINT, SPE- Cedar Run, Sunny ar 3rook, Port, Sherry, er HALF PRICE Alcohol, 188 per cent, full quart 85 Cents | morning for a week. }to eliminate uric acid by stimulat: | ing the kidneys to normal action, {with lthia the kind you ever played, for a score of women will be “it.” But emember that the purpose of t you won't mind when you yrecceee Ryther just takes them in. So let's be “caught” on Mother §| Ryther's Tag day. A dime could not go to a better ca fer “Blessings Received _Just as the mother snd her small son left the neighbor's | ‘Till be back again Inter,” house, where they had been call- | the boy. ing, the hostess handed the little | fellow a banana Use Star Wants Ads for Ref dear?” ad- | sults. “What do you say, monished his mother. ‘ he rome is to care for women and $2.25 Sherwin- hildren who, otherwise, would sotees, nave no place to go. Mother Williams and Ayther asks no questions of a| other standard woman who comes to her door wi baby fn her arms, asking f shelter. There is no red MANY CASES OF Says and Avoid Exposure Meat Eat L dry, of water, exposure, keep feet eat le meat, drink lots | above all, astonally acid to keep ous toxin, called uric actd, which generated in the bowels |sorbed into the blood. It is t function of the kidneys to filt it out in the urine, The pores ing the blood of this impurity. damp and chilly, skin pores are closed, and and fail to eliminate this uric ac ness and pain called rheumatism, At the first twinge of rheum four ounces of Jad Salts; put |tablespoonful in a glass of wat land drink before breakfast eac! This Is sal lthus ridding the blood of these tr purities less and is meade from the acid grapes and lemon jJulee, combine overcomes uric acid and Is bene! celal to your kidneys as well. tap RHEUMATISMNOW We Must Keep Feet Dry, Stay off the damp ground, avoid and, take a spoonful of salts down uric Rheumatism is caused by- poison and ab- this acid from the blood and cast | the skin are aiso a means of free-| cold weather the | thus fore: | ing the kidneys to do double work, |they become weak sluggish | and muscles, causing stiffness, sore. | tism, get from any pharmacy about Jad Salts is inexpensive, harm and is used with exce lent results by thousands of folks who are subject to rheumatism Here you have a pleasant, effer vescent lithia-water drink whic! | th ‘or e. | brands of Ready Mixed Paint, $1.47 While It Lasts --None to Deal- ers. All Colors. $1.00 foot Simonds’ Royal Chinook Crosscut and Falling Saws, 53¢ foot. $2.00 Steel Solid Socket Peavies, for $1.19. $2.00 Kelly Handmade Warranted Double - bit Axes, 97¢. $3.50 Handmade Solid Is he er | of} In| which keeps accumulating and clr. Steel Snatch —_ Blocks, culating through the system, $1.73. eventually settling in the joints 75¢ Simonds’ 2-Man Crosscut Saws, 33¢ foot. ~ 25¢ E. C. Atkins’ Cross- al cut saw Handles, 14¢ er | each, h 1$c Simonds’ 8-imch id Flat Saw Files, 4¢. 10c Steel Wedges, 4¢ Ib. 905 Rail road Ave. n- | of 1 i h fi- WORKING] ON THE NEW DOCK! Crowding GOT TO LET GO! Our Bulky Goods! Alaska Hardware Co." ssa” Six ft. high, 900 sq. feet Galvanized? They're 2-in. mesh Poultry Wire $2.79 a roll. Us Out! We Need the Room! $2.00 1-Man Crosscut $1.25 Round handle Saw, 98¢. Post-hole Diggers at $2.50 E. C, Atkins’ Sil- | 73¢. ver Steel Hand Saws, $1.25 4-tine Spading $1.49. Forks, 63¢. $3.25 Myers’ Brass $1.25 5-tine Hand Cul- tivators, 69¢. 35c Garden Hoes and Rakes, 19¢. $3.00 Galvanized Barbed Wire, 80 rods to Spray Pumps, $2.19. 40c Alabastine and Ce- mentico Kalsomine, 17¢ pkg. $1.25 Swedish Grass Scythes, 83¢. the reel, $2.19. $1.00 Cobbler Repair 65c ‘Carpenters’ Steel Sets, 53¢. Nail Hammers, 29¢, 25c «= 4-foot_—- Folding 75c Pruning Shears, Rifles, 12¢. 39¢. 65c Brass Hose Bibs, $1.25 Block Planes, 29¢. . 83e¢. $1.00 ,Long Handle $3.50 Clayton or Lam- round point Steel Shovels | bert Gasoline Blow 57¢. Torches, $2.19.