The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1915, Page 6

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PHON®S rie MAIN Sem |} FUNERAL NOTICE Bivo STAT tT ‘The Star Want Ad Rates ire ls Bix times ¢ eopr t . ® . ‘ FOR SALE FURNITURE Per tine pe Bix tasertior 4 10 per cent J Fait | BLACK WHEL. FURS 117 i Be Within 10 days atter ¢ spcitias bandeicbiemilet Abiper cent ‘ 1 days « WANTE D ~~ FURNITURE nnn | HAR ACPA UNS a PHOTO SUPPLIES “so LOWMAN & HANFORD CO : This directory is intended)... 4°) gre © for the convenieyce of any one) ~~ ~ BS desiring something a little out|§ ISCELLANKOUS Of the ordinary in their daily ‘ieee: adbolen Seeds and requiring it in a Bvevything © hurry. The firms represented #11 Unty S below make a specialty of im- SNSSISREENS i mediate service and will glad ene oe = fy furnish any information " se is necessary. Remember Satisfaction is guaranteed by every advertiser. © Just Use Your Telephone! TOOK WERE Fi~ Harein Store Occidental are rner Matn, selle new RA eccond-hand suite and overcoats map, edd conta. dhe up! pants, 60 hata and shoea S80 Up: watches ha eo: toole mons, trunks Jowest prices matt ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW | RUSSEL Fikee aw Y Wik F General practice : ind wife consultat “RPE 108? 0 years’ exp GLASS, Rusband and’ wife, property right) "AND HARDWaRm, ONE-THIRD LESS Seana ‘ GONSULTATION PREF, Rooms | 406 Etiers ete Bi ae. Mate | igWaia| “8% FOR Catatonun wo. tt |224 BUSINESS PERSONALS pis, 35 rears’ experience In Chicago} B DOORS |” “ARTIFICIAL TEETH ee book « . AUTO DELIVERY =} DWIFr Mra Wh le a. BY 60. | $2.50 R82. 60 ara res me AUTO DELIVERY C0.|.02-00 62.00 on oe erence 4 te | with “aphert Caen WANT clndeer sas chscn Te BILLIARD TABLES aA tometriat 237 Rpler Wieck. Broken! ain 4 Ay wiiniard ie . | WARSHALT ELD & COL SPIRITUAL MEDIUMS “WADAM DINTA oTIAN PHRENOLOGIST ‘BRI LOO. 200-2-4 First Fife CaANapiaN HANK oF Head off! Teronto, Branches in Canada. et fhe business, Interest allowed fnge and time deposits fo Branch, Mr FE. CARPENTERS the Pianos POR Ke Ireland SPIRITUAL MEDIUMS MADAM ALEXANDRA EGYPTIAN —Kieciric sian fheyal Cafe | RRRPECTABLE place to borrow © nd jewelry: low Fr | offte ‘American Jeweiry Co. & Second 9 FOR SALE—LIVESTOCK FEDTGREED HOSTON TERRIERS for CHATTEL LOANS ania. Phone North 121. @. 4 r POULTRY TROGHORN chicks 1 00 per 100 Red, Barred Rocks $150 dozen. Pacific Poultry Co, 108 Elliott $612 Keneca st D__|14 LOST AND FOUND Richt & MeLEOD Mbeemnnt. reliable deulvery: 8 CHIROPRACTOR __ D- Palmer gradu Exrent ede Bide work. Hs Produce heniine where othere fall 24 #OR RENT, Fernished. F. We can save you money on ¥ ur ure DEPOSIT VAULTS FI ne Saari ae Mais Wek wane) Pt a Go — Tite First av 8. Binet i ran ceca |" mianegaparpenin amt Barber MODERN om waltes tor rent and $2.76. 16164 Seven ong Noakes snd wie. |25 For ct AL ee husband and w 7 jawyer, practice 615 N—Woman general confidential 1 Baitiine 109 Main st Wants men and women to learn the bar MOLE ber trade, Wages paid while learting . an 1000 A A AA We assist you in securing positions Original Moler syetem of | ATO D aa STORAGE } OPTICIANS FRASER PATERSON OPTICA Z. W. Edmunds, Oph. D University. Popular p? 22 A Becond and Main 2174 PHOTOGRAPHERS “Photos that p are im JOWN® 213 Liberty Bide PLUMBING ie at VERY PERSONALS PRETTY Miss aby to $4 ‘ plays piar heated and phone. Tranatent, 25 17 an mene eulte & ar Tm ‘ Bronbwey TRA Nar “25 at 09 hats. 1605 let ne | ee RK and household goods move: ast 902 C vs NFURNISHED APTS. MUSIC 20 MALE SITUATIONS | uNFueNisiieD Es seme PF eat; elt agg caer te aed. Fico #16 Se wn Bank Ride ee ~ - Kitchen HAUTHAN PLUMBING & WRATING CO arrinton, ibis} 18-120 King. Seatt “- HOTEL BUR Physicians and ‘Surgeons nd painted: hot and cold water; free rv Grant Tucker Pe Cuna eens Sframn 22 to 10, | Co ARAAAARARAAAAAARARAAA ee a | 2 to @ wid ‘27 FURNISHED ROOMS Ba ASHTON—O10 American Bank Wide | er ows + i _ STORAGE \ii mart fa Are you ln aay ibaa AE | gain Glob. Ladice tren Aae'P. vena |” e: prive ; now hag ~ 211 Union, Apt R. 409 ee i i. r Farnishe ‘ K. Denn ~_- 7 ‘4 WELL ‘DRILLING AND FORSTEMED 7 Tarance Went w TESTING Oaoe ie PATENT ATTORNEY APL @ nan tind ERED P.GORIN — Faieot tor) paw Kets bovg : s HOUSE 3 MESH BAGS repaired. 402 People’s Bank | “YY Y ~~” i «| _ Bide. »9 BOARDERS WANTED - 4 e Bid) GET ACQUAINTED = BU at amiee stp A 5 r aio tT . 5 5 WTD MISCE LLANEOUS TAO Pine Mat Ge 90 por, week, 1218 'W. 87th, one 6 AUTOS FOR SALE Sn WRIT T arian | 33 RE NTALS & Mach "ay 2) ad all at offic Sas D. as JAN PRADA DIAL AIA ARAL | TT ‘ “ 414 Bitel Mid MOTORCYCLES | it si te TORCYCLER— New and #vco sa hand’ | EAVANAUGITH 42-06 iorneay| WATER FRONT LAND INDIAN MOTORCYCLES. ‘Ballon w| MIRE JEWHIA—MANIGURING 110% | WATHR FRONT aaa ia Wana Wright, 007 B Pike st, near Broadway, _ Third. office 10 Price $46.00 per acre. Oscar Krown Whos Bast 471. JENVER DY WORKS, 1906 Beventh, city Bangor, Wash. 1915. PAGE 6, STAR—TUESDAY, JUNE 1, my 51 REAL “ th, 1% city ys hwina erty make b NOW Bi Main 9400 Seattle Star |40 BUSINE Ss CHANCES } SANITARY ACREAGE LET t YOU MORE TELL THREE LAKF SNOHOMISH CO, WASH ne area WESTLAKE Where « 4 , THERE ARE MANY | ADVANTAGES you US DIRE 4 E. H. MEIKI Land Dept, 1701 THREE EJOHN, Mer ide LAKES ¢ o rocLrny AND DAIRY MANCHE | land, foi LAST WIGNT } WAS ) OVEN A SUR PRISE PARTY? PUGRT sort BUT SAY HEY QIONT Foe mg OWE BF" NO'AS SCON AS THEY ALL MARCHED INTO THE HOUSE JANEW WHAT 17 WAS! * ay, Price tas $10 4 and $5 5 fn WH. HEINZ ‘ Rank Fide 10 AC SRES } ONLY vr | ot an Mon | L. J. MARSH & CO., 1209 34 AVE. A INVESTMENTS etinent Co, 403 Lumber Bx 43 REAL ESTATE ° ¢ | HO—HOUSE AND 1081450 CASH, 15 ON PHILY |! ‘ . ‘a | STATE L OANs| red, for wale by Je a THAT wAs |) avea@! | In the picture above, Maj. J. G ernor, is seen reading one day's pl |life. More than 100,000 have been “/THE WHOLE NATION PLEADS FOR LIFE OF LEO FRANK \Petitions Would Make Pile Higher Than Tower That Holds Him Perry, secretary to Georgia's gov le of petitions to save Leo Frank's received. Below, the latest photo: lgraph of Frank, taken the day he was sentenced to be hanged on June | 22. “BILLIE BURKE -TICKLES FOLKS | AS “MISS JERRY’ Mins tler at t night and and evening T Billie Burk lovelier th sweeter, pret will repeat theatre to- tan wdny Jerry way she charmed her audience last night would not be half ex pressing it. When you have once tjseen Hillle Burke, you love her >| There tn only one Billie Burke She creeps into your very being robs you of yourself and makes your heart laugh and «ing with hers, and hers ts always singing As for “Jerry,” she ts Billie Burke herself, She is a happy girl with a staid old mother, whom you |want to shake for her stupidity Jerry,” who just can't hel ing a lively, loving girl, sets about to love a man, and does it. But Jerry's” mother can't “see it When you have seen “Jerry, you will know why it is New York hee kept Hillle Burke so long with out letting her out of the dooryard oe | | PANTAGES Everybody Pantages was and evening | Margaret vandevilled thronged Monday afternoon Edwarde—you remem ber, she was in “The Hypocrites,” or do you’—very pretty, is an aw fully cute little bare-legged dancer. Oh! The Six Kirksmith Sisters, also pretty, appear in melodies and in. strumental numbers. The Fiying Fishers, Jim Halley and J ers; Fisher, Schaffer & Rockway ngers, and the Three Webber Sis. ters in acrobatic stunts, complete |the bill | acrobats; eee _ EMPRESS Dairy Maids,” eight of them, are headliners at the Empress, and ably so, Theirs s a musical revue of songs Written expressly for their act The Way Out” ia a thriller, It nas to do with convicts, who es jcape to meet again after one han) |turned “square” and the other |hasn't. The remainder of a good | bill is made so by Maestro, a pan- tomimist; “Just Married,” a com, edy skit, and Ed and Jack Smith in songs and dances. MOORE The favorite operas, Rusticana and “I Pagliacet,” be sung tonight by the | Grand Opera company at the Moore | theatre “Cavalleria will afternoon | Noble, sing: | italian | DO YOU WANT TO SAVE A LIFE? IT IS AN EASY TASK: BY HENRY woop United Press Staff Corr (By New York.)—Fifty typhus victims and oidiers lie in hospi tals and isolation camps in Ser- bia today, without even a bed or cheap mattr to their suffering, stretched out on the ground or the hard floor. Thousands of these diseased sufferers are still clothed in the | same germ-infected garments | they wore when they were first brought in. There is nothing | here to replace them. Hundreds of fever patients are dying dally from a lack of thermom eters to ascertain the seriousness of thetr condition. There is a cry ing need for gauze for the wounded, for clean clothing for the typhus | victims, for beds, for mattresses, for blankets, for all sorts of medical | supplies and surgical instruments. for the simplest things that will give the herole little band of physi- | clans and Red Cross nurses an even | chance in the fight against death, Makes Appeal for Help Lieut. Col. V. M. Soubotitch, head of the Serbian Red Cross, detailed | these conditions to me today He asked the arry the appeal both to the Ameri- an government and the people for NISH, Serbia, April 2 Mail to dom. The condition in Serbia is with out a parallel,” said the Red Cross leader. “We had in our hospitals ja few days ago 46,902 patients, and the number was steadily increasing. “Of these 7,704 are soldiers re covering from battle wounds. Near. ly all the remainder are typhus vie- tims. And these figures do not take into account the sweep of the ept- {demic thru the civilian population, |where there must be at least 100, Enumerates Nation's Needs | “Serbia does not lack food. But she does jack the most elementa medical, surgical and hospital sup} | Dites. We have 113 hospitals where vic- tims are under treatment. Not rsd of them has a complete set of | struments “We have urgent need right now. for 3,000,000 yards of gauze. “We need 1,500,000 pairs of white pondent | United Press to! ald for the disease-ridden little king-| 000 cases. With our independence Jat stake, we must look first to our | army | “La Gloconda,” with Katherina|Shirte and drawers, so that when) | Ly brook in the title role, played | our typhus jefts are brought to! to a good house last night, in spite |¥® We can burn their infected cloth. lof counter attractions everywhere. |ing and give them other cloth: |Her “Suicide” aria and the duet| “We need 50,000 beds, the with Laura were two of the best/mumber of mattresses, 50,000 pit-| | numbers |lows, 150,000 blankets and 50,000 ) The company's operatic concert | |wacks that we can fill with straw | lin the afternoon was thoroly en-|and use as beds. n | joyable, many of the best works “i “Then, too, there is a pressin: |the masters being played need for artificial limbs and artifi- jcial eyes for the soldiers wounded in battle.” Contributions of all kinds, both | in money and supplies, can be made to Prof. Pupin, the Serbian consul general at New York, who will ar for their forwardin, | KEEP WELL Ir Health is often in our own hands | T8ng) to keep or to throw away. We usu) = <a ally are respons! | health ble for our per- | _— sonal health, and | Varicose veins are a dilation aera. Seurta tan }| and overfilting of the veins, us- | the health of | ually of the lower limbs. They bout us. In | are caused by too great | the vast majority pressure in the veins involved of instances sick- or by the weakening of the ness is the result of in@™cretion,| thin walls. The causes are which is not unconscious, though| Weak Circulation, interference |we may not stop to calculate the| Svarmeoaita cet de scbele nn results ‘ If we knowingly jeopardize our! Standing, constant exposure to |individual health and tisk illness| 4@Mpneas and overstrain on the chance that we will escape . - "this once,” we are putting our |FREE LECTURES |selves in the same category with | |the criminal who risks his freedom ABOUT ALSASKA| jeach time he breaks the law. Eth. | jleally the one is no better than the With a lecturer in charge, the “ Jother, The man who willfully} Alaskan exhibit maintained by the era www? | From MES |transgresses nature's laws by ex-| Alaska bureau of the Chamber of 32 cesses may have far less self-con-| Commerce opened up at 10 o'clock HOMESTE wd trol than ohe who violates the | Tuesday morning, tn the store build ite witabie for hoe | penal code ling at Fourth ave. and Seneca st hi nein “ tone altaltn TICKIN UNTO END If each individual member of a od lantern slides of Alaska / reid community failed to exercise control y and industries are being : ; fi in the matter of his bodily well-be ee .o:| OSTRICH GASHES IN shown from 10 to 12 and fro ing, it would Jangerously Ppa fy be im. a PITTSBURG, Pa, June 1 te,|general health of our mation, It| janie / OSA |the official ostrich at the Annex/must be thru stimulating individual |PUPMC es |hotel, has eaten the enemy and he! citizens to appreciate their respon °c DRATUE " [irs aes on Sete sa cre ‘CARRIE’S BROTHER te or call f |fice clock, he did four steps of the! Each man, woman and child iow Intinigration hesitation, fell into a slow Castle|should try and measure what indi TOSSES HAT IN RING « walk, gasped twice, ticked a couple! vidual health means, He should be | e ~/of hundred times and uttered his| brought to realize how easily tt can SPRINGFIELD, Mo, June 1 dying squawh He had eaten a| Slip away never to return, A single | Carrie Nation's work is to go on ch and chain and simply| Violation of a law of nature may! Campbell Moore, brother of the FAIA LA rat i TINGTORN | couldn't away with a {mean death or what is worse, a lin-| Woman Who leaped into fame when ' oN P) nied ceee| ‘The watch, atill going,» wak| Sering illness she began smashing saloons in Be te Bureau, | salve We are vigilant in watching our! Kansas with a hatchet, today de t money lest it slip away and leave|clared he had been commissioned us impoverished and yet we are | by God to try everybody on earth, He 50 EXCHANGES STAR WANT ADS prodigal with our physical re-|is arranging to devote the remain EO RADE Burlen Tair é xources, forgetting that the poorest! der of his life to fighting the liguor Wylde, 412 New York Bik. i BRING RESULTS individual is he who has lost his traffic, F . ed June 1 commu —Enongh king ation of nk’s sentence have come M. Slaton’s office to hieher than the tower is confined, were they piled one on top of another. They would run for miles were they | spread out end on end They are coming in at an average rate of 2,000 a day, mail, wire, express and personal messenger. Counting special de. and registered letters, probably over $3,000 has been spent in postage on them. 1 went over today to tell Leo Frank that 1 had just seen the big stack of something more than 100. oF petitions begging executive clemency for him. College Chums Send Appeal His eyes beamed enthusiasm Just look what I've got,” said | Mra. Frank, who is every day to be | found in her husband's cell. “I'm getting on an average 2,000 a@ day, many accompanied by per- | Sonal letters. I hope all who have sent petitions in will appreciate the | fact that I can’t answer them all personally. How I wish I could! Mother Frank ang I would if ft | Were not simply impossible. But you will tell them for me, won't you, how grateful we are?” The Cornell club of Western Pennsylvania has sent in a bound volume of about 0 signatures. Frank is a Cornell graduate. Pleas have been recelved from former Secretary of State Philan- der C. Knox, F. 1. Delano of the | federal reserve board, Senator W. E. Borah of Idaho; Senator James A. Reld of Missouri, and from Sen- ators Clapp and Newlands. Gov. M. G. Brumbaugh of Penn- | sylvania, Gov. David Ferris of Mich- | igan; Gov. Hunt of Arizona and Gov. Hall of Louisiana also have sent in petitions. | There are petitions from jurists, | conere: smen, men in every walk of ife It seems as if all America ts with | Leo M. Frank in his fight for life. WHAT WILL S. E. PAY ON BRIDGES? Maygr Gill sent a message to the council Tuesday, urging the city dads to get together with the Seat- }tle Electric Co. to fix definitely the amount to be contributed by the traction company for the Eastlake jand Rallard bridges. The company is to run cars over these bridges, and, in the past, it J has been compelled to pay a share of the cost of construction ATLANTA, Ga petitions | Leo M. F to Gov John make a stack jin which he STEAMER SEWARD REPORTED SAFE CORDOVA steamer Alaska, June 1 Seward, slightly returned to this port had left Sunday night carrying 4,000 tons of copper ore from La Touche. That she was in distress was first reported today by | the steamship Mariposa, by wire less to Seward. The Mariposa’s message simply said: “Going to | assistance steamship Seward.” | The disabled, today. She for Seattle, At the local office of the Alaska Steamship Co. it was stated that the Seward !s safe at Cordova, its injuries t being of a talnor character, LOOT DOVER’S SHOP Another case of Footing asa re sult of the dynamite explosion Sun day morning, was reported to the police Tnesday, David L. Dover! who conducts a pawnshop at 6127 First ave. says his place was ‘en tered thru a broken window and 7 in Jewelry taken. | POSTPONE CASE OLYMPIA “June A continge ance was allowed today in th® Thurston county superior court of the M. & K, Gottstein suit agotnat etary of State I. M, Howell, [testing the constitutionality he prohibition law enacted} nf Uative vote of the people last No- vember.

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