The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 30, 1915, Page 9

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30 DAYS UT PRICES FREE EXAMINATION Per Cent Reduction fem these recular prices. Gold Crowns. ss .00) Fillings. .. We é exactly as dant. Terme to suit work guaramecd 15 years Fillin, end Pike, Opp. Public Market People’s ventists. ta Money} as Great] } res | ryes Quality arkets/ Saturday ‘Specials Fresh Dressed ) n..... 17¢ | | | | wife of New York city, |neta left for the CORRESPONDENT HOW HUS 8 AND KEPT HER FOR FOUR YEARS UNDER LOCK AND aid [Pere Cave-wife and her baby! The Planeta, whose husband kept ® prisoner in New York tenement four years, and her baby boy, Louie BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH | NEW YORK, July 30.—I have |talked with Theresa Planeta, cave at the pistol’s po! Louls saw his first sun ray when after a struggle in which knives and pistols were drawn, the dete ves took him and his mother away father and I have the wondering black eyes ear-old son, Louis, as his » English mixed with tny hands reached out to clasp and rescued cave-woman told play with the firet ray of sunlight ner remarkable ster d ever se 1 was > Joseph Planeta For this baby and his mother y,. wow » Years ago,” she have just been rescued by New aid st year of my mar York detectives and an agent | Sit i, Boge dtp dtr of the Children’s seciety from | fo 0° tern ime crunk by husband a hermetically sealed and dark. wedhienyy~ Digger alh yng AB age fbecenigae ened tenement, in which they found the photograph of a man who Prisoners by ‘the | had loved me when I was a girl in| and father, Joseph = 'tly | for four horrible The sight of this picture of an old sweetheart changed him from a man into a DEMON OF JEALOUSY And from that day I have been his prisoner “| have never had a friend Pla | have never rd a human volce except that of my husband and of his two sisters who would come to torture me.” MOTHER ASKS COURT ORDER TO LET HER SEE HER 2 SONS years. Little Louis has never been yond the squalid twilight of three miserable rooms into he and his mother were every morning when be Joseph cigar store which he is the prosperous tor, until he was taken fr m them Dressed Spring Butter SOC ter... 10 sale 12:¢ Shoulder Pork ooteak 12:¢ 5 Mrepe Open Until 10 P, M. WRBANK OFFERS YOU bi / RESPONSIBILITY, attention and courtesy. We WP You to investigate our man- rove and methods carefully be- Gepositing your money with ann if you are satisfied, we be mutually benefited, - Iiterest, @ Per Cent SPO AP SES TAT weal OF SEATTLE Capital ana Surplus, 315,000 D. HOGE, President B. SOLNER, Vice Presi-| and Trust Officer AME Mrs. Elizabeth Cri ashul | wants to see her children. ve L. J. Covington, superintend- ent of the Washington chil- | dren's home, says she can't. ‘The boys were taken from Mre. Crashu home at C bonado, In Pierce county, last fall by juvenile officers, and committed to the home here And now the courts are go- Supt. Covington, asked Thurs Ing to have a whirl at the Rev- day for the reason of their com erend Mr. Covington mitment, said the father drank Judge Jurey, on application (and the mother didn't provide a of Thom: B. MacMahon, proper hon for them Thursday issued a writ of Mre. Cra |, who has spent sev habeas corpus, in which the eral days tn the city in a vain at children’s home society is di tempt to see her children, had rected to appear Saturday asked The Star Thursday to ald morning and reveal the where admitted she was poo abouts of Mrs. C ul's two being an Austrian, she boys, John, aged 12, and An could not talk good English, but drew, 6. she insisted her boys had alwa — had plenty to eat and wear, and . had been well treated at home. Thin People Can The last time I came over jhere,” she said, “two or three months ago, I went out to the Increase Weight Thin men and w ike home and they let me see my chil dren. My little Andrew was n well. He was so pale. And I ha or 38 4 , not heard anything from t since. I just want to know how he ta I Just want to see m boy once, and then I'll go back to 5 ed RNAETS FORTS Hittle place in the woods Sargol—one tablet with every ee val moods.’ 3 | —tor two weeks Then welg She was lonely, she | ald, sin e meanu the officers took away her of how yo But Rev. Covington infor rmed jeri her that her boys were not at the tals oan home, and refused to tell he their own jhome, and refused t t t " | where they are. Don't you think {t would be a fourteen following this dire And best ofa the new flesh. says put this woman see her boys just Sargol does not oF once, before she goes back to her Hhittle cabin?" Rev. Covington was lasked by The Star. | lfat product ar or the| He thought maybe it would be |tissues and nan! And easily an mil m the | I suppose,” he said, “the wom blood can at mow passes from your|&n does love her children after a body as waste. B argol stops | fashion. the w c fekly and/| But then he looked the matter makes contents! 4», and discovered, he said, that of the ve Sew davere the children other leading druggists and vicinity sell it in large boxes— forty tablets to a package—on a jsuarantee of weight inci® or k wi | Attorney MacMahon's attention was called to the case, He imme diately filed plication in behalf of the woman for an order from the | : court against Covington FOR BIG, FINE TIME MT. VERNON, July 30.—Big! doings will be on tap here Saturday, the big day of the fifth annual Pow The town is in its gayest ed hase. Wow. colors, and thousands are ex here. Northwestern league , president of the. U of W ak from an open alr platform urday. Cavanaugh's band of Seattle will furnish music, and the big pavement dance will be on Saturday night, In connection with other Mardi! Gras features | h HOGE Bu BUILDING Heart of the Financial | District World Milli ine: 1316 Second Ave id Unusua) Reductions in irtment for tomorrow, 1 CAN SAVE YOU MONEY “ecause I determine your needa before attempting to effect a eure. Tam a graduate of of the highest ¢ medical col- loges in the United #tates, Lam a legally licensed physician and ave had 29 years experianced in my profession—* years in Seattle 1 EXAMINE YREE ‘raat disorders of Me vital organs, Nerves, Veins, Liver, Stomach, me tor reliable Hood Test DE. DONAWAY, 102 Aberty Building Union and Third, Opposite Postottice Office Hours, 9 a m, to 8 p. m. fundays, 10 @. m. to 12. kind and human thing to do to let} of healthy {1 y skin|a family in Eastern Washington and bones. Sargol ix safe, pleasant,| which was considering adopting| jefficient nd igexpenaiye. ene them macy, and Dre Cosine dtogsists In Seattle} And being so far away, he sald, MT. VERNON READY i between Aberdeen and Van , ls one of the attractions for | Saturday and Sunda CAVE WIFE OF NEW YORK MAN TELLS STAR |i TAR—FRIDAY, Jl |] MUST UNLOAD AT ONCE Over 100 Cases of New Shoes for Fall Have Arrived I Must Have Room at Any Cost Men's Clothing, Men's, Ladies’ and Children’s Shoes, including the new arrivals, must be turned into Ladies’ White Canvas PUMPS ILY With rubber soles and heels; sizes only; $4.00 and $5.00 Ladies’ for summer season Special price Hundreds of pairs of Ladies’ High-top Shoes, cloth tops, in black, gray or putty; regular price $4.00. To Make Room Sale $2.45 Misses’ Vici sizes from 9 to $2.50. Make Room Sale price > “FATHER BEATS SON, AGED FIVE; SENT TO PRISON Beaten by his father until he} was black and blue, bruised from| ead to foot, his head cut, and his| discolored, all because hel 114 not obey his father’s com nd to bathe in Puget sound, Har. Schwartz, 5, son of Gotlick hwartz West 82nd st, Thurs force that his fath had been placed with|to three AS hing by According to the testimony, Schwartz carried the boy to the yeach, and tried to force him to go afternoon told The he couldn't see how he could bring | Schwartz, the boys back to Seattle just to let|for her husband's arrest. their mother look upon them again. | ade to blow his story to Jus Brinker with such was sentenced days in the county Jail was given a severe tongue the court and by Depu- Prosecuting Attorney Carmody boy's mother, Mrs. Anna swore out the warrant Otis W n the water, He became fright ned and refused, Then the father |took him home and tried to teach him swimming in the bathtub. | ain the lad refused. The fa | became enraged and administered be: ating. ‘TRY TO DYNAMITE TOWN RESERVOIR: BLAINE, July 90,—As a ctl against the employment of Orientals | in the canneries, an attempt was up the reservoir at of dynamite tore up | Blaine. A atic the pipe line, and for several hours | the wa system was inoperative A note left by th amiters read ‘This is what Japanese ot leave town ings ) YACHT CLUB WILL Ladies ttle Yacht club will be celebrated Sunday at | Venice, Bainbridge Island, where a basket luncheon will be served Those who destre chicken dinner at the clubhouse, phone A, F. Com- may the foot of Pike st., the steamer Kitsap from Pier 3 at 30, 9 ypen to the and Chinese if they do HAVE LADIES’ DAY day of the Se West 297. Non-boat owners take the yacht Wanderer at at 9 o'clock, or 2-strap Pumps, just arrived, but too late $1.95 CHILDREN’S SHOES Kid Button, regular price ™ $1.45 J.B. ROBINSO }and 30, large regular $2.50. Sale price ig in all 1915. ton $3.50. last ° [DANCER LOSES HER FEET UNDER A TRAIN SUES RAILROAD COMPANY FOR $100,000 Miss Pretty Daisy James, the famous|& Western Railroad company |New York dancer, can't dance any |for she values each of her dainty | dancing toes, now lost forever, at more because she lost both of her| gi) 599 | |feot in a ratiroad accident recently She was in haste to board a train, ran where she was dragged paneatl the insured. under the car wheels, Now the be Mra. of tonal supreme against the Deleware, CHICAGO WOMEN OPEN THEIR HOMES TO GIRLS OF STREET | CHICAGO, Chicago women today open their homes to 10 girls of the streets. The girls are not going to “experimented on.” homes Into which they are to she has filed an action {n|the money in the world ff it were court Jul be taken will In no way sug- fhe fall—so-called—of a girl in gest an “institution for the 9 per cent of the cases is the e wayward,” fault of the mother or father, or m O. They will become, In fact, both. The parents are criminally e€. S el er » members of the families In blind in not seeing their duty to which they are to be taken. Clarence Summy, the Protestant association, 75c Misses’ Shoes Sizes from 9 to 2, in Tan But- Boys’ Shoes $2.50 and $3.00 Boys’ Shoes, all solid leather counters, solid inner Hundreds of pairs ‘ vieciske peta soles; as good a Shoe as you ff Button or Lace; regular price ff $2-00 Silk Shirts. ~95c can find anywhere $1 95 $3.50. Sele $1 95 Sale price . for $3. Sale price ° price e $1.50 Hallmark Shirts. 95 $3.50 and $4.00 Boys’ Shoes. § All my $5.00 Shoes, in the new- § Sale price ........... Cc “Made in Seattle.” Every pair J est toes, cloth or leather tops, § 50c Silk Sox. 19 ene: . Sale $2. 75 all go at one $2. 95 Sale price ............ Cc GUOE> sesvesavenss's price 35 Suspenders. 19 $6.00 and $7.00 Men's Shoes, Bale Pde 66. evids dees Cc ns “ri y aah oper ar naar $1.00 Blue Chambray Shirts, pello, Mass.; the Collegian Shoe, § with two separate Men s Hats the Weber Shoe, the J. & M.§ collars .. : 2 59c $2.50 Imitation Panama Hats. ma Mate "$ $2.00 Pants 95¢ Sue rie. $3465 |" Boy scour SHOES | #2 Fs $3.00 Felt es. all the newest 9 Ai teather bottoms, made i $3.00 Pants . Sale a ; : nT $4.00 Pants shapes. $1 45 Seattle; sizes 1214 to 2; regular $5.00 Pant WN ir cdeiwees ° price $2.50. Sale $1. 65 J ants Hundreds of odds and ends of § price ........... Hats of various shapes; sold up Sizes ‘214 ‘to 51%; regular price SUIT CASES AND HAND to $5.00. Sale 95 $3.00. Sale $1 95 BAGS AT LESS THAN PICS os vessses . c MID). 65 05s cass ° FACTORY COST AGE and More Coming Men’s Shoes nly; regular $3.00 and cash, regardless of profit or value. price $15.00. Sale price. Lot 2—100 Men’s Suits in strictly all-wool, latest $ 1 O 95 for $20.00. Sale price..... ss Lot 3—150 Men’s Suits of the very finest blue serges, fancy imported worsteds buttonholes; fronts will never break. Regular price $25.00 »nd $30.00. Sale price ........ FURNISHING GOODS 15¢ Men’s Sox, in black, Tke 10c Men's White Handkerchiefs; packed one handkerchief 3 Cc Lot 1—Men’s Suits in gray cassimeres, browns, Oxfords and, fancy new stripes, in all sizes; regular 8. 5 patterns, newest cuts; sold regularly or unfinished worsteds; all hand-tailored, hand-made ] 2 95 | tan or gray; all sizes. to a package. Sale price. . 50c and 75c Work Shirts. Sale price...... $1.00 Dress Shirts. Sale price ..... 35c ...48¢ x Gunmetal Shoe, the highest on the market, all go at one price... class Shoes $3.95 Sale "$1.65 Pula 1422 Third Av. Between Postoffice and Pike Street urally turn to the street corners! j and parks. “Institutions Do No Good” “Institutions do no good tor! these girls. What they need are homes. For two months I gave one of them a home. She lived with us as a daughter. She as- sociated with my daughter and son as if she were a third child. “When she had company she en- tertained her visitor in the parlor - not on the back porch or in the}, ©: R Rings, of Mt. Vernon, ts kitchen, When she wished, she in-|'®¥entor of an automobile lumber- vited her friend or friends to stay| Computing machine, said to be the to tea or supper with us |first ever placed on the market “Then her mother learned she/that would deliver the goods. was making good and insisted on| taking her back. The same differ-| Jt !8 & cylinder ae inside in the cylinder ences resulted, The mother refused | ®20ther cylinder, | to allow her daughter room for in-| inside are printed figures. You |dividuality, That girl fs back on|can find instantly any unknow! n the streets. When I find her again uantity di I see ge her into my home— Sater and te oat bean and keep her.” | Yankow & Lasalle, sales | , ents, It was this story that Mrs. Sum-| of this city, say lumber Sealers my told the Protestant Women’s) are greatly impressed with the ma- National association that resulted| chine, and are indorsing its use in 10 wealthy women pledging| unanimously. The invention will themselves to give homes to 10 of| be placed on the market in a short Chicago's girls of the streets. time. HAS A MACHINE FOR COMPUTING LUMBER COSTS Dalsy James and her $100,000 feet Redelsheimer’s Semi-Annual CLEARANCE Coats, Miss James wishes now that she had taken the advice of her friends when they told her to have her feet closed gates, offers you tremendous savings in Suits, Dresses and Skirts The Greatly Reduced Prices tec at POTD Up $6.25 Up ‘$3. 75 Up ° | “But I would gladly part with all | for $100,000|mine—just to be able to dance,” Lackawanna | sho sald, shortly after the accident For Coats, begin at .. \the. plan at a meeting, said: ‘ Blames the Parents 29,—Ten threw Yy “However much it hurts them, F = folks nowadays aro being made to or Dresses, realize the falseness of the bellef begin at . that once a girl fs stained she Is forever damned, This is no more true of a girl than of a boy The W. H. Fisher, Mgr. Two Entrances First and Columbia become confidants and companions} president of thelr daughters, Women's Na-!| “They refuse to permit boys to who suggested call on their daughters, who nat-

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