The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 27, 1915, Page 6

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STAR RIDAY, AUGUST 27, 1915, PAG 6 Phone Elliott 185 Free Delivery PUBLIC MARKET Third Ave. and Washington St. LOWEST PRICES IN THE CITY Best Meats at Cut Prices Ib... Ib It Pot Roast, Steer Steak, Round Steak, Roast Veal, Ib Roast Pork, Ib.. Shoulder Lamb, Lamb Chops, Ib Leg Lamb, Ib..... Loin Lamb, Ib. Pork Steak, Ib.. Pure Lard, Ib, 3s at 35¢; Seow: Independent STALL 53 A. E. ALLYN Real German Mettwurst, tb. Kraut, Pickled Onions, pt... STALL 67 Large Pears, doz Apples, 3 doz. . STALL 84 Yakima Honey, wholesale a retail, combs, each 15 Washington Creamery, Ib. Soe STALLS 0-51.52 D. D. FAGAN’S SPECIAL for Saturday: 50c SHOPPING BAGS....35¢ 35c SHOPPING BAGS....25¢ -18e -10¢ 25e SHOPPING BAGS. lSe SHOPPING BAGS. Roller Curtains, complete. 25e All Glassware reduced. FREE FARMERS Radishes, 6 bunches Onions, § Ibs........ 10¢ Green Onions, 5 bunches. be Celery, 2 for... , Lettuce, 3 for. ‘Eggpiant, 1b.. Summer Squash, 2 for STALL 85 GEORGETOWN BAKERY'S REGULAR SATURDAY SPECIAL 10¢ COOKIES, doz..... 2 large loaves Bread -14e lle 20¢ -25¢ . Se -lle ..15e¢ } le Ib Hams, ‘5 or wh Shoulder Hams, Sliced Ham, Ib Sliced Bac« Bacon End Good Bacon, Local Bacon Cottage Butts, Lard Compound, .10e Pure Lard, Ib iase 5s at OE; 10s at $1.20 Packing Staite 38 to 42 STALL 56 WILLIAMS & BEAN Good Coffee, Ib Best Coffee, Ib Best Butter, 3 lbs Mild Cheese, 2 Ibs... STALL 48 Creamery Butter, 3 Ibs New Swiss Cheese, Ib.. Peanut Butter, 2 Ibs. Kaiser Limburger, each... FISH MARKETS Whole Salmon, each. Smeits, 2 lbs.. : Kippered Salmon, 2 Halibut, 3 Ibs... Red Snapper, Ib STALL 100 Live Hens, Ib. Ib Ib Ms be 40¢ O5¢ B5¢ Sie iba. Dressed while you wait. FRUITS Cantaloupes, 6 for. Sunkist Oranges, doz... Lemons, doz..... . H Peaches, basket | Bananas, dot... Huckleberries, 2 1b Concord Grapes, 2 lbs Italian Plums, 2 doz.. STALL 62 Large Cucumbers, 3 for Red Cabbage, 2 for QUEEN CITY MARKET Pot Roast, Ib...... Good Steak, Ib. | Leg Lamb, Ib | Veal Roast, Ib. ‘ | Pork Sausage, Ib | Eastern Hams, Ib. Picnic Hams, Ib. Smoked Jowls, Ib. Cottage Butta, Ib Pure Lard, Ib. Compound Lard, Ib of lads Gey | PHONE ELLIOTT 185 10 Ibs. Pure Cane Sugar With $1.00 order, not including specials. No. 1 Hard Wheat Flour, sack No. ‘alnuts, Ib. Mason Fruit Jars, q Mason Fruit Jars, pts., doz.45¢ Pineapple, 2 large cans...25¢ Condensed Milk, 10 cans. .25¢ Fine 25c Imp. i ogre can.isbe -10¢ Salt, 3 5c sacks... -10¢ ice Polish, 50¢ size. .39¢ Citrus Powder, 25c size... 20¢ Cornstarch, 5 pkgs..... Tuna Fish, 15¢ can. All Kinds of Chicken Feed. These Prices Good Until Sept. 4th. Free Delivery Over Entire City. Phone Orders Taken. 200 AUTOS WILL HELP BOOST FOR PUYALLUP FAIR To advertise the 16th annual Western Washington fair, at Pu- yallup, September 28, 29 and 30, and} October 1, 2 and 3, inclusive, an BUY SEATTLE MADE GOODS The high grade line of SUNSET BRAND of Paints, Varnishes and Stains are manu- factured right here in Seattle by Sunset Paint & Vamish Co. 1622 Fourth Ave. One-Half Block From Westlake Market Baking Powder, 40¢ can..15¢ Extracts, 40c bottles......15¢ Bartlett Canning Pears, b.80¢ Soda, We pkg ‘ ‘5 Schilling’s Tea, 50c pk, Campbell's Soup, 3 cans. ‘Boe Campbell's Pork and Beans, 3 es, 100 size, 4 ibs. “* «BBC Norway Sardines, 3 cans. .25¢ American Sardines, 6 cans.25¢ Minced Clams, 3 can 25¢ Ground Chocolate, Ib -23¢ Honey, 25¢ glass... | Jar Rubbers, 10 for. automobile booster trip, in which will be 200 gatly-decked automo-! vreong a been planned for Septem-| The ‘trip will start from Puyallup, and will tap all the territory to Se. attle, including Tacoma and the} |smaller towns en route. At least two bands will accom- bie the boosters, and there will be banners to advertise to the far- po dl and city folks the big noise, | Within 14 square miles in the Puyallup valley farm products valued at $1,500,000 are raised an-| | nually, according to W. P. Elling | Wood and J. Bert Forbes, “advance }men” for the booster excursion. | This does not include dairying, hop| raising, etc. And Seattle is the marketing point for a majority of this harvest. |, The people of the valley buy largely from Seattle's stores. During the ny 4 season Puyallup | Valley employs 15,000 people, and [pars them $50,000 for picking ber- Many of them are Seattle Aba dt and school children. | For these reasons, think Elling. | wood and Forbes, Seattle should get behind the Puyallup fatr, The fair grounds and bulldings jare valued at $40,000, all paid for |It {8 self-supporting, receiving no appropriations. SAYS ANCHORAGE WILL BE GOOD TOWN Anchorage, terminus of the Mat anuska branch of the Alaska gov- jernment railroad, will be as model 4 town as Utopia, according to Jack KB. Roberts, who's just down from there and who liked it so well he bought a lot, paying for it $1,400. CURE FOR FELON EAU CLAIRE, Wis., Aug. 27, |Joseph Michaels, 26, that he has found a brand new jremed for felons. His “cure” is |to soak his ffhger in carbolic acid \for a couple of hours. The felon came off and so did the finger. and the Blue Funnel line, lamount of Oriental trade will, it is jsix big new freight and passenger today insteté! KEEPING U. S. FLAGON PACIFIC MEANS TO FLY IT FOR COOLIES R. P, Schwerin and the 8. 8. Manchuria, one of Pacific Mall fleet SAN FRANCISCO, Cal. Aug. 27,—The Chinese coolie has been driven from the decks of so-called American mer- chant ships on the Pacific ocean. And when the coolies were forced out there was no “Americanism” left FOR THE AMERICAN-OWNED MERCHANTMEN ON THE PACIFIC DEPENDED UPON ORIENTAL CREWS, PAID LESS THAN 0} FOURTH OF THE PREVAILING WHITE MAN’S WAG AND ENDUR- ING THE STANDARD OF LIVING THAT IMPLIES The Pgcific Mail Steamship company and the Dollar Steamship company, the only Stars and Stripes from this to carriers operating under the Oriental ports, have quit. The reason assigned is the LaFollette-Furuseth seamen's act, which compels compliance with American humane and wage standards from all vesse Is entering our ports The patriotism of the gentlemen owning these two lines’ could not square itself with Mail, it has been announced, fleet will be placed under Bri SEATTLE IS NOW | CHIEF GATEWAY | TO THE ORIENT With the passing of the Pacific Mall Steamship Co. from the Amer.) fean-Oriental trade Seattle will be-| come the greatest Oriental port in) the United Sta The abandonment of the Orien-| tal run by the Pacific Mail leaves San Francisco with but one line plying out of that port to the Far East, the Toyo Kisen Kaisha. Seattle, on the other hand, has/ three lines—the Nippon Yusen| Kaisha, the Osaka Shosen Kaisha! Up until now the Great Northern Steamship Co. has had {ts mam- moth liner, the Minnesota, on the Seattle-Oriental run, but announce- ment is made from the local office of the company that when the vessel returns from her present) trip to Russia she will be loaded) with a big cargo of salmon, lumber, | wheat and flour for the United Kingdom, where the company hopes to sell her. With the Pacific Mail Steamship Co. out of the running a great freely predicted, be deflected to this port. Of the lines plying from this port to the Orient, the Nippon Yusen| Kaisha and the Osaka Shosen |Kaisha each have six large ves- |sels, and the Blue Funnel line bas three. The Osaka Shosen Kaisha! has placed orders with the Osaka Iron Works for the construction of liners, and the Nippon Yusen Kaisha is also increasing {ts fleet, preparing for the expected increase) of trade resulting from the Pacific) Mail's dropping from the lists. Operation of the new seamen's law is given as the reason for the Pacific Mail and the Minnesota quitting. Shipping men will wage protest) against the seamen’s law at o mee ing at the Hotel RainierGrand at 2:15 Saturday, under the auspices jof the Seattle Merchants’ Exchange. Discussion will be led by Kenneth ©. Kerr, editor of the Railway and Marine OLMSTEAD HEADS LIST OF ELIGIBLES Frank Olmstead maintains his po- sition as head of the list of el- igibles for police sergeant in the |latest Het announced by Examiner D. P. Kenyon, of the civil service | board. T. J. Clark 1s second and FB. | J. Margett 1s third. There are 47| in the list will such provisions. The Pacific sell out, while the Dollar tish registry. Both employed Chinese seamen exclusively in thelr transpacific service, You ought to know about this special brand of hyphenated “pa- triotiam” which demanded Chinese #eamen to uphold the American flag on the high sea; what the flag has stood for on the ocean highway be tween this country and the Orient. THE STARS AND STRIPES HAS FLOATED OVER FORECAS- TLES CROWDED WITH CHINESE, OVER FOR ASTLES FROM WHICH EVERY AMERICAN car eak OF LIVING HAS WIMINATED! what Col. R. P. Schwerin cific Mall means when he about the patriotic duty of the United States in keeping its merchant flag flying. “Permit American-owned ships to operate on equal grounds with for eign vessels in competition,” plead- ed Capt, Robert Dollar, head of the Dollar fleet, before the Federal Trade Commission recently when the question of foreign trade was being discussed. “We ask no help, no subsidy, no odde—just an equal chance.” BUT CAPTAIN DOLLAR, LIKE THE PACIFIC MAIL, WANTS TO OPERATE WITH ORIENAL COOLIE CREWS, NOT AMERICAN OR ANGLO-SAXON SEAME! | | “The Seamen's Law will give | America every advantage over | other nation said Andrew | Puruseth, “because {t will at- tract to this country the most | | skillful seamen of the world and will place American mariners | on @ plane that they need not be ashamed of. Unless the act is enforced, Astatica will rule | the nei Furuseth, tn replying to the | statements of Captain Dollar, declared the Dollar Steamship Co. owned four tramp steamers, | all of which were built in Eng- land, were manned by British seamen and were registered in British Columbia. At this time the situation seems! jto present very clearly these alter natives: Either the Caucasian seaman is doomed to be wiped entirely from the W: which has operated with Orien- tal crews and Oriental stand- ards in competition with Jap- anese merchantmen for the transpacific trade, must quit, Either one spells a gloomy pros- pect for the triumph of American Gold vate Op | 4. BR. BINYON, Jn. Let us duplicate your brokan lenses LET US DUPLICATE Y Special All This Week Eye Glasses, Fitted With BINYON OPTICAL CO. 1116 FIRST AVE., NEAR 8) Filled Spectacles and Spherical Lenses— $2.50 Jontific exan tometriat and 1) Examination Free ROA ST. S2Sue] UeH0Iq JNOA 93ED)|dnp Sn 327 OUR BROKEN LENSES Free Delivery Phone Main 6989 0 Made Where You TRY OUR E. N. SCHUMANN Our Goods Are Noted for Quality. STALLS 126-126-127 Special for Saturday PICNIC HAMS, llc # of Moot, : tbe Fins ... 12%¢ Lean Noasts of Pork per tb 124¢ Two pounds Pure Lard FRESH CHURNED WASHINGTON CREAMERY HUPTER cae Ib 9c Fires pounds 85c tor F. S. Frink 10-1b. hag Pure Cane Sugar Ibe. Brown Beane f Campbell bby’s Cateup for abe ‘ pigs. Tea! Brenneman & McIntosh a o-syete Whole or half Harms, Ib. Ihe No. 9 pall Pure Lara Wo No. 6 pat! Pure Lard ote Spring Lamb Chops, Ib oe Me Picnic Hama, per 1b 1ahe Good Bacon, per Ib... 1340 and 300 FRESH DRESSED HENS AND FANCY SPRINGS AT Mrs. Oliver’s Smoked Meat House STALL 360, MAIN FLOOR Homegrown Tomatoes, 6 lbs. for Sweet Corn, per doz. Cauliflower, head . Dry Onions, 5 Ibs. ° STALL 340 PINE VEGETABLE CO in Seattle pig boys (The best button of and patent te dats in Seattle Sheeting, lace, leather styles, fo: et ! sizes button Shoes| heavy soles. - oe eee ‘mt, | fancy work, Stockings for “ T sixes rs hiss tai ee. 12 to 2% | Baby per pair, oa Biankats, $1.75. | Gatecajwith aol Work Shirts, for 300 Wh heavy — | Fioure Lining,| Gioves for a" | Be | he Every Egg Guaranteed Fancy, FANCY FULL CREAM CHEESE, One Day Only, Lb., 15c RED SHIELD CREAMERY ircne cf marco. 265 Westlake Grocery a Bag Pure Cane Sugar for............-6lc No. 60 sack Patent Flour... .€150 ibe can Ripe Olly + 100 tec can italian Poss for: ....ssise 10 small Milk for abe Poe pk. Cream of Wheat for. .1Be 6 large cane Milk for abe | FREE—1 Savings, Bank with ‘each Bo can of Babbit’s Clean Cheapest Store PUBLIC Can See It Made. 32c EGGS At the Big Churn We Sell for Less 10 Bouillon Cubes for 9 bare Swift's Pride Soap abe abe 250 are. FREB Toilet Paper elloge’s Krumbien t prices on Fruit 6 large © Sugar Pound - gh Blue Ribbon Tea for 12 cans Carnation Milk fo + 7 bare Crystal for .........6le eee. aC .25c 25c 10c 10c solid pack hite Star Tuna Fish $e can Van Camp's Pork and Beans No. 50 sack Centennial Best_or Holly Flour POF ceeses ° ‘i Lamb, Pronoe ... 18¢ i ath vactoed 124c We Deliver Free. Stall 331. Lucky Strike Fruit Co. 2 ibs. 1Be, 4 Ibe. 250. Bmall, Young and Tender Hubbard Squash, per Ib. . Fine Watermeions, each New Pumpkin, per Ib Golden Bantam Corn, STALL er doz. PACIFIC COAST FISH CO, STALL 301 Fresh Halibut, 3 Ibs. Whole Salmon, each.... Fresh 3 Tbs. for. .25¢ Salmon, for. .25¢ Silk Fifth, Sixth and Pine WESTLAKE MARKET. Lb. Pure Cane Sugar No Other Purchase Is Required On Sale Saturday in All Sections of Market. Limit—10 Lbs. to a Customer RED SHIELD BUTTER 32c Lb. Three Pounds 95c %' Walter M. ar 6 large cans Milk for ‘The Big Store No, 60 sack Patent Flour... .@1.86 ree cans Wash, Milk Be ars Sweetheart Soap ae Jelly Glanses, per doz 10-Tb. bag Pure | Cane Sugar 200 can Ripe Olives le Crisco he, B00 and 81.00 | bc can imported Olive Oll....40e | i$c can Shrimps for... _l0- llc 12% Ie 120 Pot Roasts, Lb. Pork Roasts, per Ib Lege of Lamb, per Ib.. Shoulder of Lamb, per Ib Round Steak, per Ib... - Ie Sirloin Bteaks, per Ib - 200 Prime Rib Roasts, per i eeeeees Dress Hens, ib... ive Pure Lard for rit 2be OTTO PARTHIER STALLS 11-12 LUCKY STRIKE FISH Co. STALL 326 200; 2 for 2 Ibs. for Whole Salmon, Fresh Halibut. Fancy Dry Onions, 7 Ibs. for . . -10¢ Green Peppers. 1 5c 2 Ibs. for..... 5c 6 Ibs. 25c Sweet Potatoes... STALL 207 Watermelons, Ib... ..1c Fancy toca! Tomatoes, per ib. Sweet Corn, per dos.. Sweet Potatoes, Otto's Quality Market 6, LOWER FLOOR iy. AKS, per Roas st f oad B, Flenic Hams, per Ib... Rolling Beef, per Ib. . ‘rele W Lamb Cho eon ¢ nd Bon Ib Stall 16 Lower Floor Nice Home-grown Corn, per doz, 100, 18e and j 25c Sweet Potatoes, 5c ,,,, 25¢ Pole Beans, 4 lbs. for......10¢ Nice Tomatoes, per gt Be California Watermelons, -le Sweet Corn, per doz. 15¢ ‘ 25¢ STALL 321 48 -in, it Tubin for Sheetin for ‘Serim tte ine Curtaining Window i Lino Shades, for floors, | ——~Tadi jen : ae bad SiIK_ Coats, 188 White Bab: black and Y | Flannel white stripe| Tollet P Fisene, aplendi: Walste, § roll white, La Ste Can white Men Woo! Batting, 36-in. | Serge Suits, Underw big box for or Silkoline, | 85.08 Be $1.50 u Se 10-1b. be, re Cane ie for snune ‘i a Ole r Raking Powder. a gallon fason ane A a er «Be 5 Ges ie Gs ll Totlet 5 rte A 35 ¢ | FeP8.5 siiais 106 tare soeesee BOC | Wetch’s Grape dulce € age 95c | pints 20 «. varts 40¢ rth Hara” Wheat Flour, sack ..... - Lt sack Johnson Grocery Co. ,' 10-Ib. Bag Pure Cane Sugar for.............6le | 4 large cans Carnation Milk...26¢ 7 barn Crystal White Soap... 98e 2 lige. cans solid pk Tomatoes the 2be bulk Cocoa, per ib CORNER GROCER Pay Checks Cashed Office of 6lc Grocer, Oth & Pine. Goebe of Quality tea $1.50 or Lemon. 160 or Macaroni. ‘Be Patent aw eous, %4 of ext. Vaniti 3 pkes Exe Nood) ; cans imported Sardin ‘olle Totlet Paper M. CINNAMON CO. Corner 6th and Pine Italian Prunes, per box....40¢ Peaches for Canning, crate 40¢ One box Peaches and one box Prunes, together PEARS FOR CANNING Flemish Beauties or Bartletts 50¢—Full Size Crate—50¢ up Burrell Gem Melons, crate 75¢ Everything delivered Free, Joe Fischer at the German Delicatessen STALL 200 those Delicious Table and Lunch Goods that Serves Pickles, Weisel Milwaukee Sausages Stalle 110-111-112, Annex 1344 Big White Sanitary Market HAM SPECIAL Hams, whole or half, ib....15¢ Plenic Hams, per Ib........126 Fancy Bacon, bel the ne b.. 20¢ Aaa Compound Lard, 3 Ibs. tor. -25¢ “api of Lamb, genuine, 15¢ No. | Burbank Potatoes, 6 Ibs 196 59 (DMs 5 sno. ocenchasis River at 8 Ibs, 100, 21 Ibs. ice saad Dry Onions, & Ibs, 100, 18 Ibs. ..28e Watermelons, each 20c, 180 and Ite Hubbard Squash, per Ib ite Peaches for Canning, crate $3¢ Itallan Prunes, box. Bartlett Pears, box. Yakima Gem’ Potatoes, 1 sack . | loshe expansion. | Government operation of a na- merchant marine seems to jtlonal | |be the only hope for an American ‘flag that means anything to Amer ica on the & And even those who complain | most bitterly of the present state of jaftatrs speak of that prospect with ins. . Meantime, the merchants of the Pacific coast and the inland ship- |pers to the Orient are fearful that their business will be hurled into a chaotic state by the withdrawal of the Pacific Mat! and the Dollar mer. chant fleets with their Chinese crews, The only ships left are the Great Northern Company's Minnesota, and those of the Japanese lines, which} have contracted all their space for jthe next two years, This 1s one of the biggest prob- |lems facing the Wilson administra- |tion. It becomes acute on Novem- jber 4 when the seamen’s act be- |comes effective. ‘BIG CROWD TURNS OUT AT CHEHALIS CHEHALIS, Aug. Today's attendance at the Southwest Wash- ington fair was a_record-breaker. “it was Chehalis and Centralia day, 27.- and all school children were ad-| |to scale Mt. McKinley, is in Seat egy Al igri Mahon thinks she has a substantial |tie en route to the California expo-| Seattle, Portland and Tacoma bank account sitions, It Is the first time he has day, as well as Governor's day,|,, “ts Mason, police woman, test!-|heen “outside” in 11 years Thursday, was a marked success, | fled that Mrs. Martin refuses to ask! ‘Taylor and another “sourdough, Portignd sent a delegation of boost-| fF any assistance, tho she says her/named Pete Anderson, scaled Mt jers that kept the town alive with| husband was @ Mason. She prefers| McKinley April 3, 1910, shook Lister, , Was represented Hart. lexcitement.* Gov. Ka |Gov. who Is by 1 STAR WANT ADS ARE GO GETTERS, GRAY-HAIRED WOMAN DEFIES POLICE JUDGE “Well, I have to eat, don’t 17 She was a gray-haired old grand- mother, She sat with her legs crossed over a heavy cane, and with her finger keeping the place fn the |magazine she had been reading. Her bright eyes snapped defiantly |from behind her bowed spect: as she hurled her question at Police Judge MacMahon. “I don't see why it isn't as decent a way of making a living as any— I have to eat,” she repeated. “But you don’t have to beg,” judge reminded her. “Ah, am I the only one who vio- lates the laws?" she asked. But} before she could go farther she was hushed up by the matron. She is Mrs. 8. C. Martin, a fami! jar figure during the past few months on Seattle's streets, she has been sawing on a violm, with her hat lying upside down on| her lap. Into the hat has been| jdropped many coins, Judge Mac the Jan independent life. “I might have some consideration | for some persons who bregk an or. dinante, but I have none for you, said the judge, who had become huffy because of the belligerent at- where | titude she assumed, And then he fined her $10 on a specific charge of begging. “Thank you,” she shouted. “A nice way to treat me—with no friends and no money,” and she flounced out of the room, Later the sentence was suspend- ed, after Rev. George Wood of the |Columbia Baptist church had prom- ised to look after her, and she had promised not to give public per- formances ¥ with her violin any more. ASK RECEIVER FOR TRANSPORTATION CO. ‘o|. Asking that “the a action of Clal- * iam county courts {n appointing a receiver for the Port Angeles Transportation Co., on the applica- |tion of Peter Grubb, be ignored, the Fidelity & Deposit Co., of Mary- land, has asked that a receiver be} appointed on its petition in King county. Judge Tallman has or- dered the transportation company jto show cause why this should not be done, September 2. FIRST MAN TO SCALE MT. M’KINLEY HERE Wilifam R. Taylor, the first man hands and planted a fi the topmost peak, 20,500 feet above! level. It took them 18 hours| to cover the last 9,000 feet, a dis |tance other parties have failed to Imake in two weeks, z pole on TAMPICO COMMERCE HEAVY WASHINGTON, Aug. 27.—During the year over 500 American vessels are expected to clear from Tam pico, Mexico, carrying oil and other commodities, according to reports of the bureau of commerce, if the Present rate continues. THE MAN WHO IS PERPETUALLY HARD UP Cannot be happy, and no man can win a safe place in the world If he is hampered with debts. The man who starts out right, will never be poor in the extreme sense, no mat- ter how Iimited hie income, because he will always manage to save @ little, Interest Mf Per Cent UNION SAVINGS & TRUST CO. OF SEATTLE Capital and Surplus $815,000 JAMES D. HOGE, President N. B, SOLNER, Vice President and Trust Office? HOGE BUILDING tn the Heart of the Financial District l= — mit

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