The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 21, 1916, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Y, Gili K LS ‘ SB Nl i) iy ly, \Y \ “ee #2 Se Bas Gg Zp ee wp \t bi Wilf 1/0 $295 $38 An Economical | Delight u Place to Trade Mi you SAVE”. $199 TO $2,50 ee elaborate” SEA GULL GREY ‘TOBACCO BROWN ‘RICH BRONZE KID WHITE NUBUCK: VANIORY and MAT ‘ARID —__ WHITE, ‘NEWPORT DUCK and a diversifi =. gae of Laces ihe wnt Low Shoe in a ag Zable Shoe Stc IND AVE. AT” Pre FOR MEN & WOMEN Ake = Correct erry ij An mi 2 $345 Ji \ \ SS sky, CL | WW | H| ) ih Cc MYSTERIOUS MURDER OF LITTLE ELSIE MILLHUFF IN 1906 NEVER SOLVED“ her sleter, Two thousand five hundred dollars is the reward outstand- ing in King county today for the apprehension of the derer of little Elsie Milihuff, “the 11-year-old daughter of W. S. Milthuff, of Renton, who was brutally assaulted and killed May 30, 1906. It has been standing the week the crime was com- mitted, unctalmed by anyone. The Millhuff murder was chological” crime. That criminal, Miss ry tho his identity | was un- on the Get Your Easter Suit at a Big Reduction in Tonkin’s Sale Style Shop Quality Clothes for Men and Young Men $15 Suits Now $20 Suits Now $25 Suits Now $40 Suits Now An exceptionally fine line of Union- made Suits included Every Garment Fitted Perfectly Killed | Mrs. Corts ne; known, could be pretty closely de-|!ff Lou S ei scribed by the rules of psychology H as a fiend of a cow shortly She never returned. Her Clothes Torn |Her throat was slashed. mur- earth. tive for the murder. killed her to cover crime. Coroner F. M. since up a “pey-/ is, bank of the $12.75 $16.75 $18.75 $24.75 THE STYLE SHOP HOTEL BUTLER BLDG 609 SECOND AVE The little girl had gone with her mother and elder brother in search |} after sundown | Within 200 yards of their simp le! |country home she was felled by ® galt |heavy blow on the side of the head jstabbed in the heart and her body mutilated and thrown over a fence| and covered with a few inches of The torn condition of her cloth ing showed all too plainly the mo The fiend had | that night, the his first | chattering to-do. Carroll hastened | Jury the|to Renton and to the Millhuff home Cedar river latter Henry McKnight and » pos| se that had searched all night, }found the body. He found some bloody hand prints on the fence nothing mc Right there the tral! of the mur- deror broke off. It has never been wed past the shallow grave ‘© the victim lay ng deputies under Sher. ith rushed wildiy about of the critict: | Blundert and pec ri to him while nu skulking away thru the woods, Boy Freed by Jury And when, after many repeti tions, the ‘s first story seemed to differ in me details from b last version of his whereabouts deputies set up a They held him for the coroner's! who let him go in the vain hope that the deputies would leave! him alone and look somewhere else for the criminal But until the erime was old, they hung about the little boy, giving} out amazing Interviews to the news papers as to some new “clue” or other unearthed by them and con necting him with a murder he never could have committed. Policemen Hubbard and Dolphin did make an arrest that looked for! the moment reasonable. William| Duncan was picked up by the po-} licemen, who discovered some dark colored stains on his ragged coat Was Only Paint Stain | He fainted on the way to the sta tion and couldn't give an account he had been the night of} of where the crime. But Duncan was let go the fol lowing day when a chemical analy. sis of tite stains on his cont showed them to be red paint That ends the story Elsie Millhuff's murderer ts attil| lat large, and the reward for bis capture is $2,500. |o--- — - 4) |} BEER, BOOTY, BATHING LONDON, April 19.—Under government orders restricting the Importation of beer-making | | apparatus, English brewers will reduce their output by one glass of beer In every eight. STAR--FRIDAY, APRIL 21, 1916. PAGE & “WOMAN CROWNED QUEEN” So Says Revivalist in Star Sermon e : . — e he HIGHEST LASS OF | BY REV, |. E. HONEYWELL ‘THOUGHTS, and this in ane rea Written specially for The | son why it i# so frequently over Star in Series of Holy looked mong men We are think Week Sermons by in nes, but our duties call us America's Six Fa material interests mous Evangelists We are stu dying how we port our families; how Dr. Honeywell is known ae we educate our children; how one of the most powerful logical evangelists In Amer bulld our cities, Th © Objects which force them Ives upon the attention of man day to day, and because ° Text: What think ye of tianity does not directly take Christt—Matthow xxil.;42, Jd of them, many thrunt It aside: In this quemion What think pur - Revelation ts the great sub ye of Chr 1 notice that, feet, ject upon which all men SHOULD [Christianity ts a system think thought. It does not come S8 AT Christianity has SAVED CIVIL system of unthinking obedier TION and’ bees the crowning but appeals to us as reasonable|peneractor of the world we | 1, Look at the Influence ond, Christianity awakens in| 6% ‘Christianity upon man’ "A “———" | social condition. What were } the homes of Greece and Acid Stomachs “ | Rome in the days of their refinement? Reeking very abomination, with Are Dangerous| in the rriage nd woman utterly de But Christianity threw a purifying element this fetid mass. It woman from the of shame » throned her as qui the sanctitites of home 2. Trace the effects of Chris tlanity n lberty The siave when Christ came was a live chattel, an {implement with a voice, a piece of property valued less than an ox.” But our ly ail) Lord declared all men brethren ‘ged |The gospel is the nurse of liberty striking off the shackles from every slave. 3, See the effects of Christian- ity upon science. Where but tn antacid | Christian lands has science found biew {ts gost splendid victories? —yte Lat me appeal to you as reason: ‘an who stepped |Adle beings, You are indebted to mt on the foot|/Christ and Christianity for all is the te the advantages and comforts of x an the oe V neal | tne that you enjoy. If you are Ir |thankfal for your homes, you owe ft to that Christ your homes. If you are thankful for the enjoyments and blessing» not known fn heathen lands, you lowe it to Christ! Friend, what do YOU think of Christ? Is He not worthy of the homage of your heart and life? it would be fo on @ tack to ru blew will din ting miles and miles Between him-| 4 the horrible thing he had lent ind that had once been|' satoutes 3 fecegeat GET LIQUOR FINES She was| Piste Millhuff. efficacious tn all ment ~|. The city’s coffers jangled with $490 more Thursday, paid in by Nquor law vioMtors who were fined y Judge Gordon. They were E. Leonard, a waiter the Thalia cafe, which is owned y William Hodge, son of our |sheritf; R. E, Southern and Fred | Wright, of the Hillside bar, and Se bastian Vicct, 419 Yesler way Each was fined $100 NEST OF VAUDEY TWICE DATLY— FRITZI SCHEFF LIQUOR ADVERTISER FINED Travel Weekly Reunton of Vaud BONITA and 1 In “Bits of Mu EVERETT, April 21.—Because he advertised the names of liquor deal [ers outside of the state, Henry Pick |man was fined $100 and sentenced to ten days in Jail yesterday, y HEARN al Comedy” TONIGHT AND ALL WEEK WILKES PLAYER “BABY MINE” S20—I5e, Be, Bhe, 50 4:20—18e, B5e, Be, Hoe, JUNIOR REVIEW OF 1915 25—PEOPLE—25 BULL BROS. Just Printere 1013 THIRD AIN 1043 a OMEN BiG ACTS 10¢ and 200 April 24th to 29th Inclusive AT THE MOORE Six Nights, with Matinees on Wednesday and Saturday LONDON, April 19.—German colonies captured by the allies ha 0,000 square miles area, 4,804,269 population, about | | $15,092,500 revenue and exports and imports of about $110, 000, it Ia officially estimated LONDON, April 18.—"“How they bat t Palm Beach: A | | Jockey bathing costume seen at || the famous bathing resort in | | California,” says the caption | | over a picture in an Illustrated | London daily, \¢ ad | venteen barrels of whiskey tored in the basement of Capt Harry Cade's home in Kirkland win eized by deput heriff Thurada According to Deputy Prosecutor Carmody, the booze be longed to J, A, Ferry, Kirkland drug ‘store man STANDARD GRAND } OPERA COMPANY | with Florencio Constantino WILD HUNTSMAN | | as “Guest” Presenting in English “THE OF BOHEMIA,” by von Weber Humperdinck’s fairy fantasy, “HANSEL AND GRETEL,” and Gou nod’s immortal “FAUST.” Popular Prices—"“Faust” Nights | performances, 250 to $1.00, Bow » 25e to $1.50, All other , $2.00 and $2.50. Seats Now Selling at the Moore “mere| who gives you! WHEN YOU BUY FROM The pleasantest job I have is to prove just that. Take my $11.80 and $13.80 Suits, for instance. Compare them with any $15 Suit in town—upstairs, ground floor or base- ment—you'll come back to me. The value is here. Same thing with my $16.80 Suits. Place them side by side with the twenty dollar ones up and down the line. You'll decide that my Sixteen-eighty is as much a Twenty as if I put that price on it. Victor Clothes and Leopold Morse “Character Clothes” are made by the strongest Union Label houses in Amer- tca. Their goods are thoroughly guar- anteed. My own guarantee goes on top of that. I carry large stocks of these re- markable Clothes in all the latest shades and patterns, including pencil stripes, plain gray Clays and handsome, service- able Worsteds, Cheviots and Serges. All sizes are here for shorts, stouts and slims—everything wanted by men and young men. I have the biggest store on First Ave., because | sell the most goods and sell for less. | can do that because my rent is the lowest, my buying is heavy and my system of doing business cuts out the frills and the leaks. There’s time to get that Easter Suit yet. Come in tomorrow. CARL SCHERMER 103-107 First Ave. So. Ten Steps From Yesler on thoroughly good, abso- lutely reliable and stylish Clothes for Men Compare them with the regular $15 kind $16.80 See if they don’t measure up to the $20 sort $18.80 Can't tell them from the $22.50 ‘kind $21.80 They sell for $25 as a rule, and are good values at that Your Pay Check will be cashed here whether you buy or not Complete Stocks of Men's Shoes, Hats and Furnishings SAYS CHINESE HUSBAND TRIED TO RAILROAD HER TO ASYLUM ee of affidavits ing John Seung, a wealthy Chinese canneryman, many times threat- ened to have Mrs. Mary Seung his wife, deported to China, Judge Ronald fas set aside the findings of Dr. Lilian C. Irwin and Dr. Helen B. Babcock that ing is insane. ng says she was marrie< in China 32 years ago; that her h Heging herself rself | children. | said, disliked her from the start the step-mother of four | who acted as ee ge at the in- sanity hearing. Dr. Irwin admitted night have been possil ble the iIn- r was not acting {n good fait Mrs. § ng is to be examined by | Drs. A. Calhoun and W. A. band came here and re-married| Nicholson. Pendink the examina. twice, and that when she finally|tion she is being held at the county arrived in this country she found’ jail AMERICAN AUTHOR HONORED BY FRANCE GET UP FEDERATION The Washington Insurance Feder ation was formed fr ttle ‘Thurs by representatives from North Who sell all kinds of The object is “to bring together buyers and sellers of in- surance,” said the resolution, |da west ‘8 policies, Two step-daughters, she!/ It was one of these daughters | Hair Often Ruined By Washing With Soap Soap should be used very care fully, {f you want to keep your hair ford its best. Most soaps and red shampoos contain too moet alkall. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins The best thing for steady use is just ordinary mulsified cocoanut of! (which is pure and greaseless), and is better than the most expen- sive soap or anything else you can i One or two teaspoonfuls will jcleanse the hair and scalp thorough- lhy. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, which rinses out easily, removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive oil. The hair dries | quickly and evenly, and it leaves the scalp soft, and the hair fine jand silk bright, lustrous, fluffy and ea to manage. You get mulsified cocoanut ofl at any pharmacy, it’s very cheap, jand a few ounces will supply every member of the family for months, Advertisement. Star Want Ads cover the entire Northwest. Southeast Corner Fifth Granuinted Su articles wit BRANDS OF PATEN | 2Eareté Wharton | This American novelist has re ceived the highest honor Fra | has to confergn a woman—the gion of Honor, Na on's order of merit, The five-rayed star, insig-| nla of the order, was presented to 2’ cans Sliced Pi All Kinds of Garde TWO STORES—waHirt | Mrs. Wharton in acknowledgment of her war F relia f work in France cITy TO MAKE FILL MAIN 2809 “QUALITY” | | County Engineer Denton has!) Jowl Bacon, 2 Ibs....25¢ Jasked the county commissioners to é d eal for bids for a hydrauite fin of || Neck Bones, 8 Ibs...25¢ 4 miles of Kast Marginal way, to Back Bones, 8 Ibs...25¢ be extended from the city into the | Leaf L 21 county. He estimates tho cost at eaf Lard ........ 13%e $35,000, WHITE PUBLIC MARKET STONG CUTS IN DEEPER OUR SPECIALS GOOD FOR ONE WE ha 2 MARKHT AND CORNER MARKET WHITE MEAT COMPANY MAIN Avenue and Pine Street pkgs New n and Flower Seeds OUR MOTTO | Veal Chops | Veal Roasts | Steer Steaks | Pot Roasts 2809 = ZEEREREEZREZREZREAEEZEXK EX EZEEEERER EE ES ES | sx ERE = =} fons Ught Pain &gon ofr. ono

Other pages from this issue: