The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 22, 1916, Page 6

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PORTRAYING GheNEWEST CREATIONS oP IN POPULAR [MODES r= FALL Ci and Inspect Our Select Showing of the Coming p _Aeliete FASHIONS Including Smart Laced Boots and Dainty Slippers, Two Tones Rich Browns and Greys. A and Popular Low Heel Boots ECONOMICAL PRICES <4", SAMPLE SHOE SHOP Up Stairs Shoe Store Second Ave.at Dike St. TAKE ELEVATOR MENS SHOES RRC spe WOULD ALL BE | Minister Visits FLIES NOW, Blonde Eskimos | SIOUX CITY, Ia. Sept. 22.—Po- SASKATOON, Sask. Can., in the neighborhood of the Chi- | Ne t. 22.-— The tribe of house are now kept busy pull-| de Eskimos which Harry Doys off the walls. Frequently v Radford of New York, the Men attempted to duplicate | murdered explorer, reported feat of Harry Gardiner, the/ he had found on Coronation an Fly.” who climbed the|] Bluff, far in the Arctic zone, building Saturday evening. |] have been visited again by a out half an hour after Gardiner | pete? an — pwnd Fong the building a boy about) Fears old drew » crowd around Rev. H, Girling of Emmanuel @ north end of the building when || college, the missionary an- P clambered to the third story.|]| 2unced he reached the fair (@id not attempt to swing over dweilera of the Arctic on ie cornice, but stepped to the cor October 10, 1915. on an adjoining structure. He} ca nen is applauded by the crowd success had the effect of /Ohlund. During the week several ons ting several boys in the|newsboys endeavored to make the| Manufacture of the Missouri |. but they were prevented | ascent, but were prevented by po- corncob pipe represents ao indus climbing by Patrolman Johnblice or hotel attaches ltry of $500,000 a year. BiG GROWTH OF HAIR ST. LOUIS, Mo., Bept. 2 Men who have more than the normal) amount of hair to cause the bar ber trouble, and men who have less than the allotted amount, both should be subject to a tax, in the opision of the journeymen barbers. | At @ meeting of the St Louis Journeymen Barbers’ union, a charge of 5 centa was indorsed for ‘trimming & mustache—heretofore trimmed free with a haircut or shave-—and a charge of at least 15 cents was urged for hair restorer or tonic placed on the cranium of a bald-headed gentleman, Tho present charge is 10 cents. NEW OLYMPIC |e" bas ‘BARBERS WOULD TAX STAR—FRIDAY, SEPT. 22, 1916. PAGE 6 ENGLISH HEAR KAISER PLANS PEACE OFFER) Expect Wilson to Refuse to! | Act as Mediator in | October ALLIES TO FIGHT ON| BY EO lL. KEENE U. P. Staff Correspondent LONDON, Sept. 22.—-Ger many will eet another peace kite flying about the middie of October, British officialdom, both military and civil, confi expects. apparently well au: ed rumore have reach. then ed London that Germany, suf- fering huge losses because of the recent offensive, is trying to suggest an armistice thru Spain or the U, &. It Is understood on reliable au thority that King Alfonso, of Spain, so far is unresponsive and is un likely to act Wilson to Be Asked The Germans, it is believed here, | to tempt President Wilson to | wtart jations at the time when lany attendant success would be jikely to affect favorably his jchances of reelection Americans conversant with In ride British sentiment feel certain any such move on the part of Wil son would not only be foredoomed to fallure, but would arouse the} most bitter resentment of the al |Hen and ales permanently elim inate Washington as a possible | mediator | Want Decisive Peace | Every indication points not only |to the oneness of purpose of all) the allies to continue the war un) til a decisive peace is obtainable, | | but to the fact that the army, the |navy and political leaders are thor loly united in the determination to asnume re ibility, if necessary for the war's continuation after | Germany |e ready to quit | | If this does become necessary, they will leave it to history to jum) tify the additional carnage | It is no secret that the Angio-| | French are prepared, both in num- bere and munitions, to continue | the present offensive indefinitely, | fe Ba of winter weather. Ready to Fight On Altho there was much nervous- hope is merely of a! the occupied territory might have been received sympathetically by mifitery authorities, they feel that ow everything favors the allies d that soch aa abandonment of | occupied territory would be only to! | Germany's advantage, enabling her lto shorten and strengthen her lines British soldiers’ only worry now is possible over optimism of civilians because of their recent succeases and those confidently ex- pected in the future They realize that the Germans are not yet beaten and that a long and arduous task still confronts them. VARSITY GADETS TO GET NEW UNIFORMS There'll be no more army of the | Gray at the University of Washing |ton after the present college gen- eration passes thro those “columns we love” forever to do battle with |the cold, cruel world Capt. Patten, commandant of the cadet corps, announced Thursday that the = fresl nm needn't buy their “unis” this year, as congress had passed a Dill providing for the inguance of olive drabs to all state universities, The new uniforms will not be available until July, 1917. Drink Hot Water The Man Who Made the Crew of S. S. Congress Happy @ Something happened in Seattle last Satur- day, and that something caused me to say to Mr. Carl Schermer that for today I wanted to write his ad without any interference from him. I had my way. @ The important happening was the arrival in this city of the crew of the ill-fated steam- ship Congress. Every man of them- sailors, firemen, stewards and all—had lost some- thing, many of them had lost all their be- longings except that which they had on their CARL 8C backs when the fateful fire was discovered. HERMER @ So when these valiant men reached their home port, the Pacific Coast Steamship Company supplied each and every one with an order for a complete outfit of apparel—from underwear to suit from hat to shoes. @ The company had no contract with any dealer to supply this im- mense amount of merchandise, yet the business had to go some- where. What followed is a lesson in preparedness to every business man, a lesson which every young man especially should note and ponder well. © Carl Schermer got this business. He did not bid for it, did not know even that it was to be had. Unconsciously, however, he had prepared for it-——for years. His policy of stocking only good goods, of being satisfied with small profits, of being accommodating and courteous to a degree, of being on hand personally to greet his cus- tomers and supervise his store—each and all of these have given Schermer and his store a reputation, and this reputation got him the business. When the men came—nearly 200 of them—they came with their orders addressed to Carl Schermer. @ Right here Schermer preached another sermon without saying a word. Regardless of the rush, notwithstanding the opportunity, and remembering that each man’s needs called for an average of a dozen items from half as many departments, every man got just what he wanted, each item was charged on his slip at regular price, and as great care in filling orders and courtesy in dealing with each indi- vidual was observed as if business were normal and the customer a prosperous business man instead of a humble follower of the sea. | know whereof I speak, for | was on hand and helped handle the crowd. @ It pays to “shoot square” and to give the customer a bit the best of it. Carl Schermer follows this policy, and he agrees with the great Marshall Field when he said, “the customer is always right.” @ It’s a pleasure to serve a man of Schermer’s stamp. In his store there is no marking up before marking down. There is no talk of wool when the article is cotton. For years he was satisfied with small individual profits, looking to volume to make the business worth while. Now he has the volume, and the volume is greater this year than last. It will surely be greater next year than this. @ This is the testimony of When you buy from Carl Schermer’s 103-107 Ad Man. CARL SCHERMER you save. FIRST AVENUE SO. 10 steps from Yesler. Public Market If You Desire a | SATURDAY SPECIALS MUSIC 2 TO 9 P. M. Choice Fed Alaska Reindeer ee + 20¢ Steaks, Chops, per pound . FRESH MEATS | SUGAR CURED SMOKED Prime Steer Pot Roast......10c | MEATS Choice Short Ribs of Beef. Shoulder Pork Roasts Small Hams Shoulder of Lamb........ | New York Shoulders Lean Light Bacon Anchor Bacon Light Skinned Hams Cottage Butts Boston Butts Other cured meats at propor- | tionately low prices. BAKERY DEPARTMENT Nut Loaf Cake, each German Rye Bread, 3 10c loaves Fresh Churned Washington State, | Mayflower brand, Ib EGGS Strictly Fresh Local Ranch. . .42c CHEESE Fine Old New York Full Cream, POULTRY Frye’s Celebrated Milk Fed Fowl, | Whole Wheat or Graham Bread, 2 10c loaves for Fruits and Vegetables at Farmers’ Prices | Watermelons, 5c and 10c each. Grapes, 5c Ib. Cooking Apples, box 75c¢ 1422-24 FIRST AVE. First Door South of Pike The Old Location Has Been Abandoned { AP 8 a BG Rosy Complexion Says we can't help but look better and fee! better after an ine! bath, To look one's bes’ nd feel one's bent is to enjoy an Inside bath each | | morning to flush from the system |the previous day's waste, sour fer material in the form of 0 the food and drink taken lay leave in the alimentary organs a certain amount of indi- gestible material, which, if not elim inated, form toxins and poisons, |which are then sucked into the | blood through the very ducts which are intended to suck In only nour ishment to sustain the body | If you want to see the glow of Ithy bloom in your cheeks, to your skin get clearer and clear- Jer, you are told to drink every morning upon arising, a glass of hot | Water with & teaspoonful of lime- | stone phosphate tn it, which is a | harmless means of washing the | waste material and toxins from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels, thus cijeansing, sweetening and | purifying the entire allmentary tract, before putting more food into | the stomach | Men and womeg, with sallow | skins, liver spots, pimples or pallid complexion, also those who wake up with a coated tongue, bad taste, nasty breath, others who are both- | ered with headaches, bilious spells, acid stomach or constipation should | begin this phosphated hot water drinking and are assured of very es. agen results in one or two weeks. A quarter pound of lmestone | phosphate conts very little at the | dru store, but is sufficient to dem: | {ovstrate that just as soap and hot ater cleanses, purifies and fresh: | ens the skin on the outside, so hot| iter and limestone phosphate act on the inside organs, We must al-| ways consider that internal sanita. | tion is vastly more Important than | outside cleanliness, because the| akin pores do not absorb impurities into the blood, while the bowel! pores do. jh OTE ITT BEES CAUSE FOUR FARMS TO BLAZE TOPEKA, “Kan, Sept. 22 The attempt of Frank Koehler, a farmer, southeast of Topeka, to exterminate several swarms of bees resulted in a fire which spread over four farms. It re- quired the help of 150 farmers to get the flames under con. trol. Solve the | Servant Question Save | Money | BY DINING AT Bird’s DAYLIGHT Cafeteria Where you can get your meals cheaper than at home. Los Angeles settled the serv. ant problem by her cafet Bird's cafeteria is operate along the same lines for your benefit. CONTINUOUS SERVICE | 11 A.M, TO 8 P.M. EVERY DAY | Second at Seneca SES SE ae | ticular ‘ALVIN MOORE BACKS WILSON H. Alvin Moore, | former state or. ganizer of the Rallway Men's Re. publican club, sent The Star Fri- day a copy of a letter addressed to President Wilson, in a post- script, declaring, “Besides the pres- ident, we are going down the line |for Senator Poindexter.” The letter follows Sir “T hav publican for for a democrat in since you have been responsible for the enactment of so many laws for the benefit of labor, and in par- railway labor, which in- cludes myself, being a locomotive lengineer of 22 years’ experience, I have ceased my activity as organ- izer of Rallwaymen's Republican clubs and am converting those or- Honorable been a partisan re | ganfaations into nonpartisan clubs so we railwaymen may unite in voting for the man who votes for us, Which meane at this time we shall support WOODROW WILSON | for PRESIDENT." BRIDE IS JAILED DURING HONEYMOON Mrs, John Mochineki is spending her honeymoon in the city jail in default of $1,000 bail as the result of officers finding $200 worth of | goods said to have been shoplifted from Second ave. department | stores The young woman, whose name was Vera Wasolek before she was married, was arrested last Monday, | charged with shoplifting, together with her mother, when goods val- ued at several hundred dollars were found in their home at 326 West 50th st. The daughter main- 5 years—never voted | my Ite—but | tained her innocence and was re leased The mother, Mrs. Cecelia Waso-/ lek, is being held jail HUNGRY GRIZZLY MAULS TWO ME CODY, Wyo, Sept. 22.—Ned Frost, a guide, and Ed Jones, a cook, were brought here suffering | from serious injuries reecived in a in the county battle with a large female grizzly |bear near the Lake hotel in Yel- lowstone National park. Accord- ing to their story, Jones caught the jbear raiding the commissary and attempted to frighten it away. The janimal was mauling Jones, when Frost came to the rescue. Both | were badly clawed before the anl- |mal was frightened away by ap Proaching tourists. The injured men will recover. le TONIGHT | SUPERB Dancing Exhibition By Dainty BENTATA The Stianedinend! s Talented Chief In structor Of Adult and Juvenile Classes in Ball Room and Fancy Dancing Fifth Avenue at University Street

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