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oo (FAN Economical, Delightful Place to Trade ‘ | i) | § ' f : ‘ FROM WHICH TO CHOOSE All Styles and Sizes—Felts and Vic! Kid Men’s Oxford Gray Slippers $1.25 Warm and comfortable Felt Slippers, with soft leather sole 81,25 Men’s Vici Kid Slippers $1.25 and $1.50 in black and brown, opera, Eve White kid lined, $1.54 Women’s Cozy House Slippers $1.25 These soft, easy ng Felt Moce exquisite colors, including blue gtay and Diack at asins may be ha avender maroon, red 81.25 and 81.50 Women’s Felt Juliets 95c To be had in black, gray and wine Very special, 95¢ Exceptional ve $3 45 Ue 1. 4 Low Heel Boots Goodyear welt I pictured. ber sole, pair 83.45 Same last in dark tan Russia cal or high top Novelty Boots large variety of patterns, rich colors and combinations, in both lace and button models at + $2.95 to $5.95 New High Spats In the popular shades, light gray and white, at & Men’s Shoes Undoubtedly we are offering the Dest values in the city. Why pay more? $2.95 to $3.95 Mall Orders Delivered Free by Parcel Post BOSTON SAMPLE SHOE SHOP C2: The Store of Style and Service SECOND AVE. AT PIKE in many with fur trimming . fawn $2.25 -50 fo Elevator Open Saturday Evemngs to9 ¢ ° | MALCOLM STUART FEELS | IT WAS ALL A DREAM Just as I fin decision of retu start a ) Stuart was down to dine wi All at ¢ hungry, eaten | noon, be at the stat Little be | since then—so m |since yesterday that recording 1 Cor. First Avenue and Pike Street Opposite Public Market. Entrance 104! Pike. PAINLESS -and Prove It I was very bered I had ® STAR ——})| SHORTER WORK-DAY KEEPS MEN OUT OF SALOONS--STELZLE BY THE REV. CHAS, STELZLE [CROWD ABOUT THE BARS OF} Religious Writer of The| THESE SALOONS FIVE DEEP. | IMPATIENT FOR A DRINK | itself there in| every 90 men,} Apparently | worked by these Special es =| one saloon for about men and LONG bour author children | than Dy | men do not keep them OUT of the saloon A recent study of how working 6 time sho LON in the EST hour | saloon. Printers Sober Now | One of the moat ¢ yicuous fh lustrationa of the EDITOR.) of the eight-hour day ts the A yardmaster from Buffalo | of the printers, When the printers testified the other day before f America worked long hours they a board of arbitration which |} is considering the switchmen's n of being “boos eded in se demand for an eight-hour work ¢ r wor ny they day, that the eight-hour day ' « own this reputation will simply “make — more wered ther rates drunks.” yved their general health | have considerable trouble now because the men spend true that if the awiteh their time in saloons,” he told t eh h r da the arbitrators, AND HE y at the THEREBY GAVE AWAY HIS | by g to ! some of thetr CASE ne gained leisure time in get What is it) that drives a frunk, t ! ntly in workingman into the saloon? Mostly overfatigue—too many hours spent on nerve-straining jobs! will or oon © the men will be nmorality Is Decreased always de i) nd every the moral wh inn works 1 artificia: INDIAN HEIRESS GIVES UP LUXURIES; BECOMES NURSE TO HELP SICK POOR LETITIA CURTIO i pected to see mr a q Denti as I Practice It Is| #27. When I looked n 4 tistry |dressing table mirror I was ver KANSAS CITY, Mo., Dec. 15.—| to which 3 G Art ite Devoid| ™%ch surprised that I could still] Miss Letitia Curtis, owner of valu. Curt i ° tle Quite Devoid) trie. Jable oll lands, descendant of a fa- both P “Here the Little Lady ‘ag aut 4 of Pain Salvia aga Stuart |MOUS Osage chieftain and relativeof oi) 5 . ator | Senator Charles Curtis of Kansas, I ha "This, my statement, is not new.|“Do you know, M @ a|has given up a life of luxury to a we I have said so before i a s arprise to me ep the Gene a ae |o I Se sands of wondering, satisfied Pesige tt patients will bear me out yer poo tead of a luxurious apartment | money and ee and I say it now and w e atiffene ¥ in and again be J r that 0 oe gy «i again and again be Tonight you come with all th 2 Awe » ) know of no better m glorious color that I love in your fe this message of h r upturned smiling Goodne promise to the ur ady, you must |that?” I asked 4 fearful sufferers from “de then or you are have realiz full Quite as his laconic and ©) toothache and all b that which you are no Jeapactty of human motive yet, Mr.|most enigmatic re aerige t pte ‘ ; | | Stuart, | (To be continued) Py) which accompany and foll } ros what ou ya Bent | “te that an iatimation that 1 | t. r, returned, dropping a faint| ll you Mrs. Waverly?” | 4 ORALTHESIA apt S ra when 4 im hetase she | y friends call me Mar. | is about to solve the great secret sero acai ae saree ie to embark on the great adven-| oe ht b gorges ois nt The most wonderful known : ‘ he was t : to f antidote to the pain which ac Picre aeetee neal aye i ear her home, Vida 4 es d operations — you, dear Little Lady | the 1 daughter of Grove: £ companie dental operations, e is your cour-| Salvia,” he said fervently. “What|! city, was strangied. permits me to’ work at will on | | would you think of me, I wonder, She w dead when discovered ymning it had gone fly the most sensitive tooth with- 2 I could not reach out the slight t degree of pain A nas come for the pat For the past t. I was three years I have made acting neither then nor now. This of this wonderful, ha world seemed some-| at any cost; tonight] antidote, and never, in one sin ething to hold at what gie case has it failed me ; Think what that means he said I began to ; on wi endid and 4 - apprec » appetite, “I think It | Teeth Filled or Extracted) 1s order to hold our possessions |than it is to compass our desire Absolutely Without Pain Live nerves removed. Crowns and Plates fitted with the patient ab solutely at ease and— we must erything Sometimes | yn why some n greater than | Most of us do not re h | of us find anticipat | realization, We bring every gift of |imagination to enhance our antici I Guarantee Painlessness | pation We overturn our live jour world, to make them come true, and then we cept the it back and realization in a kind of as No Other Dentist Dare apathetic calm that takes all the No matter what the operation may | y out of It be. 4 "But my dear little lady, in “IF IT HURTS DON’T) ti? 1expectedness of your wel PAY ME” come make anticipation very cold MI Work Guaranteed 12 Years. | here and look at you across this softly lighted, flower-bedecked ta ble as tho I had been having a bad and strange, 1 feel tonight as I sit Lowest Prices in the City. TEDDY WILL HUNT DEVILFISH! MAY RETURN WITH QUITE A DISH | -— — —————1 T, R's going hunting for devilfish this time full of monstrositites well, that's no Or he may take a harpoon to he'd flit, shouting he had done it quite a bit he'll cruise over he'll feed on wild bees to sting seas topuses to death pear ‘em into meat: and back home he'd made a big hit, science gained, His fish had nine long feet! ‘ FRIDAY, DEC 15, 1916, PAGE 8 An average of 15% saved on every dollar’s worth of groceries that goes into the home of every thrifty citizen—man or woman—who will take the trouble to read this advertisement through. Will you do it? and 15 per cent is a mighty big discount! If you don’t believe it, try borrowing money at that rate— Or let your taxes go delinquent, and see the 15 per cent penalty grow into great big dollars—a picture that haunts you every time you think of the day of possible forfeiture. Business men are all-fired eager to save a measly 2 per cent on their purchases, and 5,7 or 8 per cent-—about the limit in the most liberal lines in the mercantile s->- = world—is very existence itself to many business enterprises. and when a merchant fails to pay promptly and take his discounts he’s a goner—either a bankrupt or rated as a decidedly poor risk. How about you, Mr. Wage Earner; is it beneath your dignity to save 15 per cent? Are you a victim of shiftless habit— buying blindly, slip-shod fashion, paying dearly for the antiquated, wasteful, costly -inferior, if you please—methods of the enslaved retail grocer? > => WAKE UP, MR. EASY MARK, GET INTO THE THRIFT CLASS ou are familiar with the Cafeteria ide bright thought master-mind, me stu dent of modern efficiency who cut the cx st of feed Mr. and Mrs. Thrift Buy at the Groceteria nate all t o hin 1 know that here in Seattle are twelve 1 t grocery stores, called GROCETERIA nder the same successful plat tor from trust domination and price-fixing indepe \ \ here the nice, clean, dustless stay ished from the big central warehouse every day? attractive front, take a clean mar- se exactly what you wa ‘s counter, whe ¢ neat bu regular grocery “uy pay—not a mighty 15 per cent saving at least, and much more on many articles each busy GROCI 1 cut below every day in the year You don’t have to wait for bargain day at GROCE TERIA stores! Every day is bargain day here You don't have to travel block er block in search of clusive specials—only to be disappointed ‘mc lf you Brothers’ Co ound ¢ of 45 mu n Tea GROCETERIA pay 55c ir 1 « If you want Le TERIA is sold at a regular fixed prices—- { st every time want Hills’ ee, it is 38c day, ery in buy Lipton’s at we give you 2 bars 7c any ¢t y tire al € bookkeepers in the GRO CETERIA St And we have no delivery sys- tem—no motor trucks or teams for you to pay for. notice the en- of clerks and es Mr. and Mrs, Thrift Carry a Market Basket ks are replen- | GROCETERIAS | are “Ma, We've Saved 20 Per Cent” the new popular lowing list of 1ess fir tores, the go F as per slips at order is is an actual test can easil The fi Do y nth made without our knowledge; test it out for yourself in any part of the city. es show a saving of twenty per cent. u realize what this means in the course of a , a year? more actua ally saved out of every u rather put that $15.00 in the savings bank to your own credit? wasteful habits! Rem e pennies that count Make a start by buy from the GROCETERIA Patronize the indep a month and compare y paying Visit the big central GROCETERIA Stores at 85 Pike Street, or 509 Pine Street, in the great downtown market rict, and be shown through t buy anything ig at least a part of your supplies it GROCETERIA Stores for slips with what you are now of the GROCETERIA wn neigh outlying Join the big THRIFT FAN trail that leads to 1I1LY fol low the scientific marke Buy better at the GROCETERIAS, and save that 15 per cent. Mr. and Mrs, Thrift Save Enough to Start a Bank Account GROCETERIA Knox Gelatine, package Jel-lo, per package STORE Lipton’s Ceylon Tea, 1-lb. pkg Hills Bros.’ Red Can Coffee, Ib 5-lb. can Blue Can Karo Syrup Arm & Hammer Soda, package...... 25c package Crackers . 2-pound sack Salt 2 bars Lenox Soap.. Grape Nuts, a package Mrs. Porter's Mayonnaise, small bottle Wesson Oil, small can . Old Dutch Cleanser Bon Ami Powder, can... Snider's Catsup, a bottle.. Citrus Powder, large package.... K. C: Baking Powder, 25 ounces. 82 cents saved on less than $4.00 purchase. it—over 20 per cent! $3.13 $3.95 Think of bstistersccstsitcssistititistssitisssissctittistestiist iscsi sesres sii tists iit stot Groceteria Store No. 1—509 Pine St. Groceteria Store No. 2—1314 East Forty-fifth St. Groceteria Store No. 3—Section 45, Pike Place Mar- ket—down stairs. Groceteria Store No. 4—5419 Ballard Ave. Groceteria Store No. 5—7111 Woodlawn Ave. Groceteria Store No. 6—85 Pike St. STORES AT BELLINGHAM AND KENT Groceteria Store No. 7—South End Public Market. Groceteria Store No. 9—233 Broadway North. Groceteria Store No. 10—503 Union St. Groceteria Store No. 11—Pine Street Public Market Seventh at Pine St. : Groceteria Store No. 12—New Economy Market, First and Pike. | Groceteria Store No. 14—Westlake Market. a Ban (ORR je