The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 16, 1917, Page 10

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)

FRIDAY AD ER@2ERB BEB EEZI Frank H. Spear- man set out to write a novel. He chose ' for his heroine a girl of the mountains, who lived with a pack of thieves. And he decided to make Frank de Spain, » manager of the stage P fine, a hero. ) The result was that he built a won- “derfully exciting stale, full of red- Dlooded action and the wild atmosphere of the rugged coun- try of Calabasas. , And finally The Star arranged to pub- ‘lish that novel tor its readers. The - first instaliment will appear Monday. The title is: I ee ae Flock of Hens a: Valuable Asse t Now Furnishing Goods, etc., which It Is easily possible for this old store to PORT CLINTON, Ohio. 16.—A profit of $24 fro: hens ts claimed by Gee Oak Harbor, thru rai im his back yard last year says he spent $160.40 for feed and other expenses, and sold eggs and chicks to the amount of $407.31, KRATKKRFKRKFEKR’ The Largest Credit Apparel Inetitution in the United States Now Showing New Arrivals in presented whieh re lated to industr free apoech for Spring pg ee d than any other #0 wwe in whieh Thomas H 4 other members of the Industr Workers’ organieatio a iarged with murder ¢ < count o death of Jefferson Heard from shots fire when { went from Seattle to Bverett oe “Verona” November 6 last while the art being din cussed, was brought back, and t articles and other I, W. W, Htera ture read to it Thursday afternoon and Friday morning Juror Sleeps One of the jurors slept during J Walker ©. Sm author of t Y book in question botage,” wat at he press table during the after nd Elizabeth Gurley Flynn was in tted cheerfully with rned from peaking trip| n and will leave for Califor n whether she m Tracy as yet fta often and restlessly & attention. a «rin with iden ern That's the \rrange you fent way to QPEN SATURDAY EVENING UNTIL 10 O'CLOCK We ee, Spe “Wanted, 2,000 men for Ever ett meeting. Come prepared for action. Every available member start at once for Se attic, Street meeting will be held at Everett Sunday, 2 o'clock, Nov. 5. Locals arrange protest meetings, collect funds. This fight must be won, All fighting members answer this 1992-1334 SECOND AVENUE call to The One Store Where Credit Is Really an Accommodation tion VAN DELL IS SANE, BORDEAUX ASKS U.S. |{\"...:° 20" ALIENISTS DECLARE GOODS AT DISPLAY One sent toh, Ps Thompeon,f rth Yakima, Oct. 3, was as f * n “Forty-one men attempted to merchants and manufacturers who) enter Everett. Took passage desire to tn trade wit on boats. Drunken mob, 200 strong, vigilantes, led attack : at boat landing Guns, saps submarine zone, if It still Is In| and clubs freely used. Forty existence when the time comes, and) one men treated at Seattle hoe OLYMPIA, March 16 enists| PARIS, Mar 10 ified yesterday in the trial of; John Van Dell, who is charged with killing E. W. Olson, that Van De showed towa sanity, and that, in he was able to distinguls right and wrong. pane t France, today wero invited to brave ; nd their displays over fo: pital. Injuries range from The case Is expected to go to the send thetr displays rt prok hy ury Friday afternoon | xreat Hordeaux fair, Sept. 1 to 1 prenen ‘gnemeer $0 serious: In ternal injuries and scalp wounds, Advertise conditions Only agninat the Trams and Bye, Buy, Friends: = It'sOurSwanSong: © Redelsheimer’s name will disappear in just two weeks from the old Weird Influences home, corner First Avenue and Columbia Street, where we've been do- Held the ex-Czar: Consulted Quacks merchandise to be sold, or, rather, ° ed Nicholas | ar of J a, who GIVEN AWAY AT ALMOST CHARITY DISTRIBUTION PRICES ped down fr throne at ing business for the past seventeen years There are yet thousands of dollars’ worth of snappy, up-to-date | Thirty-five Cents will do the ordinary work of a dollar when ewap- 0.0 OTE | ped for goods at the Redeisheimer Store during the remaining few days! weird inf of its existence. Qu dull m | vine piritualista and arch-con Young Men's Suits, sizes from 31 to 36, values up to $30.00, for ple $B.B9),,, 2, tore, = Pemend, Mer $11.89 xander L, was as with a bomb on the spot We want every particular fellow, who knows what Really Good Clothes are, to put the above to the test. Come along, men | Men's and Young Men's Sults, sizes 34 to 42, values up to $30.00, for . cesoees | Men's and Young Men's Suits, sizes 34 to 42, values up to $35.00, for where the a mutino » between d last Mon Men's and Young Men's Pants at Half Price: $5.00 regular values for nf no | $6.00 regular values for 3.00 you the truth, Pay us in marked money, if you want to FURNISHING GOODS Be Oper ti d |$4.00 and $5.00 Silk Shirts, all popular sizes, for 9 | tween peration an : $1.8: “ $2.00 Ties, and there are some of the classiest here, for sii5 | Death. Cured by Lydia SL.18 | |$2.00 Shirts, there’s Manhattans and E. & W.'s, for........ “18 . , $1.50 Shirts, their equal can't be found for that, for The E, Pinkham’s Vegetable 50c Silk Hose for 25¢, and Boston Garters for Bene. 4 Compound $5.00 and 00 Underwear, two-piece and union sults, for.. #2.85 $2.50 Union Suits for $1.18 and $1.50 Night Shirts and Pajamas 7i5¢ | Les Moines, lowa—"My husban $3.00 Men's Hats, soft or stiff, all late Spring models % | $5.00 Men's Hats (who ever excelled Redelsheimer’s on hats?) $4 ‘30 | | grave today had it not been for Lydia KB. Pink ham's Vegetable Compound, I sut- | MOTHERS, TOG UP THE BOYS WHILE THE TOGGING’S GOOD if it wasn’t for the careful, shrewd women who do most of the! |household buying these days, this country would have been bankrupt! |long ago. Watch them snap up these: AA $1.00 and $1.50 Boys’ Shirts 5 | Lp arte 74 $2.00 and $3.00 Boys’ Hats : 5 donors eal A or Oc could not lve 3.00 and $6.00 Boys’ Suits n ne year with $8.00, $10.00 anz $12.00 Boys’ Suits, $ 5 tion, My hus Lasts wee aaaer band objected to sizes ° years 3.7 the operation and got me to try Boys’ Overcoats, values from $10.00 to $15.00, $3 75 Lydia EK. Pinkham’s Vegetable -\at one price . Peewee een eee ce ewewerere see . Compound, I soon eommenced to get better and am now well and The burden of the cost of Iving wouldn't be near so heavy for |months to come If every demand for Men's and Boys’ Clothing, Wats, 20° 0 do my own housework, I can recommend Lydia BH. Pinkham's |Vegetable Compound to any wom ly befo it ut of existence, was br ht righ supply re it goes out of ex was brought right to us. Only! an as a wonderful health restorer.” Mare) Strictly dependable merchandise will be offered. The unblemished rep is Mrs. Blanche Jefferson, 703 Ls utation of this store will be upheld in every transaction right down to 4. a) 4 Molt ¢ last minute ‘ m ch famous remedy, the medi r ingrec of which are ¢ riv a from highly prizec ts and herbs, bas for forty ye proved {ts value in such cases. Women everywhere bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia FIRST AVENUE AND COLUMBIA E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound STAR—FRIDAY, MARCH 16, 1917, PAGE 10 JUROR ASLEEP AS LAWYERS READ OF SABOTAGE BOOKS 6 Jury, which had been excused | ‘taking of Ii $7 89 #ervatives—all helped make him un . popular with the progressive peo-| 1 $7.00 regular values for.......--.- $3.50 After you've donned a pair oft these Pants, you’ declare we told) says { would have been in myltioke The J ing Jefferson Beard. The tele grams we want to Introduce Jthat a an, f ed at the ver carried out all the wa rder of Hea tent in the con t ‘ at t end with the deat Kxatracta from read by Vandervoe Black, w abot profite te nomic end What Sabotage Means some b is the destruction of aw re tionary ¢ “It may mean destruction of raw | al destined for a factory or shop. It may mean the destruc tion of parte of machinery or the disarrang jent of a whole ma chine, where that! machine in the one upon which the others are de pendent for thelr mat It ma mean working slow mea may mean missending pac e yinting out defecta in nods, telling trade secrets, in fact are different Hines of work.* Hit His Pockesbook » alm is to hit the employer which we reply, ‘W Civilization is a Me Antimilltary and ants agitation must also be Not After Lives botage does labor mar orkers well thelr power to 5 rm various quality for a low price. If ¢ plies to b equally to the comme the laborer? It is from this re: ing that there arises the idea, poor wages, poor work.’” Commerce Is Fraud “The workers coming to see ats and shoes, w y are the ones to who 1 food, shoddy ¢ : sold ‘ the re fu eal to adulte not on reases the ¢ Us, b afeguards th cla to terms tage dition of foods, et , Sabota fo, and eape i iclass, higher than anything else in the untverse of exercise, and la Petrocrad m Church cereme maneuvers took up most of his time and at 18 he Was asstgued to a regi ment At the age of 22, while traveling in Japan, he was attacked by a fan atic, and narrowly aped a saber declared Nicholas and his companions had behaved disrespectfully in the shad ow of an image of Buddha Three years later he mounted the’ throne, on the death of his father, Alexander Il. The same month he was married to Alexandra Alix, daughter of the grand duke of Heane, Dissatisfaction spread ax the populace began to renlize the young new ruler, tho peacefully in elin was by nature a conserva tive Revolutionary movements gained strength at various times. Strangely, he bas been declared a radical by some writers, but he ts generally painted as the tool of narrow and selfish advisers, tho kindly and {Inclined toward relig- jous ritual Has Only One Son He is known to have consutte quacks and spiritualists, to have petted them in high circles, and at Imes has been subject to morbid melancholia The first four children of the ezar were girls, noted for their beauty, and the fifth child—the heir—wak born July 30, 1904 ne poor weight to the cus | An AS Many Variations as there g, expose the secrets of man-| i the mar poturer will « United Pre An Advanced Di isplay |, Men’s Spring Fabrics Just take a look at our Spring Suiting, and next compare our the benefit. wide range —$—$—— ——_———, your clothes sure Suit or Over. rfully offer it —@——_—_—_@——_—_ We are able to give better values because To be sure, QUALITY comes first ve don’t stop there. We consider values—thi has put us in a class by ourselves—it has put ‘common push.’ prices, and we know where you will buy your Spring Clothes. rent district and you are given h us, but The style must be correct from collar to trou er cuffs—the fabrics must test pure wool- workmanship must be of the highest al tailored-to-individual-order—it possesses char that cannot be duplicated. Prices range from $30 up. ys distinguish a suit We have now as fine an assortment of moder- , priced Spring fabrics for both men and young men as we have ever had, regardless of the great increase in the cost of materials. The shades and patterns, which cover an unusu- this season, from gay check and plaids to the more conservative and dignified blues, grays and blacks, are all very attractive and make up handsomely. Frost & Seynei, Tailors <se 1225 First Avenue a S. JOINS WAR BY WwW ‘s. FORREST PARIS, March 16.—France believes a speedy decision in the war rests with Washington if the United States today joins forces with the ailies against Germany, it means a swift decision for the entente, France is confident. For this reason the French government, after the report of the sinking of another American steamer, is most anxiously awaiting Washington's word These one of the h gove Kh oF @| day night Had English Tutor TH TRES } | Ho was raised with an F nstiah | |tutor, who saw that he H t PALACE HIP Little Don »pened Th ay at the Palace Hip. This eley lever tricks and works harmont-!of the yurly with nt does all sorts pony and dog. “peanut sapere. receiving the’ rounkaters on the stage after the first show, when bags of peanuts wil be} r numbers are feature photoplay regarded as pment. was authorized state them today as the opinior 4s, sung by cate na nutshell » to see, once cores that Vic- i and a number of feature in the new show which * won her way into the hearts in. | |ZIONIST MOVEMENT IS ADVOCATED HERE . The Zionist movement, which has Stone and/for its aim the revival of a Jewish Dunlap |self-governed nation in Palestine, comedy and|has been handicapped by the 3 mon and Ranney, comedy }but not halted, according to Rabbi 1 prima | Meyer Berlin of New York, a leader »ve and Wilbur, with some|in the movement, who is in Seattle, “There are about 200,000 of our | people in Palestine now,” ‘and room for about 7,06 lish Hterature is being revived an@ a system of schools worked out. there. We don’t need immigrants from this country so much as we |need organizations to lend their | support.” He is editor of Haibri, the Jewish weekly ‘COPS NAB ROBBERS AS THEY QUIT JOB The cops arrived in time this time. ur motoreyele policemen raced |from the central station Thursday night on receipt of word that a grocery store at Fifth ave, N, and Aloha st. was being burglarized, and they arrived just in time to arrest the burglars just as ther |were leaving. G. B. Hughes, 32, and am Carpenter, 28, were taken e police station, where they held on an open ¢ Select Your Spring Suit Now There are no better values in the United States for $15 than you will find on display in our two stores. Backs, Box Backs, Plain and Form Fitting Models. suits to appreciate the values. Garments in heavy, medium and light weights. Pinch You will have to examine these First and Main “Two Stores Westlake and Pine

Other pages from this issue: