The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 11, 1917, Page 6

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Paints and Varnishes $3.00 wass-Hueter Heady mixed Paints, per Ca HERE IS 49c CAN 53c Varnish Stains, quart $1.25 Carriage or Auto mobile Paint, quart .. B5c Floor Paint, per quart .... $1.00 Floor Va per quart .... vs BSc High-grade Varnish for alf-around use.... Me White Enamel $3.25 Five-year warranted Ready Mixed Paint, ie gree. ...x...... S157 SOc Five-pound package Kalso mine, ail “Ne 1% 2l1c per package. Roofing Paper and Builders’ Hardware .97c¢ $2.00 Rooting Paper — $3.25 Ten-year warranted Roofing Bc Mortise Locks, ‘Sargent Front Lock : CC Se nes seeee 2S¢ Furniture Polish, Beirne intl each $4.89 llc 2S¢ Granite Milk Pan, Special. ...... ce... cee WHAT IS GOING ON IN GERMANY! BUY HARDWARE PAINT GARDEN TOOLS FISHING TACKLE ROOFING PAPER BUILDERS’ HARDWARE AT PRICES LIKE “we THESE oo PIKE STREET BAZAAR 415-417 Pike Street oa HOW YOU DO IT Rods 50 Fishing Rod, each Price Price Eggs Balis, each. Masks 750 Bats Special Special Special ecial Rubber Special Special 50c Grasa 8 Special Special Special B5c Nail Ham Special the Saw Files, Special Price Levels Fishing Tackle and $5.00 Bristol Fishing $1.00 Fishing Reel, 59c 25e Fishing Line, 25 Chinook Salmon 45¢ Goodrich Championship Tennre $1.50 Reach Catcher's $1.25 Steel Shovels, 50c Garden Rakes, 750 Ladies’ Steel Spades, $3.00 Garden Hose, $10.00 Kink.proof $6.50 Lawn Mower 760 Grass Sickle, $1.00 Pruning Shears, , Mechanics’ Tools Se Carpenter Pencils, $6.00 Henry Disston ft. Crosscut Saws $1.25 Anchor Brand Double-bitted Axes, Special We Axe Handles, Special $2.50 Henry Diseton Hand Saws $2.50 Staniey Iron STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 11, 1917. PRACTICE OF STRICT ECONOMY URGED BY PRESIDENT WILSON Sporting Goods $2.69 .. $1.47 17c 2c 69c 39c ch Baseball Garden Tools 68c 23c " 39c $1.69 $6.47 _33c 27c 49c at at at at Hose at at re, at at ore, .. 57e 17c $1.69 $1.63 TRANSLATED FROM THE NEWSPAPERS WE GET FROM GERMANY OF TIN USED AS IN ONE VILLAGE diges, octagonal, are being Money in the village of |, according to the Arbeiterstimme, which dis that the only drawback to this for money is that you Money to get it. The ex- }HATREO FOR ENGLAND 18 WEARING OFF There is leas feeling of hatred ai remarks the Berlin correspondent of the Frankfort Zeitung. As proof he mentions a theatrical perform- ance of Schille’s “Cabel and Love,” which contains, at the third value of the discs is 3 cents act's end, a sally against Eogland States money. jIn this play the hero, insulted by toward the English than formerty,/ GOVERNMENTAL REFORM ASKED IN HIGH PLACES Demand for governmental re | form is being votced in higher Ger man circles than formerly The Kerlin board of trade org the Boersen Zeitung, venture this opinion “In Hberal circles it is gradually becoming clearer that the German constitution, which Prince Von Bis. marck cut to his own measure, { no longer adequate to the needs o' a, jhoarders they are ‘the public welfare.” “GERMANY IS HUNGRY” DECLARES VORWAERTS “Germany cannot give in. Ger many ia hungry. If America were as hungry a8 we are, she would un detatand why we act as we do.” That is @ paragraph from a lead ing editorial in the soctalist Vor-| waerts, It protests that President Wilson “is in the position of a rich | land owner who has no right to) ning ~geinst | mous general and president of the | United USE BAYONETS PAGE 6 RARER TEST AE Famous General's Descendant Enlists Sd Ulysses Simpson Grant IV. (above), greatgrandson of the fa has eniist Seventh regi-| al, Guard, his job in the office of J.) Morgan, | tates (below), ed in Company H WITH SPRINGS | TOTRAIN MEN . W. GETTY Engiand, May 11. ‘8 part in the Great War is not nearly played. Fif- ty thousand brothers of the Canadians “who saved the day at Ypres” are here today, get- ting ready to carry on the share of the burden the Dom- inion has shouldered. Spread out over the roiling hilla of Surrey are the two greatest Canadian camps in all England. He: in what was once a wilderness of pine and spruce and ivy, Canadian offi- cers are drilling Canadian men to take their places In the big offensive, already under way on the West Front. Canadian officers in charge of these camps have begun a new system of preparing the mien from overseas for actual warfare 1n France. Conditions, parslieling as closely an possible those at the front, either exist or are mannfae tured at Witley. The pines of Gibbet Mountain,} overlooking the very picturesque ‘Devil's Punchbowl,” see just as strange sights these days an when hanged men kicked in the wind in Cromwell's day. Topping a ridge Great bargains for you Saturday. Thousands of dollars’ worth of mer- chandise caught in a railroad wreck bought by us at iculously low price. Most goods as good and clean as when they left New York; some of it slightly soiled and mussed up. On sale Saturday at Fire Sale Prices. Wash Dresses New Wash Skirts for Wo P white, white ground with O: Gabardine, Poplin and Oriental colorings, stripes, ¢ patterns shirred pockets and bag poc Skirts, were hardly wrinkled in the up. $4.50. On sale Saturday at $2.25 and ........... Outing, Beach and Garden Hat for Women and Children. jean Straw Braids with variow colored bands cool and ... sO poplin Beautifully Tailored 16-18 years and 36 and 38 bust only Wide fancy belts, patch pockets, They would sell regularly at $2.98 to Mex Comfortable and Special, each 306, 596 Navy, black, coral, chartreuse ; Men's Shoe Blucher style sole; sizes 6 to men and Misses, K cloth All riental figures in| Gaturday at, a hecks and block Boys’ Shoes, tan sole and he kets. Brand new mash sense Shoe, ru $1.48, $1.98, sole: sizes 3 to reece + BZ.BB8 | Sale Saturday ‘s | 76 Trimmed Hats, including a the new shapes and colors. They is | are trimmed and lined in most uptodate manner. Hats made to sell up to $6.50. On Bale Sat- urday at $2.98 Men’s Men's silk sizes Regu- | Dresses of price $3.50, on sale Saturday.. Ladies’ Shoes, Bathing Suits, Shoe Section in black and tan, Bal and leather heel, composition 11. Regular $3.75, on Sale pair tan color, in Bal only, Elk el, sizes 1 to 51%. Regular .. $2.98 Patent leather, common bber heel and composition 6%. Regular price $ Your cholee of any untrimmed shape in our Millinery Depart- ment. Hundreds to choose from in blacks and colors. Sold up to $3.50, On Sale tomorrow at, Furnishings navy blue with lar price $12.50, on sale tomorrow. .$6.98 | white trimming: Regular $1.25. Sale Price 100 House Dresses and Afternoon Dres madras; chambray Ss of and neat and pretty ar embroidery, others are pipe Sold up to $2.00. On at. . soe ome 96 New Crepe de Chine and flesh shades wide fancy collars. Sale price ... Boys’ Shirts and Blouses French Madras, Percales, Chambrays and Sotsettes In plain white, colored stripes and self stripes attached and detached or | Sport Collars ca Ph Sizes of Blouses—6 to 15 years Sizes of Shirte—12 to 14% Necks. Sale prices 49¢, Ge and.. ~~ 5Me. - O8e | to We cash your Pay Checks, whether you buy Goods or not. French Father and Son Die Together Waists, in white | One style that is extra nice is trimmed with shadow lace; all have | Made to sell at $5.50. | sey ribbed, long lar stock fale | Sold Saturday the new Saturday only Men's Drawers garments percales. Very ¢ trimmed with d with plain col Sale tomorrow Balbri have Men's *Sale Price Men's Summ $3.98 | Extra Special a Men’s and Boys’ Suits 96 Men's Suita, selecte@from our regu- Cloths that cannot be dupll- ted on account of shortage of mater- Good selection of sizes and colors. from $12.50 to $25.00. On Sale - $5.45 to $14.95 Boys’ Suits All that ts desirable in new Spring Sulte for Boys, especially strong line of neh Back, Bulgarian Norfolk Styles in cloths. Specially priced for $2.95 to $7.95 Extra Special We have One Suit each size—26, 38, 39, and 42—Full_Dfess and Tuxedo style. Cannot be duplicated under $35.00. Price close.... senseee ++0+- 815,00 a half acres and saved part of it for higher prices. For the entire crop he realized six times the value | Golf Shirts; made of Roseberry Rep. .. 85¢ and Drawers; Regular 50c iggan Shirts double seats. Sale Price . ree ooo cut good and full; Reg. $1.50 Shirts. 89¢ er-weight Union Suits, Jer- sleeves and ankle length. t.. Arrowhead Hose for Ladies. Black, tan and white; extra length, spliced heel and toe. Reg. price 25. Sale Price, per pair ....... aeneeee AGE | Mercerized Lisle and Fibre | Stockings in white, black, tan, | rose and blue. Reg. 39c; Sale | Price, per pair......... 29¢ Full line of Ironclad Hose for boys and girls. Light, me dium and heavy ribbed; guar- anteed to give satisfaction. Sale Prices 16¢, 19¢. 23¢ and up. COUPLE MARRY AFTER — =] i TOPEKA, Kan., May 11.—After have been found for| his English mistress, says , from sole leather to, “Gird thyself with the entire) ; potato, coffee, sugar) pride of England. 1, for my part. mighty sacrifices for ite existence substitutes are avail-| reject it! I am a German youth!” just not only be heard on the de. “Meet the shortage In food.”| Nobody took the slightest notice cisive questions concerning its own the Arbeiterstimme. “Oniy|of this classical phrase of con- rate but must be allowed an active ‘root of all evil’ ts a com-| tempt for England, according to) part in deciding these questions.” 6 substitute lacking.” this reporter, | HOARDING OF MONEY !S feelinche Zeitung, all boys in Glasses | DECRIED BY GOVERNMENT echools' and juvenile unions are $2.50 on Earth Several newspapers published now being drilled an hour a day, advertisements signed by the min-|under the direction of the military jister of the interior, protesting | authorities, these drills being on- against withdrawal of money from |tirely separated from the regular reulation, and informing the| educational course. DOESN'T IT MEAN SOMETHING TO YOK to KNOW that a concern guarantees its ‘Kk? We stand back of pair of ith th ct before in there any reason why will not and convince yourself of the value of glasses purchased from THE MARCUM OPTICAL CO. 917 FIRST AVE. Near Madison 11 Years tm Seattle—11 Years Firm on First Ave. of the ground on which the pota | toes were raised and an amount fn Gxcess of the assessed valuation of | his entire farm of 130 acres. | that winds for miles through the thickly wooded or green-meadowed country, a trench, with the yellow clay soil thrown up on either side, standing out vividly against the landscape, zig-eage tts way. Paral- leling this trench and separated frofn it by a few hundred feet of waving gkrase and here and there clusters of barbed wire is another —the “Boches.’” Wear Gas Maske For & moment everything quiet, save for the occasional harsh cawing of a flock of crows, Then the silence is broken by a crash of musketry and the rattle of the deadly machine guns—a weird yell, rising from the depths of the trench, is followed by the appear anc of tly figures in gas masks, Charging across the open jspace of No-Man's Land into a jstorm of drifting smoke from the ismudges, representing poison gas, |they rout the “enemy” from his trench, and go about consolidatl: |the position—Just as they will have to @ in France tomorrow There is no child's play about the battle. Bitter hand-to-hand en- counters with spring bayonets, harmelss but painful, are fought tn communicating trenches. The wounded carried back to the British lines’ on stretchers, while the raiders work Ike madmen blocking the communicating trench and getting their Lewis guns into position the present day “A nation that makes such give his opinion about the case of | & poor hungry devil who gets into trouble with the police for trying to obtain food ALL GERMAN BOYS DRILLED IN ATHLETICS According to the Rheinisch-West on Field of Battle PARIS, May 11.—Under-liev- tenant Edouard Rey, Sr. 50, and Poilu Edouard Rey, Jr., 18, father and son, died together in the same battle. Official the story. The two Reys left wife and mother in the villege of Gali- ard, Frence, and marched away together to fight the Germans. The elder Rey, more bril- lant, won medals and promo- tions. His son, however, was content to fight quietly by his father’s side. One day the task ‘fell to the elder Rey's section to bomb out a German machine gun which had held up the progress of the section. Father and son ad- | vanced side by side as usual, Two bullets struck the father, | but did not stop him. A third | struck him in the head and he | | | | living nine years in the same Dr. Anna C. Beebe, 3045 Arcade | house, without once quarreling, C. Bidg. Special treatments —actinic |S. Pope and Mrs, C. S. Pope, who Nght—high frequency, most effect-| were divorced nine years ago, de ive, in nervousness, rhew jatiem, cided it was safe to venture again stomach, kidney and women’s dis-| into matrimony and they have been ordors. remarried. | fome of the Best War Grafters Should _ Be Shot, He Declares BY JOSEPH HARTIGAN (Commissioner of Weights and Measures, New York.) | (in an Interview With J. Herbert Duckworth.) Ladies— Saturday we will sell every TRIMMED HAT on our Display Tablee—in —Two LoTs— $9.95 sna $4-95 This means real Bargains and quick selling—come early. Open $4.95 TRIMMED HATS... . . .$2.95 \ open $6.95 TRIMMED HATS... ..$4.95 & 920 $9.95 TRIMMED HATS. ....$4.95 “Nig” UP-STAIRS; THE ECONOMY snitxce and to face the enemy with de ficient arms is the very worst kind of traitor,’ AS SOON AS DISCOVERED HE SHOULD BE TRIED AT ONCE, | AND, IF FOUND GUILTY, SHOT 11.—Shoot THE NEXT MORNING. the first contractor caught grafting | The contractor who tricks the in this wart! | government In this way ts Just as Stamp out with | t*@ltorous as the man who hurls a | an iron heel this| Om or blows up @ bridge breed of traitors | 1m fact, he ts worse, for the allen at the outeet.|@emy, unlawful as his act may There must be no| >* believes @hat ho Is doing a} repetition of the) Patriotic act for the country of his | embaimed beef, Prth scandals of un-| rafters among war contractors pleasant memory, | 7¢ more contemptible than spies fell dead just as another bullet mortally wounded his son. They died almost at the same moment. NEW ‘YORK, May |U. 8. Finds Way to Color Khaki Cloth} Uncle Sam's soldier millions will be clad in khaki cloth of the same color as formerly, and this fact will signa! ize another step in American inde- Results Show E-V-E-R-Y-B-O-D-Y Can have good music in the home—when you know that this is A Genuine Columbia and it can be bought for $15 With the added advantage of easy terms (as low as 50c a week) —there is really no excuse \or being without the best music. There are eleven other Columbia models we will be glad to There are jum as many dyed-in- the-wool crooks toduy ready to make money out of canned offal, BOSEOH WARTIOAN spavined woolen shirts made out of cotton, paper-soled shoes, rifles that ex plode and powder that won't go | Off as there were in civil war times and during the Spanish. American war. The type is not extinct In my opinion the man who do- liberately defrauds the government in war time and who 1s responsible for sending soldiers out into the training camps and later the trenches to be poisoned with bad food, to suffer from poor clothing, horses, | | They should be shown absolutely |no consideration. These men are all cowards at heart. The sight of | one of thetr number paying the death penalty for hia treachery will act as a salutary warning to the rest I feel particularly strongly about this because I know from personal experience of the suffering of | many men who enlisted for the | Spanish-American war. Undertaker Kicks CINCINNATI, May 11.—The vis iting nurse as a menace to under takers’ business was discussed be | fore the national convention of the Society for the Study and Pre tion of Tubercule here today Miss Fanny F. Clements of Wash ngton, D. C., told of a mining town where for 18 months a visiting nurse worked with great success, This is a new phase in the train- ing—this sham-warfare under typ!- cal conditions, And Canadians back from the front declare that already it is showing good results, Another thing the Canadians in the Surrey camps are trying for the first time is a new system of| bayonet fighting in the trenches. The old—and the French—system was to feint with the bayonet draw the Hun off his guard and then lun, erhanded at his chest Today the Canadians lunge straight | from the hip, dropping the butt of the rifle and bringing up the point} of the bayonet sharply if they miss.; Marie Smith, 16, is in a serious | pendence—this time from Germany Army experts announced discovery of a process which satisfactory be manufactured in from vegetable matter. all ay many.” Previously UPPER FLOOR ECONOMY MARKET today through buff dyes can this country | = 1431 FIRST AVENUE 91 PIKE STREET dyes were “made in Ger. AL SWEATS BLOOD; PUZZLE TO DOCTORS GRE PNVILLE, Pa, May 11.—! “Go right out after him,” is the | Condition as the result of the most | new command to a Tommy learn ing this phase of the fighting, and|ternity has been asked to combat. sweats it appeals to the Canadians more than any other form of battle, “Go righ{ out after him” is a sort of) month, the girl has been losing watchword around Rramshot and Whitley anyway the Canadian spirit puzzling affiiction the medical fra The blood patient Almost literally daily for the last blood at a rapid rate, the life fluid it 18 symbolic of }00zing out the pores of her flesh in the same manner as perspira- PACIFIC QUTFITTING CO COR. THIRD & UNIVERSITY TRESSES MEN WOMEN FOR | |* a WEE YOUR GREDITIS 0.K show you. Come in and hear your favorite music played on the when found her financial support Columbia. ad been withdrawn by vote of the Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York City Physician and Medical Author, “There can be no strong, vigorous, iron men, nor beautiful, healt! rosy-cheeked women without Iron—Nuxated Iron taken three times per | day after meals will increase the strength and endurance of weak, nerv- ous, run-down folks 100 per cent in two weeks’ time in many instances. Avoid the old forms of metallic iron, which may injure the teeth, com rode the stomach, id thereby do more harm than good, Take only organic Iron—Nuxated tro: It ie dispensed in this city by the Owl Drug Co., Bartell Drug Co., Swift's Pharmacy, and all good druggists. | 5 own board 5 - Of the three board members who And Os a 1 rembled HE the nurse because, since her arriv- yey valno? Why it cost me $250, and il, there had been a great falling jy ean't be replaced.” anise tec eENWICH r , K 1, there had been a it can't be replaced | GREENWICH, N. Y,, May 11.— er Ol 7 | Then she explained that it was! yn she 7 s/day, and John J. Quackenbush, STAR WANT ADS her appendix, and that she was| produce dealer, gave him n check BEST FOR RESULTS || | Telephone Elliott 112 tion, ast the majority vote, one was an) gp paw, Minn. May 11L—| indertaker, who said he opposed «pioaye Yegister this package sir} | Thus rapidty spoke a young wo-| Andrew Sullivan hauled his last man to Oxear Arm, postal clerk. |load of potatoes to town the other shipping it to her friend a a sou-|for $1,242 in payment. Mr, Sulli venir, van raised his 1916 crop on five and

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