The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1917, Page 12

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KAISER'S SUBS | SINK RED CROSS | HOSPITAL SHIPS By MILTON BRONNER Staff Special. NEw YORK, June 1.—Girls thinking of enlisting for Red Cross work, put this down and ponder over it: Under German methods of conducting war you will do just as brave and risky Service for the Stars and Stripes «s your brothers who GO to the front as soldiers. Why? HRecause the men under the com mand of the n ynger re Spect the sikn of the Red Cre at least on th Mary Field \ or at tached to sh dd hospital on the Se written to a friend } n the British fas, torpedoed by a German subd Maarine “somewhere off the cc © England,” March Thought It Sacred “None of us ger.” she writ €ven to Ge would be 1 Meye any nation we vuld @nce conduct so dastardly expressible “Fortunately about 900 sick « Nobody wa @board except the regular crev @nd@ the medical and nursing staff Lemon Juice For Freckles Girls! Make beauty lotion at _ home for a few cents. Try it! y tal ship Astur had we ases s Squeeze the juice of two lemons! dato a bottle containing thre @unces of orchard white, shake well, You have a quarter pint of the freckle and tan lotion, and complexion beautifier, at very, very experiences | American nurses are not afraid of the front, and scores of them are being enlisted for service at both | navy and army recruiting stations, |tographer, is of Miss Avis Rowe and Miss Martha E. Miavacek of the Washington | Chicago, being enlisted by Coxswain J, W. Juarcka at one of the Chicago naval recruiting st d Hiavecek probably will be stationed at one of the naval hospitals on the east coast Rowe “But the Germans could not have known this. So far as outward signs would indicate, our ship was still full of s| and wounded men “We had sailed through the Ba of Biscay without dread. When we neared England all regulatio lights were kept burning. There is y that the German of rine could have racter of our ves » side of her the va was brilliantly M the other re ens were prom! Women In Bed TO COLOR The above photograph by W. H ly and went atx were “One, however, capsized and its occupants were thrown into the water, Among them were some nurses, but the German submarine made no attempt to rescue these women.” Bucket Brigade of Women Saves Town|, FREDERICK Md June 1 Unionville, a town of bout 200 pop ulation, 14 miles from this city, was i from destruction by fire by omen, who } the flames SATII Durborough, The Star's Boulev. lon Travel Far to MALANE N Y Curtis Gam 1 of this wil pany at Pe mile trip t # yott of Hudson Miss Abbott will travel twice as far She has de 10,000-m to become arted alone © trip to Japan Saved From Gall OR staff pho hospital, 8. Mi our pre! Bride and Groom to Marry June 1 Inge his brid on OWS; es JUNE 1, 191 tlake Public Market ZOBLE GROCERY C STALL 105 “We Sell for Less’’ 8 Ibs. Granulated Sugar . i ea Oe with a purel No. 10 sack Patent Flour for 3 cans Tomatoes... .35c Crackers, per pkg... . 5c 1 Ib. bulk Chocolate . 22c 40c can M. J. B. Coffee for .. 60 ORC 10c jar Prepared — ..Te Best Jar Rubbers, 3 doz. . 25¢ | Substitute for Lard 2 Ibs. 33c With a Purchase Good Pot Roast, Il teak, Ib utlet Ib 15e¢ 20¢ .. 22¢ 16%¢ Fuss’ Market “Why P. More?” TOKIO 10 Ibs. Pure Cane Sugar Sirlom > Rib Veal ( ay 3-lb. can Ghirardelli’s Chocolate for Fe 10 bars Naptha Soap 2 cans Red Beans. . .15c 3 cans String Beans .35c 1,-Ib. can Hershey's Cocoa for 2 10c cans Spices... 35c bottle Lemon Extract for .. Quart Mason Jars, 1 dozen 5 Ibs. Rolled Oats. .25c FLOUR 491b. Sack WESTLAKE SPECIAL BEST LOCAL PATENT 7 lbs. Sugar 56c |: SUGAR STALL Dry Onions, 4 lbs. .25c Green Peas, 2 Ibs the Lemons, per doz 10¢ FLORIDA FRUIT AND VEGE TABLE CO. Stall 117-8 Full Cream Cheese, per pound Ss sas ey 25¢ Buttermilk, gallon Bring your own ( Times Square” Westlake, 6th & Virginia GERRISH BROS. The Pioneers in Cash Service Stalls 1923-4 Phone Elliott 170 tores at Fremont, Green Lake Oats, small phe Head Rice Quake Iba, Be Macaron Ib Ibs, Guittard Shaker Salt SATURDAY ONLY Boiled Oil, gallon. ..24c | Paint, ed on. Wholesale Price Belov You wil urr HARDWARE—STALL 175 $2.35 | mae ..15¢ hav Yo Oll cans Market Stalis 7.89 Elliott 1952 re Tomets Fors a Pure SLAce were Lard 2 Ibs. for 35c With “THE MARKET OF PERSONAL SERVICE” Free Delivery. New Potatoes 4 Ibs. 25c 2 Ibs. for 15¢ WESTLAKE FRUIT & VEGE-, per Ib ICE CREAM — Large dish Pint Quart Stall 138 5 lb. Sack Fancy urchase only Jap Rice 33c STONG VACATES CORNER MARKET THAT MEANS LOW PRICES HERE 8 bars Crystal White Soap ... 4 pounds Granulated Sugar .. 4 packages Quaker Corn Flakes. biasie 4 pkgs. Lily Corn or Gloss Starch ... 15¢ can Standard Tomatoes small cost. Your grocer has th @ny drug store or toilet counter will supply three ounces of orchard White fer a few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the heck, arms and hands each ¢ “day, and see how freckles and blem- disappear, and how clear, soft | we: White the skin becomes. Yes harmless. 4 Ibs TABLE CO. Stali 111-112 SOUND MARKET A. Otto, Prop. 8 BRISKET CORNED Japan Rice Jello Cleared Long After COLUMBIA Mine i 1A de 1 gone to bed. It t when, without 5 an torpedo was strikin: quarter of the and damaging rudder and ry © put out the lehts er at the time was fine, rk There was no panic mons and of us b pke Not-a-Seed Raisin Albers Rolle wed con 2 phen Beard, a farmer, jon Willlam Purvis, bollers.|aco escaped death anything that would|after conviction fer murder, onl women began | b the noose about bis neck and = dashing dslipped when the scaffold trap was sprung spreading ° | | | . * being on farms, Armed with buckets and | bola water climbing ladders All of us water on the fire. Clip the Wings of Your Dollar The dollar is light and flighty these days, watch it. The bigger the prices the smaller your dollar. Carl Schermer’s than anywhere else in town. Don’t have to take my word for it, or his. Compare his merchandise with the offerings of other stores. You will find that the quality is there and that the old prices of a year ago still hold good. Nobody knows better than you how much this means. Schermer says “When you trade with me You Save,” him prove it. He can’t go to you, you can well afford to go. Tomorrow is a good day to after him hard. I Sell the Best "15 Suit in Seattle Make Me Prove It! Hea washtubs. * The but the Stall 130 Cottage Cheese 2 Ibs. 15c per Ib. Se Burbank Potatoes, per sack Dry Onions, 6 Big Sunkist Oranges, CINNAMON & CO. Stalis 10789 Main 4959 New Potatoes 2 lbs 15c CLASS A FRUIT AND VEGE- TABLE CO. Stal! 120 MILK—From our own Dairy, Pint Se, Quart se Our Own Churning Butter, iste fntedhitnen Dairy Corner Sixth Ave. and Virginia and it gets away from you mighty quick unless you 1 am here to tell you that your dollar is bigger at KR WESTLAKE MAKET 4 Corner Market. Ry Pvten P || sald he saw Mise McCombs in com-| Combs. Men Prominent in pany with another man board a car| “Well, you see, It was this way,” Big U.S. War Tasks | | for Weston lthe girl replied calmly. “A day x x “That's why I threatened her,"|or two after we became engaged I Gentle said. | was married Why did you break the e SPEND YOUR MONEY Where Money-Saving Prices Prevail CENTRAL PUBLIC MARKET First Ave., Bet. Pike and Union Sts. Specials for Saturday Sugar 7 "n° 50c “cn Fancy Creamery Butter, 39c pound; | New-laid Ranch Eggs, dozen... . .36c 3 pounds for $1.15 | [ Denese Full Cream A wees mild, per Spring Chickens, broilers, lb ...27¢ CHOICE MEATS AT POPULAR PRICES Don’t Fail to Visit Bargain Counter CENTRAL MEAT CO. FARMERS’ SPECIALS 25 20c deposit in Savi gs bank? Uncle ys you 2 per cent on it. | ay you 3'> per cent on | a Liberty Bond. Get busy. | and he means it. He asks you to make so it’s up to you to go to him, and where real money is at stake it.” Go down there to First and Yesler SCHERMER’S AD “make him prove and go MAN. | Shoes—for Little Money—Shoes Schermer’s Shoe stock is immense. It’s a quality stock | all through. A few of the prices are a little higher than a year ago, but mostly they are still down at the old level. Come here and save money on Shoes. Here are some of our leaders: Good, strong Work Shoes, double soles, McKay sewed and nailed; Weinbrenner and Endicott-Johnson makes; in chrome tans; the same old price, $3.50. ie Goodyear welt Work Shoes, double sole to heel, 00. Weinbrenner double vamp Work Shoes, Goodyear welt, double sole to heel; still yours for a FIVE-SPOT John Meier Union-made Work Shoes, Goodyear welt; they were $4.00, and they're still $4.00. John Meier’s celebrated Railroad Shoes, union made, plenty of them at the old price, $4.50. Dayton Work Shoes, plain toe, plain price, $4.00. Dayton Goodyear welt Logger remains at $6.00. Dayton Loggers with plain or outside counters, AT LAST YEAR'S PRICE, $5.00. Jefferson Cruiser, Goodyear welt, $7.00. Jefferson Kip Logger stays down at $7.50. | Jefferson welt Pac at the old price, $8.00. | | Original Chippewa stitch-down Pac, no raise, $4.50. Same make, 10-inch Pac, still down to $5.50. Same make, 12-inch Pac, with heavy double sole, the price remains the same, $7.50. Same make (Chippewa), heel and spring heel Kip | Logger, no raise, $7.50. Felder spring heel caulked hand-made Logger, price same as before, $9.00. Monarch Pacs are still at the old level, 6-inch $5.00; 12-inch, $6.50; 16-inch, $7.50. The celebrated Bergman Hand-made Logger, in all | styles, at the old prices, $9.00 to $10.50. Currin Spring-heel Logger, all styles, no raise, $9 50 © American to $10.00. i chanical Engineers, with Beacon Dress Shoes in all styles and leathers; Neolin tional” Madhine “Rocke pusidary’ or leather soles; Union made; $4.00. sociation are organ Beacon Dress Shoes in bluchers and button, in all styles of lasts, at the same old price, $4.00. American Gentleman Dress Shoes in heavy calf, all styles, still yours for $4.00. Howard & Foster Dress Shoes in all leathers at the old prices, $5.00, $5.50 and $6.00 Crossett Dress Shoes in all styles, in black and tan; old prices prevail, $6.00, $6.50 and $7.00. | Washington Dry Sox, the famous Seattle-made wet- '| weather Shoe, still yours for $6.50. CARL SCHERMER 103-107 First Ave. South Ten Steps From Yesler Take time enough to really find the best value when you want a Suit. You don’t buy one every day. If you think our summers are too cool for light-weight clothing, have a look at Schermer’s Heavy-weight Lester Worsteds in pencil stripe patterns. They’re $15, and come in all sizes for regulars, stouts and | slims, in box-back and plain cut coats. At the same popular price are shown complete lines in gray Clay Worsted Suits, and remark- able values in gray pinhead and bird’s-eye worsteds. still down to Men prominent in munitions and war work for the United States |Top to bottom, left, Robert H Fernald, Fred A. Geier, Spencer Miller; right, Herman Schneider, | Dr. Ira N. Hollis, Dr, D, S. Jacobus. O., June 1—En ill be the “men of ding Uncle Sam to. {ul prosecution of the izainat Ge held a con mm here latel whi may re 80 per cent of the lants «for manufac man vent sult in tur country's 1 Uni e tool } over Society of Me more Na We’re selling lots of higher priced Suits, too, and the models marked $20.00, $22.50 and $25.00 in this store are truly choice prod- ucts of the tailors’ art. All hand- made and beautifully finished. Perfect fit always. Among these are extra fine Serges and Metcalf Worsteds in plain patterns, checks, stripes and mixtures. Have a look. the zations to recting heads of the large already eng Ns for th munition in turnin member plants New Carrots, pound .... Green Onions, 4 bunches Fancy New Potatoes, 4 Ibs New Cabbage, pound 5e All Other Vegetables at atacnsatte| Low Prices BANDO’S SPECIALS New Potatoes, lb. 5¢; 6 Ibs........25¢ | | Bing Cherries, pound Fancy Farm Tomatoes, lb. 10¢; 3 Ibs. | Sweet Oranges, per dover 25¢ | Juicy Lemons, per dozen And Lots of Other Bargains She Proved to Be a sit Absent-Minded CLARKSBURG, W. Va Jun 1 Felix 1 wealthy mere of this ¢ anything but gen according t s Ethel MeCom who had him arrested on a ch » of threatening to do her bodily harm } Gentle told the mayor Miss Me Comba had promised to marry him and that he had spent large sums on her including $300 for a trous Beau On Jay set for the wed. ding, Genth 1 he was unable to | find his by he hancing to pass the interurban terminal, he|

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