The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 8, 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)

Banker’s Wife <eSRSEL s#¥ Roo Not figuratively, but literally. The Groceteria Economy Sys- tem gives you the best, always, for Less. ae ts Eliminate all the waste in merchandising—that’s the practical way to save No army of clerks in the Groceterias No deliveries, no credit, no bookkeepers or collectors The Groceteria System is the greatest waste-saving and cost-saving selling plan in no solicitors and no high rents existence today : Every article in clean, sanitary packages, and you help y« urself, as in a cafeteria Everything at cut prices every day in the week, and all goods marked in plain prices. Save at Least 15% “It’s the Pennies That Count” A Few Demonstration Prices for Saturday SPRINGFIELD, Mo., June 8 —"Searface” Riley, the Chicago | police character, believed to be QUAKER OATS, 1Sc JIFFY CAMPBELL'S | head of the gang which kid small package “1c Ps ae ‘ 10c SOUPS 12c Toccoa Galena lee lla K. C. BAKING POWDER 9c 13c 2l1c ject of a nation-wide hunt. Poliee, private detectives and civ {Mans in practically every part of the country were on the lookout for | POST TOASTIES ; 9 Cc /10¢ KRINKLE CORN! CRISCO fas Oe ie SKINNERS“ Gq [hin ini Satie ts EEaScADE SOAe. | Gros Prices em] me wait” 1 8¢ HINAVY OFFICER Baber” 130 [Irgaecremmtee| em E33 | SHOT; SECRECY 20c Del Monte Pineapples for 45c Hill’s Bros. Red Can Coffee... | Se CARNATION | MILK, tall | 20c DEL MONTE. ‘Tomatoes, 2)28, can Medium size .... . 78 Large size .... .$1.54 15c 38c 12c 15c IS MAINTAINED Absolute secrecy was being -10¢ OHIO | * | 3-Ib. M. J. B. maintained by the naval board TCHES .. DC! | Coffee for.. $1 .00 play et Ralens pidge vagher | SMALL IVORY 35¢ Ghirardefli's Lieut. Kenneth Heron, 34, navy submarine expert who was found dead Thursday at 7 p. m. In hie room in the Kitsap Inn In Bremerton with a 38-caliber bullet hole in his forehead. Whether Heron came to hin death by his own hand or Was murdered | is the question the board was called / to decide, Heron was alive at 10 a.m. Thursday. He lived tn a private boarding house, and/ one of the most purzling angles of} the case tI the failure of other oc: | eupants to hear the discharge of| the revolver which killed him. Not Discovered for Hours 5c 27c oer | SOAP, bar = ! Ground Chocolate. Ho had been dead many hours) STORES COMPANY INC when Capt. F. A. Perkins discov. 3 ered him after breaki down the aoc There were no na of dis “GROCETERIA NO. 1—509 Pine | GROCETERIA NO. 5—7111) GROCETERIA NO. 12—New ona ani Genk, 2. Obontn Street Woodlawn Avenue opie Public Market, First Hi) commandant of the navy yard, Fri GROCETERIA NO. 6-85 Pike| and Pike day GROCETERIA NO. 2—1314 E. Street GROCETERIA NO. 14—West. ithedk: | Teste, 1 partly dreamed, een Direct GROCETERIA NO. 7—South| _Jake Market was lying on the bed,” sald Capt GROCETERIA NO. 15—14th and Madison District GROCETERIA NO, Coontz. “Near the body on the floor lay a 88-caliber navy revolver with one empty cartridge in it NO. 3—Section | Market, Down- GROCETERIA End Public Market 54, Pike Pla GROCETERIA NO. 9—233 Broad- 16—New stairs way North University Public Market There was no note found fn the GROCETERIA NO. 45419 Bal. GROCETERIA NO. 10~503| Also: Everett, Bellingham and Ml roo: Union Street Kent. lard Avenue Friends of the dead man say that.) had financial worrtes, he y was of a Dright and cheer sition. altho h “IT’S THE PENNIES GROCETERIA NO. id Open Evenings Until 9 THAT COUNT Coontz was notified tmme upon the finding of the body, and appointed Dr. Hoyt of the navy yard, Capt. E K. Curtis and Lieut. 8. P. Chew to investigate Supervised Submarine Lieut. Heron was a native of Cal ifornta and waa appointed to the aval academy In 1903, Since that time he was almost constantly on inspection duty and ts said to have been one of the best-v nin NEWSPAPERS REPORT: Government to Fix Prices! If the present cost of shoes was not exorbitant— if the American people were not forced to pay undue high prices—the government at Washington would not recommend legislation to fix maximum prices on food, clothing, shoes and other aries submarine constructl he Const The body was removed to the na val hospital and will be held there nding instructions from his moth “ranciaco rvised the construction of the L-l, the newest and most ad. vanced type American anbmarine. | necess. Our large organization of sixty-four stores will not have to sub- 2PM. -—— TWICE mit to legislation, inasmuch as prices are concerned. We have been selling—and will continue to sell at a probable lower price standard 4 $500,000 have the same buying power in our shops today as they had before the enormous advances in leather gripped the country MATINEE AT 2 P.M Truthful economy without waste of money at the “Boston.” Lace and button styles; Pumps and Low Shoes in shapely toes— military, Cuban and Louis heels; Goodyear welted and hand-turned soles, in tan calf, gunmetal calf, shiny chrome leathers; white, ivory, gray and a choice combination of colors. Every pair warranted for good substantial wear, and will outlast many of the fancy high-priced footwear of present- day production, BOSTON SAMPLE SHOE SHOP, x ° SECOND FLOOR EITEL BLDG mM Secondand Pike Steet fx 5 “ZaKE ELEVATOR PRICES 5,000 ACCOMPANIED BY BIG Millions Have Seen It- The ‘Mastercraft” Only : Heh STAR—FRIDAY, JUNE 8, 1917. Sick as Kidnapers Hold Her 14-Month-Old Baby last seen | a |tle Lioyd’s special caretaker METROPOLITAN---Week June 10 The ELLIOTT & SHERMAN FILM CORPORATION Presents DAVID W. GRIFFITH'S than would be fixed by the government; in other words, we have TERFUL AMERICAN PLAY ibe. T a ‘mal ble Compound, Which I did, and it has helped aa rcasse, » bridge ’v ahea soi H r} ce - every way. am not nearly so nervous, no hea¢ crossed the bridge ’way ahead of legislation. Such prices MAS WESTLAKE | ache or pain, I must say that Lydia E Pinkham SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA 3 HOURS—THRILLS—-LAUGHTER—TEARS of “Film Perfection” SEATS ON SALE NOW FOR ENTIRE WEEK. PAGE 10 Worried IN ALL FAIRNESS! I a strike on 4 AUNDRY Owners of Seattle are facing the part of laundry drivers. Despite the fact that wages of drivers were recently advanced to a scale ranging from a minimum of $18 per week up to $40 per week, and are now at the highest mark paid by any city in the United States, the drivers are making additional demands that would result in such exactions from the public as to make acceptance of those demands out of the question. Though regretting the necessity for such action, laundry owners only last week compelled to ad laundry prices to publi increased oper costs necessitated tl tex osts have jumped up by leaps and bound ensur Ww the increase . rs vol- ! untarily increased the pay of the rs, and Lloyd Keet in the arms of are now paying the women and girl workers wages ranging his mother, Keet. Mre. J. Holland up from a minimum that is more than 10 per cent higher than set by the state regulations. This advance to the inside workers was not only deserved, but was an offset to the advancing costs of living found the mystertous disappearance of ‘the child of Banker J. H, Keet Will be solved. At all times the laundry owners sought to make aah ce ates rr aera te ey tr ssible their emp! and have done may. ‘They. are. bee ing resigned ey power to improve working conditions, but and place little credence fr ts they ca fer their freedom of action or grant recog- Of nereste in various cities of per nition to the l 1 when such a step means unwarranted sons purporting to be me ers of the gang. Mrs. Keet is near col lapse, after a week of worry | The authorities are convinced that the seven suspects held here | know nothing of the case. Their! confession of a conspiracy to kidnap imposition upon the public. Laundry owners believe that the better judgment of the drivers will prevail, but in any event, the public may rest assured that every effort will be made, not only to protect the Jeweler C. A. Clement, however, is public interest, but to maintain service 100 per cent efficient. accepted as proof that Riley, their leged chief, waa connected with by'n disappearance and nsot Vigil ntes Have Rope in Ozark hills, thone fa low-apreading ranges so of-| ten told of in backwoods romance, | Uttle Lioyd Keet is crying for his mother. There no Shepherd of the Hills, euch as Harold Beil Wright found hereabout, to pro: tect him. They are sure, now, that he {s hidden away tn a cave. There are hundreds of them these caves; some of them were just discov today by friends of the banker who are searching for aby Seattle Laundryowners’ Club night the vigilantes keep n all-night watch the Lander \ uilding, where they opened head \ ers, that they might elt hid den behind window shades andj) watch the public square below, No one doubts the widespread story that there is a half-inch hemp rope in the tonneau of one -NEW TRAINING CAMP TO OPEN IN AUGUST vo Public Markets of their cars, and that the slip: | pe yo WASHINGTON, J fe knot is ‘dy tied on re Application blanks for examina- 4 Nurse Follows Trails tions for officers’ training f Another member of Panker Ke camps, to be held from Au family, of whom little b ~ 27 to November 26, may be ob- tained after June 15, according to announcement made here. A total of 15,000 will be trained. The quota for Washington is 240, and examinations will be held at Fort Lawton. ald, is Ida May MeCa hyearold nurse girl SEATTLE MAN PROMOTED Victor L. Brooks, who formerly lived at 405 Eastlake ave., has been promote to the rank of corporal in the United States marine corps. | who wan lig Ida’s kine sent the little fellow to trust ful slumberland the night the kid-| napers stole him. She ia fresh from the hills, knows almost every trail in the range, and has guided the search Into some of the almost tnacceasible regions. He 18 brothers and sisters bh gather ed from the far corners of the anges to help shorten their sister's grief. | # WILL MRS, BELLE -- MATERA READ THIS? Two little kiddies are in tears to-| day at a Seattle hospital, for they Sta are now without either father or| !% mother's care, tho both parents are living. The left ho! | | SANITARY } new pack fish bails, | » Middle Age " Many distressing Ailments experienced by them are Alleviated by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. © Matera, | sald to mother, Mrs e recently be at Trail, B.C. This so upset the father, G Matera, owner of a dye works shop at 1425 Seventh ave. that his bus! ness has been neglected and finally his children had to be sent to the! hospital Relle She {i been tr pana with the ¢ hanet of Life and the feelings common at that time. 4 was ina Very mets vous condition, with headaches and pain 38 deal of the time so I was untit to do my work friend asked me to try Lydia E. Pinkham’s Ve DAILY ——— 8 P. M a. bo pk tain 18-19, 600 ca reaate we te Vegetable Compound is the best remedy any & " i pig. Grape Nuta pk “a woman can take.”—Mrs. Marcarer Quiny, Beis land subesiines elk wae Fe 259 Worthen St., Lowell, Mass. i haf raga 3 ‘« She Tells Her Friends to Take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Reme ‘ EVENING ar, $88 wor North Haven, Conn.—* When I was 45 I had the Change of i ataP.M Jap which is a trouble all women have. At first it didn’t bother ™® but after a while I got bearing down pains. I called in doctors told me to try different things but they did not cure my pains. 0 day my husband came home and said, * Why don’t you try Lydia Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and Sanative Wash?’ Well, I | them and took about 10 bottles of Vegetable Compound and cou | feel myself regaining my health. I also used Lydia E. Pinkhal | Sanative Wash and it has done me a great deal of good. <Any coming to my house who suffers from female troubles or Change 11M Life, I tell them to take the Pinkham remedies. There are about ‘s, vest Of us here who think the world of them.” — Mrs, Fronencs I eee" | Box 197, North Haven, Conn, PRICES oe : a ane atringloss beans, pki 2 phew 4 nione 4 Ibe 50c “HORSES” 3,000 ihe; large lemons 100 don sourH Anilorson’a, #uKa tbe, $1.00 ir, $2.75 mck, large # navy beans, it END patent 120 You are Invited to Write for Free Advice. No ot medicine has been so successtul in relieving woman _ suffering as has Lydia E, Pinkham’s Vegetable Compounds | Women may receive freeand helpful ad vice by writing the Lydia ‘| 2, Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Such letters are received >, and answed by women only and eld in strict confidence. -To Come Again and Again. Ling Btong's, 20) 200 Instant Po powder, 180; 60 f Wheat, 19 K C bakl |. B, tea,

Other pages from this issue: