The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 30, 1918, Page 9

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i= <> The Star LASSIFIED verdale, istrict handy wet) Price $800 per tract; $100 cash Ad Rates GLIFFORD ‘Transtent—Charge Advert 2 Third Ave. | Per tine per insertion ie Six Insertions for the price of five. | ‘Transtent—Cash Advertising Cash tm advance—any claasifica- COAgT mn Empire 8 cents per tine or fraction of line. ape stopp. Six times for the price of five. Contract Advert Fr tine per month—1 month r line per month—3 months. . e “HOMES FOR eALn cottage; tot r line per month--@ months w line per month 36 lines each week, Banned each ‘week. 1 “’ 860 cash months |, Modern cottage, $2.1 per ? i year, |S-room house; $1,200 |4-room modern; caah $400 onan year, fn halt close 41,28 Youn @ nronEeRo Ave seas Te cont—Three | _ Six months add Months add 1 cent. Open Space Contracts bp B00 lines to be used tn one year, | 299 Natiara Phone Watlard 819. WAWGAIN ad lot, with O. BECKMAN 1102 First Ave, Miltott nee to be taed in One year, line .. Re G Tersien ad. pate... .tMe per word | YOUNGHTOWN wal ad. rate, per iine ...... oe Tate $200; 85 @ per month. om house, $8 ty “phe down, balance > per month Classified Ad Department Phone Main 600 _TheSeattle Star! ~~ 418 per Swell hom _GOrF SACHIFTC® park distrtet rare WY A REVEN AND AN factory building and Hitienal tots, Write for par to 4092 Rurton pla __Lawton car te Elmore « Practice. — Collectiona Oriental Fintiding Main 3781. D LOF POW Wile, CieaP. fees Will seit on terme: close I practice ate, BALL —ESTARLISHED 1887 GEN- Rarke Bidg., 905 Second | __! Matin 1308. ATTORNEYS—PATENT RIVERS— Consultation and if? Patent booklet free. 322 New York Bik. FRED P. GORIN—Petest ater, 7. Patent Seeered er tee OWNEN— PARTE FURNIMED, medern S-reom house (was), $1, $200 cash, $25 monthly, 214 W. @2nd at MOVE MOV to a fire, Atop Central Red rent money, refunded Fide. Mate 290. Pree book on patente re Lawrence. A close te city | time, $280 caah and $5 monthty, enry B. Gt _Bex 265, RF. Db. 4, Beattie, MR SHIPHUILDEA, a § rooma, bath and pantry best Kind of sei! with brick boule ean buy i Ot 467 Empire Hutiaing 25—Unfurnished Apts. APARTMENTS hi Jot 2 rooms, furnished MENRY © EWING CoMPANT Successors to Calhoun, Denny & Rwt Suite 200 Alaska Hide Main 7136 27—Housekeeping Rooms 7-ROOM MODERN soe t Kay in corner house 30—Fur. Rooms for Rent _ jouble beds for $13 per . including hot and cold er, 144 W. Slat FCRNIME THRE CAGE NICHLY Orwald. Wittott 187. The Hippodrome, Fitth and Untverstty. CHEERFUL FRONT ROOM: PRIVATE best of furnit Te GHD WORK. wie, 1931 Fourth. Prone Main 2506 OPTICIANS fimcnds Praser-Paterson Co.'s balcony Mate 2174 “LRU PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. Bre: renew HARRISON — 001 STXTH nan STORAGE ROOF STORAGw WAT 7 homer. Central Storage Co, White Bite I ogee “SEVERAL SINGLE ROOHS for $6 per month. Also double beds. Ratiard North car, 1443 W. Sist nA 82—Male Help Wanted WANTED—Ry Civil Service Commission zamination as fire posit perienced fireman. In Seattle £9 less than one tasdon for, approval ances Apply to Civil Service Com aston, $07 County-City Bullding, ‘not 1018. 8. DEPT. OF LAROR mployment Herr nion and F or1tid Western Ave m Blectric cabinets, there, pe. tnbe Rheumat my Geortatty. Louls Myers, chiropodiat. Mmechane-therapiat. Prone Matn 3219 Gay or night SHIPYARD WORKERS AA AARAARAALAAAY FARM LABOR Tints Yank Co., 1120 First pt 2297 We w Bring this A 1 ingt ¢ pe RS sinned tata OM CORDIALLY mrvirep_| WANTED PARTNER YOR ALARA. = - Must have $5 Placer mia\ JOTEL, MILWAUKEE cy King Las tiewlars, call Holland Hotel, room 190. (Under New Management) Hot ana|W fn every Very ay. 2B, F. Lire ¢. 6. GREENE'S Me Bult Bhop waves you $10 on every suit and overcoat. Traders’ Bullding, 905% ‘Third DR Air 34—-Female Help Wanted nce for workmen. INGTON, 1813 11—Acreage for Sale erty bonds ance out MENT IN SALARY. K PAID WHILM NING ADVAS WE: LE RAPID p and. mill for $9.00 PER enay mat LAKES LUMBER COMPANY AT OPERATING SCHOOT, PHONE COMPANY 1116 FOURTH AVE, BETWEEN BENECA AND SPRING work tn Bremer- cat ton, Good sandy loam sotl; walking co in leas than half the time of i t to Beattie. Raise your own : pF Jand end heed money $A M TOG P, M, LA pres AND F TO ,, ue Ave SATH FROM $2.00 1 THIS AD AND ¢ YOUR PURCHAS| Block. Bilt ee! -_= DOWN, A TATITLE | Open ips Co, , 1% iN AC Kone vo bt south of city Mmits of Port Or-| _ Zusrd ave, (uperaits), Thard; about two acres cleared; g00d| WANTHD—YARN BPOOLER AND PAI: | ty to learn machine knitting. Steady position, Apply Octonek Knitting Co., itl Union et Foes 35—Female Situati ns Wtd. WK SEWO AMAT to care for, 3 to 4 yours od, 810 8 1120 Hiawatha st, between 9 na 4 p.m. 88—Business Chances RBATAURANT DUBINESA, AMALL, BUT well located. Must be sold at once Cheap for cast, or will trade. Fine for man and wife. Call 654 New York Phone Main 5846 small barn; all seeded. house and well : Port Or- Price $1,400. hard. LITTLE CITY FARMS Im Beattie; close to the industrial center 60 cash, $10 monthly; good soll; w and every city convenience; larg ugh for ebickens and a cow. Statin in Beattie; st will make you . Free circular and map. soe Brie A ALE i Wm. B. Mille, ¢ ACKES, THRER MILES h of eity Uimite of Port Orchard; on im chonty road; about three acres Teared. Price $500. Owner, Wm. B Milia, Port Orchard, W RY OWNER, Reainelr valley; Holly st APL PALI $WO ACKER all cleared. a Inquire 2811 19 A—REAL ESTATE FOR SALE) Move again, Where next? Three moves | Plan to encape! Don't be a TENANT @ longer than you have to, @ mild form of slavery . What is a RENT RECE: Nothing! So much water that's thru the MILL! Like the seat coupons find show! new derby with a bale of t The only man who can out his chest, ever rent receipts — is LANDLORD. But YOU? You're not permitted to about ANYWHERE for than a few hours at a without having to dig your pocket and “settle” y! Do you Mke the though: Buy a LOT! Save, and PAY for it! ask @ good builder to pi HOUSE on it! God's sky that's YOURS! move into. The columns of The Star will you straight, and the ff the HOME! 45—For Sale sinsinatotnt ae want AND Fly time ts coming a “yi 70 and 2 130 Short cedar lap siding Rough bungalow siding Short lengths beaded cefling 20 We sell anyone. guarantes safe delivery the consumer 0. B WILLIAMS CO. 1943 Piret Ave S, Seattle, RECORDS ORD EXCHA in your pockethook-« month after you've been to the You couldn't buy yourself a and be pleased You're only a “renter*— it— that’ ‘Then Have one SPOT out under Or save a down payment and select a property all ready to “Real Estate for Sale” money will just about pey for Lane" ALL LOCAL ROUTES ines Ship anywhere, and ‘The lareset Washington ~PHONGGRAPHE OUR SPRCTALTY— F 4A—AvTOMODL KS FOR SALE ——_—_—_—_——- aro PARGAIN —————— - MARKET mB PK ————— THe LARGRAT List oF e cD CARA IN. BIG ING PROM Te in MOOS THE CAT J WANT FROM OUI RGR STOCK ALWAYS ¢ MAND. LIBERAL PASEENOER SYUDEBAKSR, A TERMS ON ALL CARS 1916 7 191T BIOIN STX, without = eorete owt $1.2) 5 appears months; used just & 41.000 1817 NUPMORILE ROADSTER; post. tively new; Just repainted, has good top and tires this, Ite @ good buy ... Heo $1,100 1917 BANY GRAND CHEVROLET; coat $1,200 new. We will eel, With electric lights starter, food tres and patat, for....06 1916 and 1917 FORDE, in both roadster and touring models, These cars must be seen to be ap: Preciated at the very low price of . seeeeeee O10 1917 Bimost brand new: appearance of finish, wi cellent tires, at ... day It's OVERLAND ROADSTER, top comlition, both meeh: ly otherwise, at the low price of ...... PAsBEE: irr? 1916 Btion MIX, 7 1 run BUICK FOUN, « late model, the very low frure of « you WP JUST LIST A FEW OF ovr MANY GOOD BARGAINS, DON'T FAIL TO SEE UN IF YOU ARE IN ! THE MARKET FOR A CAR mena! WR CAN BAVE YOU MONRY ° On as oF : poser ON ANY KIND OF A USED the avTo — hang more time into with DARGAIN MARKET tt Tel Rast 240. 55—Business Personals anagement. music; good Adralssion ut a $1.00 couple FERICTLY PIAVATE HOME POR GO) finement cases; good nurse; best tora, references 11-205, Wi a eee PARIS—A new German aeroplane called the Pfalz D III. has appeared at the front. It is a single-seated || chasing machine, only 30 feet wide, with wings spread. A French liew tenant has already brought down one) and an American aviator a second. LONDON—Princess Alice presided ~)over an openair bazaar in the mar ket place to which the king sent from the royal gardens a quantity of flowers and vegetables, which were quickly sotd by the royal vender PUGET SOUND ateer ENT Sand up @TEAMERS IZAVE FROM COLMAN DOCK, FOOT OF MARION GTEEET 0 NOR Union KAVANAGH 8 $2.20 HATH 1008 eer a ~~~ || “eee te, Aloe “Ttepm | 43—Lost and Found 00pm Townsend a tree t./10:20pm \ioar LADY GOLD WATCH, Gafty [Connects at Townsend) daily || day. initialed “From W. C,H. to Agnes jwtth rati fines for ai!) | ipotnte THOM rent $3 per mon’ PAYH MORE Tor We buy, self Hiake Furniture 408 Pike M ean Personals STEVENS 7 cs Elliot! — - J Times Hide Derere ‘9 Ofem Tadlamapetts fer Te 11 O@amicome Gtrect. 1 C@pmievery twe hours, 2 C0pm single trtp, The round § bepmitrtp. ‘7 :90pm/| 1:00pm ied on pure ~~ HOUR, 50—Furniture for Sale ist ave. ge Otrmptel 0 th, 1212 clothing. and ‘WedjJuan teland potnts. __Friday! ain 6ei8 ne Utopia, for Port) « 1fenm tle comt halle 10:20pm ifow. Bunday[Townsend, Port | Mein S911, Member Dancing | | Teachers’ Asan, New York. 2 | iNGTON—PURLIC #TENOG- ‘ioe Crary Bide. Trem ‘wank i 55—Business Personals REV. GREE Ho 7 HOLLAND ort Port Angee coe onal Pray | ras 1 Fourth and Jefferson, near Kasily reached for minister lors. Main 6491. rt house, nervices. a, mplete, Schwa k, 64 nation Gaity (Kingston, Gambie| dalty except(L udlow, **Ret except fatur’y!¥ la gier, Townsend! Bundsy (Amnday\Fanavillo and ied. 7:00pm) | Aaturday Onty 1:30pm. Puget. rinte D rte. 3 Becond 1m |Meamer for] 9:00pm. (Kingston, Ludlow and] r G |way points. 1 | mother wil this ad, = Sanday Onty | as interesting information. Address H-204, :00am [Steamer :80pm || Bar Heres om [Kineston, Ludlow and! Grows WAI i esulta GUAR Hood Conel—GembMe—1 men. Violet itm ee face masnage Louise Dalton, $17 Bitel Bids. except |**" Sas ae sii ee MONDE |] _Sundaytpotnts an Hood Canal. Semday ANTHD — DIAMONDS, OLD | —- OLD JEWELRY, OLD aI VER, | Me ‘tor! datiy [Ladiow, Port Gambte,| midw'ht WATCHES, OLD FAIS TEETH, HIGHEST 'PRICHS PAID. other bot Innding points mest make SMITH JEWELRY CO. their own arrangements for landing. 412 1. C. SMITH BLDG, 4TH FLOOR, || and assume all risk and Hability je 1 ime PIANO PLAYING making such Pere hocthe teas And popular music taught in 20 lessons. gt ae. od eR ~ — co Mability fe Tmited to wear- 6LD GOLD, #iLVER, THETIC” DIA not to exceed $100 for|| monds wanted, Highest price patd, 108! 1b pounds allowed free. y Bteamers and schedules subject to Yr Ni TUBIK: || change without notice. Freight re- 18th Hallard||eatved daily for all points (excepting 17—City_ Lots for Sale LADY R HANDBAG AT INT 6, Ait, CABR ok ie Winder will be liberally 1394 > Mays two lots. North Park; hae old rewarded calling Queen Anne _— hinck oni good title, Abwent owner) G44 “AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE . ;. OLLINGER, 467_ Bi wildy oth SeRUCE K4 | PWS GOOD 1T8, WEVEN BLOC in 5 Feat Green tans car line, Price $225. cycles, Owner, Wm. B. Mills, Port Orchard, repairing. | DIAMONDS WA TC MICHABL, 2 59—Legal Notices KNOW YOuR aboute. Mverything O. K 1 Give one week to come home, Tacoma) named in above schedule ‘Tickets must be purchased at tie! office. Open from 6:30 a. m, to 12:00 Come, SOUND NAVIGA' iN OO. N, F101 ‘Ticket Colmen Deck. Pheee 300s. 1Ale-tviSDAL, MAX 30, itn Faas 9 'TO FILL RANKS OVERALLS, APRON OR NURSES’ CAPE? IT’S A PUZZLE FOR GIRL GRADS NOW With each harvest of sweet girl graduates the problem of finding an avocation crops up anew, Uke the dandelions of spring or the chick: iris in large numbers have volun-, months. weed in the lawn. What to do after the graduating | |gown has been folded away in tinnue paper and the diploma hung on the! wall—that in the question. This year the problem is terrifying. The world offers many openings as a revolving door Whether it ts better to be a black emith, a plasterer or a Red Cross nurse in a question not easily solved The lure of overalls has never before entered into the solution of the sweet | girl graduate equation Work on Farms Whother to view of the world from dizzy heights in a cage swung high up above the shipyards, where girls are operating winches in these times of war, or stick to terra firma and a typewriter, in bringing sleepless nights to many a soon-to-be graduate. Farm work is one of the biggest the girl graduate as) * openings, Over 100 Univeretty of! Washington girls will work on farms |thix season, under the direction of the Harvester league, while high school | teered to work in the fields | Many girl graduates, members of} the Motor Corps, will spend their | first summer out of school in master: | ing the mechanics of machines in| public garages at hours | a day tn a public service station. 1c Take Up Business Dozens have already made arrange | ments to enter business colleges as soon as the school term in ended. | Sore will become yoemanettes in the nervice of Uncle Sam's navy All will be active in the Red Cross. | At the University of Washington, where s#pecial courses hav given in war work and war service leaders have been trained who will go back to the small towns of the state with new ideas for better or-| | ganbeation. | ‘The sweet girl graduate who pre- | pares herself for work in a home is been Oe ergs Lo OE '| “Limited Duty” Class to Release _ 250,000 Men for Active Service | o— BY HARRY B. HUNT WASHINGTON, D, C., May 90.— Two hundred and fifty thousand men released from early service under the | —_——$—$—$— $$ Shipyard and Waterfront News & Notes DRY DOCK LAUNCHES LAST SEATTLE SHIP The Seattle Construction & Dry Dock Co, made its last Inunching tn Seattle Thursday night. sending the 7,500-ton direct contract freighter Daranoff into Elliett bay. The Todd interests will now butid in Tacoma and repair at their new dry-dock site on Harbor island. Their shipbuild ing facilities revert to Skinner &| | Rddy June 1. BERING SEA ICE BREAKS The weather bureau at Nome, Alaska, reports the Bering sea ice broke at 1 a. m. Wednesday, and ts movin westward Light southeast erly winds, CAPT. O'BRIEN COMING Capt. John A. O'Brien, veteran Pu get sound navigator, is scheduled to arrive in Seattle Saturday, to as- sume command of the steamer Vic- | toria on her first trip of the season to Nome. WATSON ON WAY HERE, The Admiral Watson, PF fic | | Steamship Co.'s liner, is again on her | | way to Seattle, following heing tce at Naknek, Bristol bay, for two weeks. bound nearly GETS BIG CONTRACT The largest contract of its kind ver entered into in Seattle was let Thursday, when the Vulean Manu facturing Co., recently acquired by the Frank Waterhouse Co., secured from the Skinner & Eddy corpora tion permission to build 30 anchor winches and 500 cargo winches: The facilities of the Vulean plant are being enlarged. Capacity opera tion for a long time is assured by the Skinner & Eddy contract and others. GIBSON MADE LIEUT. Capt. J. 8. Gibson, veteran mar iner of Seattle and Puget sound, re cently given command of the Skin ner & Eddy ship West Alsek, is now commissioned lieutenant commander |in the United States navy, following | that young Gard sta the transformation of the West Al sek from a freighter into a United States navy vessel, od Jdraft because of minor physical de |fects, but held for “special and lim | ited military duty,’ are to be brought into the army within the next few months for service in non | combatant units. | ‘Tens of thousands of sturdy, ath-| letic young fellows are today serving | as clerks and storekeepers in quar: | | termaster and ordnance depots, as| | military police, hospital orderlies, | headquarters clerks, telegraph, tele | phone and wireless operators and in & hundred and one other jobs that jcould be as efficiently filled by men not physically qualified for the hard ships of front line work In order that America may put into this war her maximum fighting strength, General Crowder, provost | marshal general, has decided that no | |man physically fit for front line service shall be permitted to serve in | & noncombatant capacity so long it is possible to fill acceptably these |noncombatant jobs with men fully | |as able to handle this work, but not fit for the trenches, “As @ result, we will release from | as Pas ombatant work for duty at the| front the equivalent of 20 German divisions,” said Gen. Crowder. Orders for the induction of these | ‘limited service” men into the army | will end the regime of “slickers and slackers” who, altho strong and sound, secured assi¢nment to desk | | Jobs and other duties that would keep them far from the sound of the | guns “Thousands of men in Washington alone will be released for field duty,” |thia draft official declared. “The |same will be trae, in proportion, at every army post and camp.” U. S. SECRET SERVICE MEN PROBE PLOT; MAN ADMITS MYSTERY pa i SAN FRANCISCO, May 30. deeply laid plot against the man re Killed his son landed 1, Chapin Gard in jail here today on the technical charge of disturbing the peac dentally the plot stirred the U. 8. se cret service and the navy intelli gence bureau from Virginia to Cali fornia and resulted in the arrest of janother of Gard’s sons | According to local police, Gard confessed last night that he wrote “fake” letters, mysteriously alluding | to the Mare Island yh yard ex: | plosion of July 9, 1917, which cause | nine deaths. | Ther fully designed letters by Implication brought the names of Jas, . Maloney and Chas. Wilmott into suspicion, It was Maloney who several months ago was acquitted on | the charge of killing Gard’s son in a} saloon brawl, Wilmott had testified rted the fight. Louis Simm was Injured at Patter. son McDonald shipyard Wednesday, | as commencement day for the Seat OF PATRIOTIC — COUNCIL HERE sort of democracy that mies of the Unite men can rine read- ke to comminsioned : on merit, ia to be maintained - council of patriotic serviee,4 which in to open a drive to enroll eve! 4 The same exinta in the new ed States, where ily from the r ery man and woman in Seattle as! members, Sunday, June 2 What the council wants now are of home war tes for ite arm service workers. It has a skeleton organization of loyal workers now, and it wants to fill out the ranks, The officers of its army are mainly men who will soon be called into milk {7 itary service. There will be open tunity for men and women to rise to command of units on merit, but per- al aggrandizement must be for , says Louls Friedlander, of the campaign committee. ‘The council of patriotic serviee fa | the organization next below that of the county council of defense, There are 12 divisions in the city, corre sponding to the districts of the draft boards, each with a commander and meeting place Under the division commander are precinct captains, and, under them, block Heutenants, each of whom has ides. Meetings are held weekly. ver t campaigns, such a8 those for Liberty Loans, Red Cross and food conservation, are assisted. PICK SEATTLE AS CENTER FOR WAR INDUSTRY Seattle is to be one of 20 centers of zones for war industry, according to word reaching the city. The announcement of the war in- dustries board means that the pro duction of war supplies in the en- tire Northwest will be directed by @ government executive located here. — The executive will let all contracts for war materials manufactured in the Northwest, keep in touch with Washington on war needs, and with manufacturing equipment, facilities and raw materials of the district Manufacturers will be brought to — gether to complete products bee: the district. BASEBALL GAMES. NATIONAL LEAGUE Morning game— St. Louis .... Pittsburg Batteries Gonzales; Miller and Schmidt. . New York-Philadelphia—Rain. First game— Cincinnati Chicago .... Batteries—Toney and Wingo; Ty+ — ler, Weaver, Carter and Killifer. AMERICAN LEAGUE St. Louis-Detroit—Rain, Morning game: Washington ... i Boston .. 9 12 Batteries—-Shaw, Hanson and Ain ‘ HOME DUTIES 7 not extinct, as proved by the aston: ishing number of weddings that have taken place at the University of Washington within the past six Nor is the school teacher gone. Scores of women graduates will enter schools the state as teachers next fall Work Big Idea While women graduates may pon der greatly which profession they will enter, in almont all cases there is no doubt but that it will be some pro. fession Work ts the big thing in the future of the girl graduate now, whether it is driving a locomotive or a baby carriage Wednesday June 12, has been set tle high schools. With the excep-| smith; Leonard and Schang. Uon of Broadway high school, which Philadelphia-New York—Rain. has chartered Meany hall, exercises|Chicago ....-. «+++ 4° 15 will be in school auditoriums. Cleveland .. ++ +3 University of Washington presen-| Batteries—Williams, Shellenb tation of the coveted sheepskin will |and Schalk; Enzemann and O'Neill, take place June 17, in Meany hall. O'Neill, Victory Will Be Found at the Point of a Bayonet The zero hour is at hand. Suddenty our ar- tillery lays a wall of barrage fire out in No Man’s Land—moving it slowly forward. Under its protection our boys pull themselves over the top and advance behind it at a walk, their bayonets at “high point.” And then—it has lifted! With a whoop and a jump and a good old Yankee yell, they leap forward and clear the enemy trenches. BAYONET TRAINING AT CAMP LEWIS What Sammy does in that crucial moment depends on his training now. At Camp Lewis the boys, under scientific instruction, are becoming dexterous in the use of the bay- onet. Their serious but enthusiastic practice is as interesting and dramatic as the ancient rapier duels or the tourneys of King Arthur's Knights. You are invited to witness this fascinating drama. You must come to Camp Lewis! ‘An un- derstanding of war conditions based on first- hand observation will help you to find and to fill your place of usefulness ‘here at home. PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION COMPANY Steamers Tacoma and Indianapolis Leave Colman. Dock, Seattle, and Municipal Dock, Tacoma, every two hours on the odd hour, beginning at 7 a. m. and ending at 9 p. m. Fare 81¢ Round Trip (Including War Tax) Seven- and twelve-passenger automobiles for Camp Lewis meet the boats at the dock in Tacoma. Special arrangements made for spe- cial parties.

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