The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 12, 1919, Page 2

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years service to the homefurnishers AY-SATURDAY SPECIALS— —mo ©. 0. D. or phone orders; one to a purchaser; these ape clubs will not be delivered—can be easily taken by purchaser ¢ celinar table pads: set ity $1.65—regular price $2. —protect your table top with a guaranteed heat Proof cellular table pad; S-told pads; steve inches te prive 8 ar price 82 Priday-satur day A extra d-ineh mated © each thie roaster nests ne watching roast into the oven a High Schools Hold Graduation Exercises aix high schools beld aminations, and praise for the high h exerciess Wednes | school students who gave up their ‘when @iplomas were pre-| school work for the greater work the finishing students at/|of defeating the Hun, was given , Fran! peg ‘West | without stint. ei aeks ona | Om the whole, every one of the t was * poovalion night, with pg il Bhd, are confident they held the whieh filled the auditor most successful graduation exercines § composed almost entirely of in their history. i fathers and mothers senecrtted | —_—_—_———— on which ‘Ad Men Will Meet ‘Following their usual trend, the in Stockton Next took as their principal -_ PORTLAND, Ore, June 12- “Americanism” and “Amer. | Stockton, Cal, was selected as the - | 1920 convention city by the Pacific Coast Advertising Men's aasocia tion at its 16th annual convention ot African descent, | which closed here last night. with fair-haired, fair.skinned David S. Matthews of Stockton nd daughters of northern Eu-| was elected president, and the fol- Americans. lowing were chosen as district vice presidents W. A. MeAdam, Blind Boy Graduates |toria, B. C.; ‘Tom Keane, Spokane; for the Broadway grad-| J Riley, Seattle; W. P. Stranbors, ‘were held in Meany hall on the | portland: George A. Hughes, Oak- of Washington campus. |iand; Harry Carroll, Los Angeles. high school orchestra furnished | The convention endorsed Rollin @elightful musical program, and) c. Ayres, of San Francisco, as the the platform hung the school’s | pacitic Coast choice for vice presi- [service flag, scintillating with 900/ dent of the Associated Ad Clubs ‘The students, as they took | of the World Places, were applauded, but the ns became pandemonium | Louis T. Drentwett, blind mem- B Laouis T. Dreniwott, bindmem | Masked Band Tars ‘on the arm of Andrew W. Lind, president. Drentwett furnished) gpoKANE j uel program by playing a | being & pro-German and of beat ‘piano ling up a returned soldier with his All Suceessful |fists, John Hoffman, reservation ‘The programs in the various | rancher, was stripped, marched four were very similar. Class|miles into the woods and tarred took the customary jabs at/and feathered faculty members, the junior class | masked men His right was willed everything, from the| was shot away when the tarring paper baskets to mid-termex-| party surrounded bis cabin eight —— | miles east of Tekoa last night and fired a fusiliade into it At the hospital Hoffman dentea| that he is pro-German and said he has $850 in Liberty bonds. No ar rests have been made as yet BRITISH TO BUILD FIVE PLANE MODEL (Special to The Star by B. A.) LONDON, June 12.—Five type ot airplanes are being bullt for civilian use in the plant of the | British and Colonial Aeroplane com pat ers are employed, dence their children Sar on the platforms, were Orientals and still swarthier June 12.——Accused of UPSTAIRS When you go te the larcer stores elethen you wish (o buy, rma most every || day, As we order them to haste, We ask consideration, © much more SUE COAT, This ix best evi of the part flying is to pla in transportation. The plant can turn out 50 planes a week, The | Pullman, a triplane which carries jtwo mechanics and 12 passengers is the most luxurious model. It | his duplicated drive right and left, and will travel on two or four en wines, carrying 6,590 pounds. Arr @ carpet, and full protection from the weather are among it | comforts, UPSTAIRS yr H.U.ROGERS soromettist js! | | The mere fact that a man docsn't call you a liar is no reason that he doesn’t think you are one. Patience lw the right bower of Vie-| and Feathers Man) 20 “armed and |. s| larger y at Filton and 3,000 work-| Taking the Objective Camp Lewis Hospital Patient Recalls the At- tack That Resulted in Capturing St. Juvin as Tho It Had Hap- pened Yesterday. BY BIRI M run b TrUTTLN then W's all--but the blamed ted. 1 I've been in nthe Ai vind clea. fit had terday-—moat of all, the were in the Argonne In support ber 12 were sent hopes of a long reat th orders came te t line, >t ahead, thru the night | German guns pounding 4 the sky all lit up 1 finally formed could in shell Ave On Oct we > we the at away us, line was St. Juvin over ridge and By § o'clock we whieh tay just across a small ri ad reached the ri Our company was making a di attack, while another was Nanking us on the aide | Rack of t te hill waa the Our ridges e town, on an oppo: German artille tillery was between the which we were advancing. ‘ “As we reached the top, the aight [was wonderful—both artilieries were © action—the German ahelte going over the ridge, and ours lighting in the town, “There was no much nolse that we |couldn’t realize it. Speech was im pomtble, As our shells landed in the | town, we could see the Germans re treating, and as a shell Nt near them, seatter tn all directions “As soon an we appeared on the ridge, the boches lowered their range, and placed a barrage on ux. We went \thru that, and it was awful—Id| Jrather not describe it Anyway about 100 yards down the hill there | was another little ridge, with a ma-) chine gun nest behind it, It meant/ suicide to us to attack ft. so our cap tain sent back to the major for and the major omlered up “We took it, but we pald dear for it. It killed all the men near me, and wounded me, I rolled into @ shell hole, used my first aid, And lay there im the sunshine listening to the at-/| tack go on, and cursing my tuck that | I had to be hit before we took the} town. Our men went over the second fidge, cromed the river and captured the town at 3 p.m. with 700 prison- ore. That was the taking of St. Juvin. “What did I do then? Well, sev eral of us who were wounded lay in © shell hole for about three hours, until the Germans changed their ar Ullery fire range, then we crawled out of the shell hole and tried to crawl to the ridge. They saw ua, and turned the artillery fire on us again. It was hot, then, in the munshine and agony to crawl, so I used my rifle for @ cane, and after repeated at tempts, we made the ridge, and got out of the fire. “There was no first-aid station. | and I was about all in, when we met| an officer with a private, and he de- tailed the private to help me back. After that, you know the rest—seven months in a hospital—and you know, too, what at meana” EVEBETRAYS | HUNTED MAN Japanese Arrested for Mur- take | THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JUNE 12, 1919. ) She Drives Rivets to Slogan: “Equal Pay for Equal Work” for three! | OAKLAND, Cal; pay for-equal work is fattening the Sutliff, champion operator, employed |largest factorien in ‘The task at which is engaged in one demanding detic hundred per cent acouracy and ts '‘AMERICANISM one of the by |Campaign Will Be Conduct- ed by Joint Committee other organizations have forming a foint committees on Ameri cantzation, in an effort to avoid du- plication of the work which has been commen In the past. Following the suggestion of the University of Washington extension service, the different organtzations have appointed representatives to serve on the committee, and a pro- gram to be followed in the cam- palgn to inculeate Americanism in the allen population of the city has been outlined, lated. They include drawing of « comprehensive definition of Amert- the qommittes, analysia of the fielda of a definite program, and its admin istration by a small central commit tee For the’ past month, two special committees have been at work. One} committee, composed of Paul Phillipa, United States naturalization service, chairman; J. 1. Lawler, Knights of Columbus; W. L. Walts, Rotary club; E. F. Dahm, ex officio, | hae presented @ plan of organization witch has been adopted, The second committee, known as the committee on definition and sur: vey, merdal Club, chairman; J, F. Paulda, Armertc Legion of Liberty; Mre James O'Leary, Seattle Federation of Women's clubs; Cari J. Smith, Mu der After Six Years MARYSVILLE, Cal., June 12.—| (United Press.)—Remembering a po-| Hee circular be read ‘nix yearn aco| while city marshal here, Sheriff ©. J. MeCoy today arrested J. A.| fatoa, a Japanese, long sought by Portland police on a murder charge. | Satou confeswed that he is the man| sought, but says he did not commit the erime The murder February, 1913 sent out shortly |Satou as having |the other. As \this deformity, Satou and the |will be returned Satou admitted having had tron- ble with the murdered man and he a he the the crime he is innocent |Woman Is Killed in Auto Smashup| PASO ROBLES, CaL, June | Mrs. Thornas Maloney, of Pho | Arizona, died today as a result of {an auto collision last night in which husband was badly injured. Ac | compar by their daughter, Mrs. L. H. Glass and two children, of Wa }conda, Wash, jarifing to waa committed Police circulars} thereafter described | one eye larger than | soon an he noted McCoy quentioned arrest followed. He was but at seene of naiste in Washington, when a ear, going the same direc tion, knocked their auto off the road | down a 20-foot grade Mrs. Glass and the children were not badly hurt. Sentenced to Die, Man Kills Himself NOCK ISLAND, IL, June 12 (United F “.)—Three minutes after Robert Cook had heard a jury pro: nounce of murder in the first entenced him to death here last night, bis battered body was picked up from the court ra. He had jumped frog: a window on the third floor while being tah to the jail him guilty degree and onvicted of the murder t of Davenport, Iowa, Ida Woods, last April | ell |ana Mrs | CALIFORNIANS WILL WELCOME VETERANS, AN FRANCIS June 1 wing & poll opinions by commercial nruout tate, the on re justrent tember Home co. of state today ignated 9 California's Welcome day, in honor of returned soldiers, sailors and marines, | comm! add injc nicipal league; P. T. Fagrie, Central Labor council; Miss Elizabeth Clara Six objectives have been formu: | May 31,—Kqual | bank account of 21-year-old Muriet| riveting- machine | Oakland, Cal, | three rivets. |tory ts 1,000 such wheels daily, and} acy of touch and one| Mise Butliff, who does all the rivet thousandths of an inch im diameter. PLAN ADOPTED Forty Seattle societion, clubs and) joined tn) caniam, survey of the task faced by! } of the different agencies, formation | B. | is made up of Fred Catlett, of | the Chamber of Commerce and Com- | han, Seattle public schools; A. Wood: | cock, ¥ officio, The general committer ts com powed of representatives of the Uni versity of Washington, the Seattle public schools, the Chamber of Com- merce and Commercial Club, organ ised labor, war eamp community service, Knights of Columbus, ¥, W. A., ¥. MC. ated clubs, Seattle public War Vetera aseoctation, Welfare’ league, Munictpal Rotary club and others, SELL FLOWERS FOR ORPHANS M. C. A; EB. F. Dahm, ex library, Social league, A., Women’s Feder: | \Drive Starts for $20,000 for| | Home A rose He tar drive to sell made by the » of the Good Shepherd, was d thru the Northwest Thursday The aim of the drive is to raine $20, 200,000 artin nw at tal orph The day A special holiday was declared at |Camp Lewis Wednesday, and the Y. M. C. d the mpaign for the orphan ae A special cireus and audeville | Program was presented, and the total proceeds were used to start the ball rolling for the drive. The roses na op The committer wid Carrol and W. W “No w could be ve will continue until & ing sold tn Ta coma in charge const King « ist returned from Connor thier hairman), Major Frank France, purpos ade the obje cing r r hildren in when the and build uy 1 fabric that ¢ battles of life than this ters take ure mere moral and ables them to fi@ht thi in the right manner.” NL. pon A. Special to The Star June 12.—Britons don't ukfast bacon go to while they have ext American pork. *The Pall Mall Gazett that 12,000 of English bac b by Holland 2,000 tong of this quantity has been shipped to Essen. Meantime I itish “pay ab. surd prices for American rubbish,” Mk their bre other people to omplains on ha ind that tons | n imported | the] the Maloneys were | 000 for the support of the orphanage, | atur- | A. and Knights of Columbus | oo Vietoria Service Awalis You in Our Keonomy Mereanine Shop Corrective Shoes at Keonomy Stcono AVE.© jelerea, AT SPRING St. sii ECONOMY Si hea re oP 77ANINE SH VICTORIA SYSTEM MAKES THE SHOE BARGAINS! There is nothing marvelous about the Shoe Bargains in our new economy shop on the mezzanine floor. They are the outcome of Victoria business system—a system that eliminates all unnecessary expense of bookkeeping, deliv- eries, so that goods may be sold at economy prices in this new system. Shoe bargains are obtainable at any time— not certain hours or days, but any. time you desire economy shoes. VICTORIA MEZZANINE STEPS lead to economy. Two Pretty Pumps Brown kid leather, of rich shadings; one with, French heel, neatly shaped, and one with a good-modeled Cuban heel; both with oak soles. All widths and sizes needed. Prices one at whieh no elumsy-fingered male bas ever given satisfaction. The factory in question produces calculating machines with many Each wheel demands 37 operations, including the insertion of ‘The output of the fac Several Styles of Oxfords NOT ALL SIZES IN ANY SHOE wheels ing, drives 3,000 of the tiny clamps per day. The rivets are but 60 Some colors and some black, with French heels and military. These have unusual merit, saving you from $1.00 to $2.00 on every pair. “It hanic girl in competent as a me emilee Mi: Sutlitt, “she Gooan't need to worr bout mascn line competition. 1 idew that there are scores of mechanica tasks now performed by men at which girls would be far more com. petent “Of course no falrminded employ or would pay & woman leans than man, provided he got equally effi clent servies. However, all the girts in our factory hold union cards an members of & men’s union, so the ogee pay question never troubled ave an ATSPRING JS sHOP TELL ‘DRUG STORES—5 Quality the Bartell Iobel i's wnarh of: Viemamnge Quality t arte! is a mark o dependability. While we maintain a Riargeryaa standard of Quality, our prices are sil gge te within the reach of all—“Get wt at A. D. S. Milk of Magnesia, Bartell’s.” cothe important thing about rapid or Gelicnte tasks ia to have a sense of rhythm. If you do your work to & cadence, like a mailor working in time to a chantey, it goes twice as | quickly and prevents fatigue.” '5—BAR TOILET Creme Elcaya, a fragrant, non - greasy toilet cream for the com- plexion, jar Eleaya Com- plexion Powder, all shades, box . 50¢ Rouge Eleaya, compacte 50¢ Pompeian Massage Cream sseseees + 486, 734, OSE Pompeian Night Cream ... wosee , B5¢, T5¢ Pompeian Day Cream. . 50¢ Pompelan Beauty Powder, af! shades 45¢ Wisdom's Robertine Fauld Face Powder 48¢ Daggett ang Ramadell's« Perfect Cold COMIN ce ceceeeeeee AO to 81.40 Sanitol Cold Cream 27¢ ~ ieee New Discov- Gude's slo Mangan... A eesseees SLO Swamp Root 50¢ and 90¢ A. D. S. Syrup of Figs 25¢ A. D. S. Hepatic Salts 50¢ Blad Salts ... Septol Salvasine war Elixir Buchu, Juniper and Dandelion Comp..$1.00 Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup of Pepsin. ......45¢, Septol Harlem oe, Sloan’s Liniment .... S. S. S. Blood Tonic. .95¢ Sodamint and Pepsin.10¢ _ Aromatic Cascara ..... --+.15¢, 25¢ and 50¢ Septol Eczema Ointment “KODAK” YOUR VACATION No vacation or outing can be complete without a Kodak alona. It's hard to re- member every in- cident of the trip —a Kodak will refresh your memory and make ata vacation easy to cx- } plain. ) All the latest sizes and models from $8.00 to $105.06. Bring your films to us for printing and developing. { work done in our own thoroughly equipped dark room. Brownie Cameras at $2.13 to $16.00, Just the thing for the kiddies We repair all makes of kodaks, cameras and fountain pens. Speedy, satiafactory work guaranteed in every instance, eee CHOICE BOX STATIONERY Autocrat Linen, In all the lat- est shades and tints...50¢ Cloth of Gold, a quality paper, 24 sheets and 24 envelopes. ) ) } Al Septol HH ypophosphites, large size .....4. ) FRIDAY SPECIALS sprinkle ‘3 ‘Coid Cream ..5O¢ and $1.00 Tubes..25¢ and 50¢ Melba Cold Cream . 506 a 50¢ Cleansing Mary Garden Cream Melba Stearate, and Squibb's Zine top, scented special Pond's an ce paper, in neat boxes, latest tints assorted in box—24 sheets paper and envelopes, Alexis Linen, box contains 7 sheets paper, each Milford Lawn sheets in box Extract, special.... eckle Cream c wder Kiss Powder Rice Pi Camili Beptol regular Cod special Emulsion $1.00, tic , special. . ..72¢, $1.20 wier.. 50¢ wer S56 ..50¢ Boe 50¢ . Be .. 60¢ 50 - 81.00 ‘a Mirage Cream 20¢ Charmis Cold Cream +.++25@ and Randoline Colgate’s Brilliantine .... Murray and D Java la T Creme de Luxor Cold Cream.. eptol Violet Cerato 25¢ Theatrical Cold Cream, 1 Ib Palmer's special Colgate Septol Antise Shaving Lotion 19¢ id's Worm Powders for children, spe .17¢ feet, and tired spe- B7¢ » Spe ile 29¢ hospital $2.73 *hosphate, spe ase Yerib: y "Linen, 24° sheets and Coymore Linen, 24 sheets and 24 envelope: Toilet Water, $1 : Sheerwhite Linen, 24 sheets and 24 envelop special... Milk, Rocky fea, Borden's r special Hosford'’s Acid 1 A beautiful array of cholce papetries at popular prices, tn all olgate's the latest shades and tints, 50¢ 256 . Be Lanman Florida Wa 106 and $1.00 Powder 1 ide $1.00 50¢ Colapte Writing Tablets, Inks, Pens, Pencils, etc. Eve ry- thing for correspondence. We have the Waterman, Shaeffer’s and Conklin’s Fountain Pens, at $2.50 and up. Our Own Make of Candies Take home box Morse’ al Indian spe 17¢ Polish -.18¢ spectat 18¢ » Special. . seeepeee LOG aht's special Silver Cream As a delicious box of Bartell Malted Milks. lc Carbona Cleaning Lustrite Cutex Cutlele Cutex Cuticle Comfort Cutex Liquid Nall Bnamel.. Palmolive Tojlot Water Cutex Paste Polish .. um Remove -80¢ All our candies made from richest cream and pure cane sugar. Some candies are as good—none are better. Gola BARTELL DRUG STORES LOCATED AT 5349 Ballard | First Avenue at Westlake Avenue Avenue Pike Street at Pine Street Oriental Cre Mavin Cold Woodbury } Arm Cream Facial Bath Soap Second Avenue at | Union Street andy Factory, 610 Second Ave, Near Alaska Bldg. { 8 Borent Avenue : for Bartel! 8 for Speck 1910 Boren Avenue Warehouse and Office, Ne eT | nl Soap m

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