The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 4, 1919, Page 14

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FIRST AVE. BETWEEN IKE: (AND UNION STS. ENTRANCES FIRST AND SECOND AVENUES SATURDAY SPECIALS-Market Closes 6 P.M. WESTERN DELICATESSEN Co. CENTRAL PUBLIC MARKET SEATTLE MARKET (Upper and Lower Floors) Occidental Avenue and 1422 First Avenue Yesler Way Rox Salad, 2 pints ...25¢ | Sweet Mixed Pickles, pint Extra . Queen Olives, pint.....20¢@ | Chicken Loaf, Ib. ......6..- And don’t forget to try our fried chickens. '40¢ Farmers’ Vegetable Co. Fresh Peas, 2 Ibs. .. Gem Potatoes, 8 Ibs...... Radishes and Green Onior Head Lettuce, 2 for Hot-house Tomatoes, Ib. Cucumbers, each ..:.... Rhubarb, 2 Ibs, Ps Beets and Carrots, £ Sweet Oranges, doz. Cantaloupes, each Washington Fruit and Vegetable Co. 10¢ and 15¢ Sweet Cantaloupes, each ... Best Watermelons, |b. Fresh Cucumbers, each Pod Sugar Peas, Ib. Best Tomatoes, basket 30¢; 2 Ibs... Sweet Oranges, basket . Fancy New Potatoes, 4 lbs..... Italian Prunes, 2 doz. AKE-RIGHT BREADERY ...15¢ 10¢ 1414 First Avenue Between Pike and Union Doctors recommend Dark Bread Try our Whole Wheat, Graham, Rye American Grocery Stores Co. HELP YOURSELF GROCERY—UPPER FLOOR, CENTRAL PUBLIC MARKET CENTRAL GROCERY—LOWER FLOOR, CENTRAL PUBLIC MARKET SEATTLE GROCERY—SEATTLE MARKET, 109 OCCIDENTAL Pure Cane Sugar, 5 lbs. 48¢; 10 lbs. 95¢ Carnation Milk, 2 cans .. -25¢ Del Monte Corn, 2 cans .37¢ 2 in 1 Shoe Polish, all kin -11¢ Grape Nuts, 2 pgks. .25¢ Post Toasties, 2 pkgs. ............25¢ 9 Sliced or Grated Pineapple, No. 1 cans Booth’ Si Raccccsee Tea Garden Preserves, Fruit Jars and Canning Supplies Economy and Kerr Wide Mouth, Self- Sealing Jars, pints, doz.........$1.23 Quarts, doz. . +. - $1.38 V%-Gals., doz. . -+--- $1.83 Ball. Mason -Jars,. pints, doz. 85¢; quarts, 93¢; 14 gals., ......$1.33 ‘Complete stock Jars, Rubbers, -ete., at our usual low prices. Sliced Pineapple, large ean .. Golden Age Macaroni Product rdines, No. Minute Tapioca, 2 pkgs....... Holly Flour, 2414-lb. bag. . Domino Matches, 4 boxes . Ivory Soap, large bars . Crystal White Soap, 5 bars. Hills’ Red Can Coffee, 21% Ibs. oo cee Mb nas M. J. B. Coffee, lb..49¢; 3 Ibs. $1.45; 5 Ibs... . seeeee S235 Selecto Coffee, Ib. 43¢, 3 Ibs. -$1.29 Golden West Coffee, lb. 48¢; 2 Ibs. 95¢ Instant Postum, large Ib. Covers, IT’S TIME FOR THAT SUMMER SUIT THAT SEATTLE MAY NOT LOSE A INDUSTRIAL OPPORTUNITY, NOR A POSSIBLE FUTURE CITIZEN OR FAC- TORY, TO THE DETRIMENT OF THE COMMUNITY, WE ANNOUNCE— —That we have Ample.Power, Fully Devel- oped, for all Present. and Prospective In- dustrial Requirements. —That we are the Owners of Other Water Powers that may he Developed When Needed and Tied In With Our Present System, Making a Total far in Excess of any Demands of the immediate Future. —Any person or Persons Seeking an Indus- trial Site and Full Information Concerning Power Possibilities and the Electrical En- ergy Available for Factories or Other In- dustrial Uses will Find Such Information by Consulting Us. TAILORS A shepherd check in waistline coat or patch pocket model just the thing for these warm Puget Sound Traction, Light & Power Company Seattle Tacoma Bellingham _ Everett 304 PIKE ST. THE SEATTLE STAR—-FRIDAY, JULY 4, 1919. “Baby Vamps” Drag Their Creator Into Court and Ogle “His Honor od | oe Miss Gene George Pfeffer, and the little vixens who demonstrated that vamp jwith an abbreviated “rag” and the | SAN FRANCISCO, Cal., July Miss Figura Gene girl of San vely speakir Pfeffer. ty is the mother of several George soc | Jose, Cal., million children | 4 | Pederal Judge Carpenter of Chica go recently played the role of god her when he issued an injunetion ainst two large corporations daily manufacturing 6,000 imitations of » elyps tion—the Sp With a bab. up on the judge’s bench andthe, “mother” of the child p ding be fore the bar, the court had no cholce One of the “child,” ahd the judge signed | an injunction | | Gene George is one of six sisters fall having art penchants. The| | Splash Me Doll is the sesult of six | |imaginations combined, but Gene} |George designed the come-hither leyes, the glory of the little vampire. | A saucy silk cap and a bathing id on with a paint brush com he fantasy vamp made its debut a anta Cruz, Cal., where favor and brought sh Me Doll n instar | out revealing are dangerous ladies to fool with, even if they're only dolls “hank of hair" painted on, 4.—| orders for 10,000 more of them, Then came contracts for $250,000 worth in advance of ad The ieorge the Follies ance at the varnp's fame Pfeffer to New York where in| its appear. | York Liberty Loan ball. | «feld animated the It next m ising took Miss Gene lash Me But in the meantime Gene George dren” Miss Pfeffer’s imagina-| cago at the rate of 5,000 a day. donned working attire and got a job| beach vamp huddled | in one of the factories she contended infringing on her patent— her identity. was Her employers vamps that she first day quit found out her were being turned out in Chi-| She | “chil with found her to be so look into the come-hither eyes | skilled at the art of turning out baby was promoted the ‘The factory was sorry to | lose so valuable a worker when she The next time the employer met Gene penter’s court with a tiny vamp in her arms She put the mannikin on the judge's desk and turned its come hither eyes on George won her Miss Pfeffer is a g | Mark Hopkins Inetite ford university ‘of 8 the court. infunction duate of the of Art H] Gene DEAF HOLD BIG PICNIC ON 4TH Convention Will Come to a Close Sunday One hundred and fifty members of the Washington State Sssocia- tion for the Deaf, who are in con-| vention here this week, day from the routine work and held a Baker park ‘The association banquet was held at the Masonic club rooms in the Arcade building Thursday, Presi- dent True Partridge presided and A. W. Wright was toastmaster Among those who addressed the banquet were Rev, G, Gaertner, BE. H. Whitehead, L, O. Christensen, George Riley, Mrs. A. Seeley, | |Charles Albert Gumaer, Dr. Olaf} |Hanson, Prof. L. A. Divine, Mrs. | George Riley, A. H. McDonald Mrs. I Divine, Prof. Thomas Clark, Mrg. George Cook, Carl Gar- rison, Mrs, Ed Miland, Lawrence Belser and W, S. Root. The con- vention will close Sunday with services at the Lutheran church, 22nd ave, and E. Union st, MILLERS FIGHT _ STOCKFEED ACT) Measure to Protect Dairy- men Is Attacked Inaugurating a fight against the |"Commercial Feed Stuff Law,” twen ty-one milling firms have joined in an action for order to show cause against Prosecuting Attorney Fred C, Brown Commissioner of Agriculture EB. F. Benson and At: | torney General Lindley L. Thomp son. The order for these ot appear in court ny should not be restrained from en-| forcing the law has been issued by | | Presiding Judge Boyd J. Tallman. | | Hearing will be July 10 The law was passed by legislature at the request of the| state dairymen, who declared so. called stock feed contained such a high percentage of dried rotten rice dried rotten peanuts, straw and| other materials injurious to cattle, that it was useless. The millers and feed men fought the bill. ‘The mill ers in their law suit now claim the | law is unconstitutional Dairymen char the ‘millers were buying up rotten rice and other materials from ‘he big Seattle plers and mixing them with bran, and selling the product under high sounding names as “stock feed. LUCKY COMMISSIONER IS ONLY SINGLE MAN! TOPEKA, Kan., July 4—Robert McGiffert, city commissioner, is “in| luck,” as he expresses it. He is the only unmarried city commissioner | in the city hail 4 As a result there of candy or some flowers or both} on his desk every morning wh he gets down to work, Theré are a whole flock of girls at the city} hall, and they are delighted with| the fact that there is one man to| whom they can present (lowers or| candy without taking a chance of|_ breaking up «a happy’ home. | “It is @ relief to have one un-| married man about,” said a pretty blonde stenographer. “And 1 hear he is not even engaged.” id Friday the Inst | is either a box} pienle at Mount}! PICTURE OF CLERK Wrio JALL@@EO TO HAVE SOLD JESS WILLARD A SET OF SOCKS PROTO OF COOTIES WHO ARE BAID TO BOTHER Damesevs poe! WILLARD coree SPECIALLY POSED PrcTURE! OF CONDUCTOR! WHO TOOK UP WILLARD 'S PARE —HE 1g MODEST ABOUT HS ACHIEVE MENT wOwever. USES CREAM IN Wt = HERE'S TH COW NOTE! THE INTELLIGENT EXPRESSION. CLose UP“OF BIRD THAT 3K IN TREE NEAR DEMPSEY * ‘ ices CAMP EVERY MORNING ! OLD GENT WHO JESS pass: WHILE DOING ROAD WOR ONCE Buy regular fellow, grows, War Savings Stamps be a The saving habit j | | | I) | | | jeorge she was in Judge Car-| | | | making repairs on his auto, SUGAR — Pure Cane - A8¢ pound . O8e pounds .06¢ Sugar Stall—Lower Section 10 PHONE MAIN 1434 hg ah LAKE SPE sack GOLD BOND, 49.1b Sugar Sta $2.95 sack seeee, B2Z.90 I—Lower See Westlake Grocery Store | 25¢ (4 cans to a cus 2 cans 25¢ 10¢ 50¢ 3 cans Dutch Cleanser Milk r only) Federal | ton Holly Ev % cans Corn or F Lib ‘aporated can Rogers Large can Van Camp's Pork and Beans . 30¢ 4 ibs. Rolled Oats . 25¢ 2 cans Tomatoes . 25¢ The Patrons | of the | WESTLAKE MARKET Say We Have the Most Sani- tary Market in Seattle ALPHA MARKET | STALLS 6.7 Big | 2. sticks Specials on Meats | - SEATTLE HADQU. ARTERS for Edison Cylinder Diamond Amberolas and Records. - | King Salmon, Ib. Stall 195 | | | Phonograph Supply House | i bars Large Oil Sardines 25¢ No-Rub Naptha Soap 25¢ bottle Del Monte Catsup 2 Ibs, Flake White Shortening or Spaghetti 25¢ -.10¢ Pancake pkg. Rogers’ Soda. large pkg. Olympic Flour 3 Ibs, Mexican’ 25¢ ZOBLE Grocery Co. Stall 105—Phone Elliott 314 3 cans Libby's Tomato Soup, 41b. can Cottolene. Cream of Barley, tks. 4 Ibs, Pink Beans... 3 Ibs, Corn Starch.. bottle Queen Oliv Chicory. Minced Clams, small can... 3 doz. Jar Rubbers.... Economy Caps 50c don. .......B8¢ Full Assortment of Aluminum Ware at Cost + To Introduce CINNAMON’S BEST COFFEE ‘We will sell 55e Coffee for, lb, 50¢ 2 Ibs. for O5¢ Saturday only. M. CINNAMON Stall 131 Tomatoes, per Ib. Yellow F per basket ... WESTLAKE FRUIT & VEGETABLE CO. STALL 112 K. AKIYAMA & COMP Fresh Vege’ Direct the Farm 4 bunches. special on 36—Lower Be 10¢ turday Floor --20¢ ae | Rhubarb, Carrots Berries Stalls 35- Red Snapper, Ib. Salt Salmon, lb... Anchovies, Ib. ...... "ise WESTLAKE FISH MKT. Upper and Lower ‘"loors Babes Wrapped in Paper; CoachoMlovakia Asks Aid Daughter of New Nation’s President Appeals to the paid a terrible price for our liberty, but we have it at last. Yet what good is the precious possession of it, if our children are to grow up stunted in growth and too weak to repair the ravages of war and to build up our nation until it reaches the high ideals of our dreams?” This is the question Miss Alice Masaryk, daughter of the president of Czecho-Slovakia, put to herself when she first saw the peaked, old faces of the Czech children and their little bodies, weak and stunted in growth from underféeding. Miss Masaryk is remembered in America for her settlement work in| the slums of Chicago, while her father, Professor Thomas G. Ma-| saryk, was exchange professor in the University of Chicago. After being held as a hostage in an Austrian prison camp and nar-| rowly escaping the tragic fate of Edith Cavell, Miss Masaryk is now co-operating with the American re- lief administration in its program for | Czecho-Slovakia “Our mothers,” she writes to Mr. Hoover, director eral of the Ar an relief administration, “have nothing but paper with which to wrap their little new-born babies, In the hospitals many of the sick children are without covering of any kind, so scarce is clothing and linen And as for bandages, I know of at least one hospital where paper is used exclusively for bandaging. “Besides our great need of cloth ing," Mis# Masaryk continues, “we | feed food and soap. Tuberculosis | and typhus are raging in some dis tricts uncontrolled, Physicians tell | me the cause of this can be traced almost directly to the total lack of | soap in these districts, It is impos- sible for the people to keep clean and so contagion is greatly aggra vated. Diseases brought on directly | | from under-feeding are another cause SAILOR ARRESTED IN MURDER MYSTERY ABERDEEN, July 4,—Suspected | of being implicated in the murder of John Alberta Tuesday night, ©, | F, Ashburner, 18, discharged sailor, | was arrested Thursday. Testimony | |given by Tony Alberta, @rother of | |the murdered man, involved Ash-| burner, He stated that Ashburner | had promised to take the slain man for an auto ride Tuesdi | night. | When arrested, Ashburner was | Blood | revolver ad been | in a schain of and a shells the car from which four fired, form links stains on {stains are e which against Ashburner, says | he borrowed the gun, and the} from a cut which his| mother suffered in an accident Al-| berta’s body found in the| will be used | Ashburner | , Humptulips river Wednesday morn- | | ine of our high death rate. dren are pitifully underfed. | way o: given immediate and special care.” ALICE G MASARY?<— The chil- I see no aving them unless they are Miss Masaryk has recently been [appointed president of the Children’s Relief bureau in C Daecho Slovakia, For Holiday and Every Day Use. Delivered by Kristoferson’s trucks—or for sale at good grocery stores. Use these prod- ucts of quality. Phone Elliott 223 “PERFECTLY STEURIZED 65¢ | From | Westlake Public Market | Times Square, Sixth and Virginia | SOAP f bars Crystal White... bars N ub Naptha case vb Naptha... $4.25 Sugar Stall, Lower Section Westlake | Meat Co. QUALITY HIGHER PRICES LOWER _ No guess when you buy it here. Courteous service | and no disappointments. 28¢ | ie Stalls 14-15 _TOKIO- Free | Japanese Fan to customers mak- ing a purchase of $1.00 or more, M. J. B. Coffee, 31b. can $1.25 Lipton’s Tea, 1-lb, can Ghirardelli's Chocolate, 3 Blue Ribbon Tea, 1 Ib. pkgs. Lux . Sardines, 2 ca Libby's Tomato Mazola Oil, old Oil. Cottolene. %1b. pail " AND VEGETABLES Are always Freshest and Low Priced at M. ROOT AND COMPANY 108—109 - Strawbeny Blossom Layer Cake A delicious and attractive Cake for today and tomor- row. Regular 50c— Three Girls’ Bakery INGLIS PROUD OF OLD GUARD Commander Returns After Long Overseas Service “I am proud, and every Washing- ton citizen should be proud, of the old Second Washington Infantry,” said Col. William M. Inglis, com- mander of the unit when it went abroad, who returned from over: service Thursday afternoon. Col. Inglis was commander of three different regiments. and went thru some of the stiffest fighting of © the war. He was in the Argonne, and was a member of the first con- tingent to proceed to Coblenz with® the Army of Occupation. Col. Inglis was accompanied by his. wife and daughter, who went to New York to meet him. A host of friends were waiting to welcome him when he stepped off the train in the King st. station. EXCHANGE TO ELECT The annual election of stockhold- ers of the Merchants’ Exchange will be held Wednesday, July 9. The election will be held in the ex- ecutive offices of the exchange. DROPS ing relleved in hours, a swelling reduced in a tem Gays? ulates the liver, kidneys, stomach and heart, Durifies the brood. strengthens entire syste for Free Trial Treatment. Se COLLUM DROPSY REM tang Dep A i, tan ° Treated eck = Free— Short breath- One | If your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding you have || Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Dis. ease, which is a menace to good health. We are the only Dentists in tke Northwest who specialize in this dreaded disease. Examina- tion and estimate free. Special care taken of children’s teeth. Reasonable discount to Union men and their families, All work guaranteed 15 years United Painless Dentists Phone Elliott 3633, Hours: 8:30 a, m, to 6 p, m,

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