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ARMED BANDITS ROB MOTORIST Two Men Collect $100 at Point of Gun After forcing his automobile to the side of the street, two auto bandits robbed W. 1. Jacobson, 2515 W4th ave. S., of approximately $100 Near 10th ave, and W. sail st. early Sunday night. Jacobson, who is a Standard Oil collector, after finishing Rallard, when he noticed an auto- mobile shoot ahead of him, The| machine began crowding him to-| ward the curb. In order to avoid +an accident, Jacobson stopped his ‘ automobile, Two armed men jumped out of the other machine and commanded him to throw up his hands, He complied, Then one of the men began a search of his ca! “I haven't any mone }eon replied when they started to search him. “Shut up; this ts our party,” was the terse reply. After completing [the search, the bandits walked | Jacobson a block away and re turned to the automobiles. After disabling his machine, they drove away. The robbery occurf@d in view of & dozen automobiles which passed without their occupants suspecting @ robbery was in progress. Jacobson obtained the car’s license number. The police investigated and found the license had been issued to the Coulee State Bank, of Coules, Wash. The police believe the car had been stolen. Both bandits were described as being About 30 years eld and wore dark caps pulled well over the face Goes to Theatre, Loses Motor Car When Frank M. Fletcher, 1208 Tenth ave. W., came out of the Moore theatre Sunday night he dis- oovered his Chevrolet touring car had been stolen from in front of the _ Calhoun hotel. Licen’e number, ; ~ 103893. Motor number, ©-14720, _ Threatens Girl; , Shot by F ‘ather CHICAGO, Feb. 9.—“Marry me or @ie,” said Giacomo Mirabelloto to An- gelina Costanzo, Angelina told her father. He killed’ Giacomo with a butcher knife. Giacomo had a rec- ord as a killer, the police sald. MAJORITY CONTROL of the Guardian Trust & Savings bank at First ave. and Corumbia st, was purchased by Henry Pickard, re- tired capitalist, and his associates. OATS FROM ALASKA, as well as wheat and barley, are on display at _ the Alaska Bureau of the Chamber of Commerce. Cash Here is a chance to own the above pretty home and % acre of ground ‘West Seattle. I build the first ‘unit of two rooms, and you move in and finish it as fast a» you can. ‘Payments are only $15 per month ‘and 6 per cent interest. Free blue print goes with each sale, re Typist. Gets $1 1, LOS ANGELES, Feb. 9.—When a stenographer owns six touring cars and spends about $1,000 a month, you ask: “How?” Dolly H. Pritchard, 24, who owns the autos and does the spending, sup- plies the answer. It is this: “VERSATILITY — USING ALL THE TALENTS ONE POSSESSES.” Working at present as an attor- ney’s legal stenographer, Miss Pritch- ard plang in a few months to re tire and live on her income. PATENTS, PAINTS, VAMPS, POSES, RUNS SWITCHBOARD She can do this because: She has put thru a patent on an electric sign and an a typewriter and has several patents pending. She has taken medals for painting, having been awarded one in par Ucular at the Palace of Fine Arts at San Francisco in 1915. Has toured the Orpheum circuit tn a posing act and vamped on the screen with the Vitagraph, Universal and Triangle companies. In addition, she ts an expert switchboard operator, cashier, has studied law at the U. 8. C., medicine NEW YORK, Feb. 9%.—Herbert Hoover, in a statement made public here today, said: “I have not sought and am not seeking the presidency. I am not «| candidate, I have no ‘organization.’ No one is authorized to speak for me political}; Hoover further declared that if the peace treaty becomes an issue in the election he “must vote for the party that stands for the league.” “I could not vote with a party if it were dominated by groups who seek to set aside our constitutional guarantees for free speech and free representation, who hope to re-estab- lish the control of the government for profit and privilege,” he said. “I could not vote with a party if it were dominated by groups which hope for any form of socialism, H. C. PETERS — TT IINKNANOEEENEGUOEECONGO ALU whether it be nationalization of in dustry or other destruction of indi- (TT Character! Character is that intangible something that marks the difference between men. The character of our officers and em- ploye yes is such as to make for the iendliest of relations with our depos- itors at all times. Courtesy and Service do everything to maintain this friendliness. NATIONAL “CITY BANK OF SEATTLE Second at Marion TL LDIF REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS In order to introduce our new (whalebone) plate, which is the lightest @nd strongest plate known, covers very little of the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaran- teed 15 years. EXAMINATION Full Set of Teeth, Full Set of Whalebone” Teeth, Crowns . Bridgework . Amaigam Filling work gua: ig 44 ui te 4 sud Soe Samples Most of our to pov ged is ve test our _ work. the Bodh nd Place. Bring thi an morning ar pie or atien| pelt a who. in inte andave. Wien Sto 19 & yea of Our Plate and resent p patronage is recommended Painless Have impression tak nation snd. edvice, trea! * fe Stand the our fener good satisfaction. Ask our hen coming to Se ae our Aes ‘be sure Work: OHIO CUT-RATE DENTISTS 997 UNIVERSITY sv, Opposite Fraser-Paterses Ca, atten ASC RIE 000 Monthly “U se Yast Talents” California Miss Is a Jill of All Trades and a Mistress of Many Chicago School of Muste, dancing at Dennishawn, painting at the Art Institute and osteopathy at the school in Michigan. LOAFING?—WHY, SHE HASN'T TIME! There hasn’t been much loafing in Miss Pritchard's young life She started to work in a factory when only 10 years old and has gone to night achool continuously for 10 years,*never having had the opportunity of attending day school. With the proceeds from her in- ventions and movie work she has purchased a string of six big cars which she rents to the various Los Angeles motion picture studios for location work. “I ascribe what success I have made to the fact that I study con- tinually,” said this remarkable per- son. I think there is a broad field for a stenographer to advance to a good secretarial positian if one is willing to work hard. For instance, I studied law while working as seo- retary to a lawyer, and it has en abled me to advance rapidly and has made me practically indispensible in McFadden Stanford university, music at the! my ae Position.” bos Herbert Hoover Says‘He Is Not Seeking the ‘Presidency atblod baal al o#2 a9 > do in move vidual fartiduge! “I do onat» than tem" “otherwise com- sri ashe ag binati as jn | Burope,.6¢ m S.fiangen, aminority rule. ¢Until-dt more definitely ap- pears han pire stand for I must exeraise mmx, pESFORative of Americam aitizensbipoand decline to paige mee ee ee AMingtoid.” . GERMAN ANGER COOLING OFF Learn Allied Note Is Not So Severe as Thought BY CARL D. GROAT (United Press Staff Correspondent) BERLIN, Feb. 8.—The entente let- ter covering the list of alleged war guilty Germans, whose delivery for trial by allied tribunals is demand. ed, was described today as “not in the nature of an ultimatum.” The text of the letter, it was said, had jeased the situation considerably from the German point of view. The letter, it was learned, was |signed by Great Britain, France, Rumania, Poland, Jugo-Slavia, | Czecho-Slovakia, Belgium and Italy. hit asserts that the list does not in- clude all the war guilty Germans, but names for the sake of prac- tieability only those who are chiefly responsible for war crimes. DOMINION LINER BREAKS IN TWO 48 of Crew Are Reported to Be Rescued NEW YORK, Feb. 9.—The Old Dominion liner Princess Anne, whicti grounded on a reef off Rockaway Point early Friday, was reported to have broken in two today, Forty- eight of the crew who had remained on board were said to have been rescued by a fishing boat. The 32 passengers and the other members of the crew of 76 were taken off by small boats Saturday in spectacular fashion by the coast guard and New York harbor police Up until today there was some hope the steamer might be saved. A distress signal was seen flying from the vessel and coast guard put off to remove the seamen who had remained aboard. Before they arrived a fishing boat was reported to have taken the crew aboard and started for the Long Island shore, More Sunshine Is Scheduled Today Altho the air was all cluttered up with fog and frost Monday morning, Weather Observer George N, Salis- bury prognost'cated clear, sunshiny climate for Tuesday, just like the Sunday consignment. The mercury hit $2 degrees above zero at 8 o'clock Monday morning. « in Chicago, dietetics | FEDERAL JURY REPORT READY Inquisitors Are Scheduled to | Convene Tuesday ‘The federal grand Jury will recon. | yene Tuesday morning to report on | indictments drawn up last week. It will be excused for the remainder of the November term when it has made its report, it is understood, Indictments of individuals connect ed with the shipbuilding industry. in the Northwest may be returned Tuesday, Indictments will be secret but bench warrants issued by Jud Jeremiah Neterer will be served at once by deputy marsHals on all per-| sons who are in Seattle, it is said. These indictments, which were| passed upon by the inquisitorial) body last week, are the result of tn vestigations conducted by the de partment of justice for the past four months, MOTHER FEARS | BOY IS STOLEN Asks Police to Help Find Father Recalling an alleged threat of her divorced husband, Paul A. Schraum, that he would kill their 2-year-old son and end his own life unless per- mitted to have the boy, Mra. Lottie Schraum, 811 Donovan st., appealed to the police Monday to help her find the child and his father, Mrs, Schraum said she had been in the habit of letting the father take the boy to the home of his mother, Mra, Stingal, on Southern Heights, frequently for visita. Sun- day Schraum called and took the lad as usual. Mra Stingal reported that father and boy left her place at 1 p. m. Nelther has been seen since. ORDER PROBE OF STRANGE DEATH Post- Mortem Examination Will Be Made by Coroner A post mortem examination will be made by Chief Deputy Coroner W. H. Corson to determine how Ed- ward Golden, 31, 914% James st. met) death, Golden returned home Satur- day night in @ dazed condition, says his mother-in-law, Mra, 8. M. Leach. Thomas Keegan, who shared a bed with Golden, verifies this statement. | Sunday morning Golden could not be aroused. A bottle of carbolic acid, apparently untouched, was found in the room by polict. Stricken with influenga, Golden's In Memory Of her who helped to found the Bon Marche— Whose broad vision aided in its con and wise counsel tinued growth and development— Whose kindness and sympathy made her beloved and respected by every work- er in this store and by all who knew her in Josephine this city— Patricia McDermott who passed from this life February Seventh, Nineteen Hundred Twenty The Bon Marche Will Be Closed All Day Tuesday wife if in the city hospital, He had threatencd to kill himself, says Mra. Leach, SOCIETY WOMAN KILLS HUSBAND Prominent Southern Attor- ney Dies of Wounds NEWPORT NEWS, Va., Feb. 9.— 8. Gordon Cumming, prominent at- torney and brother of Dr. Hugh 8. Cumming, recently nominated for surgeon general of the United States public health service by President Wilson, died today at Dixie hospital, Hampton. Cumming was shot twice by his wife Sat- urday night on one of the main business streets of Hampton. The shooting was the culmina tion of marital difficulties in which Cumming and his wife have figured, extending over a period of several years, The circult court of Eliza- beth City granted a decree of di- voree favorable to Cumming and his wife took an appeal to the su- preme court, where the case Is pending. Mrs. Cumming had been brood- ing over her troubles for several months. She ts in jail, having been arrested Immediately after she had fired five shots at her husband, two of which took effect. A coroner's jury was impaneled immediately SHOT IN HEAD, FIVE ARE HELD Rooming House Fracas Ends in Tragedy Unable to tell who shot him, Fred Hanson, 36, a fisherman, was con- fined at the city hospital Monday with a Bullet hole in his head. Five Persons are under arrest, Hanson was wounded during a fracas 1n a rooming house at 2807% First ave. Sunday morning, the police say. A revolver was found. John Drake, a sailor, Mabel Jordan, telephone operator, Katherine Peter- son, Emma Williams and Charles M. Peterson, landlord, were detained by the police. MT. LASSEN IS ACTIVE AGAIN Column. of “Smoke Shoots From California Peak REDDING, Cal, Feb, 9.—-(United Press.)—Mount Lassen burst into eruption early today, For several hours later there was no sign of abatement. It was by far the biggest eruption in the past three years. At dawn a huge column of smoke was shoot ing into the alr, its symmetry brok en by a stiff north wind. The approximate height of the GOAT GLANDS GIVING BABIES TO CHILDLESS Woman and Three Men Become Parents After Operation by Doctor MILFORD, Kan., Feb. 9.—A sur- geon in this little Kansas town has lifted from womanhood the curse of sterility, He is Dr. J. R. Brinkley, chief sur- geon of the Brinkley-Jones hospital of Milford. For several years Dr. Brinkley has made a study of the transplantation of interstitial glands and its results. Unlike Dr. Serge Voronoff, the fa mous French surgeon, who uses mon key glands, and Dr, G. Frank Lyds ton, the Chicago surgeon, who trans. plants human glands, Dr. Brinkley uses glands taken from living goats. ANNOUNCES SUCCESS IN FOUR OPERATIONS Dr. Voronoft and Dr. Lydston claimed to have discovered the se cret of making old men young, but Dr. Brinkley claims no such virtues for his operations. He is interested only in giving babies to men and women whom Nature has cheated of their natural heritage. Two years ago he performed his first operation. Since then he has circumvented Nature four times, making it possible for three men and one woman to become parents. He is awaiting results hopefully in four other eases. Tha most remarkable case fs that of the woman. She is @ young mar- ried woman of Milford, who had been married several years and had de- spaired of bearing children. About a year and a half ago she heard of Dr. Brinktey and his success with in terstitial glan doperations, She went to him and asked him ff he could cure her sterility. Dr, Brinkley made no promises—he never does, But he told her the op: eration was a simple one, and that it would improve her health, even if it failed to give her a child. She gladly submitted to the operation. Dr. Brinkley removed an intersti- tial gland from a live male goat. He made a slight incision in the wom- an‘'s abdomen, inserted the gland and stitehed it in. In a week the patient was about her household duties again, Six months ago she gave birth to a healthy baby. It was a boy. Tho mother was the happiest woman in Kansas, The surgeon had treated six other cases similarly, but all were men— men who loved children and yearned for parenthood, Three of the men MILITARY BANDSMEN of the First infantry, “Washington's Own,” will appear in Seattle next week from Camp Lewis in concert, accord- ing to Col. F, C. Bndicott, regiment. al commander. column was 1,000 feet. For hours the volcanic peak was wrapped in smoke, No earthquake shocks were felt. Mount Lassen last erupted Janu- ary 10, but the eruption was insig nificant in comparison—about one hundredth the size of today's, are now fathers of healthy children. In each case Dr. Brinkley had used male goat glands—and all the babies born were boys. Then this occurred to him: “If I transplant female goat glands, maybe the babies will be girls!” decided ‘to try it, and two months ago his opportunity arrived. A woman came to him just as his first woman patient had come. She was 28 years old, had been married six years and was childless. Dr. Brinkley performed the operation, using the glands of a female goat. He is now awaiting results, DEBS MAY RUN FOR PRESIDENT Socialists Support Two Now in Prisons NEW YORK, Feb, 9—While re- publicans and democrats were cast- ing about for presidential timber, with every prospect their respective candidates will not be known until the conclusion of long drawn out conventions, at least one political party already has agreed on its) choice not only for president, but for vice president. This is the socialist party of America. Its leaders apparently are unanimous for Eugene V. Debs as its presidential candidate and Kate Richards O'Hare as its vice presi- dential candidate. * Both are serving prison sentences for violation of the espionage act, the former in Georgia and the latter in Missouri. The principal plank in the socialist platform, according to these leagers, will be “free speech and free press.” Auto Hits Pole; | Car Is Wrec Driving into the city in an early Monday, H. T. Hickey Clifford Raymond, of ° a telephone pole at Marginal and Dawson st. with such that the top half of the pole ped off, The machine molished. Hickey crawled out a bruised knee. 7 tained a cut lp and scalp Both were treated at the city Real Saving on Every Purchase Women Like “Groceteria” Method because there's no wait- ing, no pressing to bu no fuss, no mistakes, Just take your basket at the entrance and pick cans for 20¢. package m home— just one of the reasons for the lower prices. Look for YOUR Groceteria— DOWNTOWN Groceteria No. 6—85 Pike Stroct. Groceteria. No. 3——~Pike Public Market—downst Groceteria N Public Market, Groceteria No, 17—Corner Public Market. Groceteria| No. 7 — South End Public Market. Groceteria No. 10—803 Union treet. Groceteria No. 831—Liberty Public Market BALLARD DISTRICT Groceteria No. 46419 Ballard Ave. eria No. 115801 14th Ave. INIVERSITY DISTRICT Groceteria No, 2—6503 14th ave. Grocetéria No, 16—43rd and 14th 12—1906 45th St. N. Bweet PORK and BEANS, No. 29¢. MATOES, No. cans for 50¢. LOOK AT THESE CANNED GOODS PRICES And remember that they are typical examples of the values you will always find at every Groceteria. DEL PEACHES | PEARS, No. 3c NEW 17¢; No. 3, , extra 1 27¢. “Lily | Corn, fi FOWLER'S PEAS, | and tender, 174¢. VAN CAMP'’S| IOWA CORN, 2 To: | DEL MONTE No. 2%, can, 19¢. | 34¢. GREEN LAKE DISTRICT ) Groceteria No. Public Market. FREMONT DISTRICT Groceteria No, 25—710-712 Blew- ett Street, WOODLAND PARK Groceteria No. 19--7317 Green- wood Avenue. non BROADWAY DISTRICT Groceteria No, 9233 Broadway North. au ANNE HILL Groceteria No, §—Seventh W, and 20—201 Blaine Groceteria No, 22—331 First Ave. North, WHITE CENTER Groceteria No. 24—16th 3. W. and Barton Street. 2 ns for $1. YORK of the Val extra GINGER large Groceteria No, Ave. Groceteria No. Groceteria No, Groceteria EB Groceteria Ni MONTE AND cans, “Groceteria” Soap Values Lux Soap Flak pkg, 12%¢. Duck Floating Soap, bar, 3%4¢. Lenox Soap, “Sunny Monday” Soap, bar 6¢. fartey, bar, pkg., “BE GLAD THERE'S ONE NEAR YOU" ALKL DISTRICT 6—Green Lake |Groceteria No. 18—2634 Alki Ave. EASTLAKE 21—301 Eastlake RENTON HILL Groceteria No, 15—1320 Pike 8t LESCHT PARK DISTRICT 1801 rte Yesler EAST UNION DISTRICT 23-—28rd and wy, KIRKLAND, No, Mark: Picadelli Streets ot oe ge Union, Groceteria No. 2 St. Meeke White es nite Pub arket — Hewitt Rua bakes St. SRETT, WASH GROCETERIA STORES Co. Trade Mark, Copyrighted, U. S. Patent Office,