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ving | THE GROTE-RANKIN CO British Destroyer OTTO F. KEGEL, President! TONDON, Aug. 9.—While thou sands of Irishmen waited to greet! him at Liverpool, Archbishop Man: | nix of Australia was landed ‘from & British destroyer today at Pen: | vance, @ watering place in Corn-| wall, according to official announce: | ment by the Government Press as | sociation, Mannix had been transferred | from the Baltic, on which he sailed from New York, to the destroyer, | BIG NEW SHOW TODAY es mance, while the liner resumed her | voyage to Liverpool, The destroyer | steamed into Mount’s bay, on| which Penzance 1 situated, at 4:15 | P. m, according to the announce | “ vf pHi 5 4 ment. No statement was made of f - Pa | 1 the prelate’s further movements, but | CA a a it was unofficially understood that a Cos he started for London, ' ‘Lf (og MYSTERY HOVERS AROUND TRANSFER | Mystery surrounded the elrewm- e ‘gtances of the archbishop's transfer e 1 ini ummer a e r@) from the Baltic to the destroyer, A Dublin dispatch to the Evening Telegraph said the transfer was ac complished by force, 1 Ever © the Baltic entered iif British waters, the Irish have been | on the alert, anxtous to give him| & rousing welcome because of his oy h, | Sinn Fein sympathies and his state: J menta made recently in America in ' 3 open advocacy of an Irish republl e - o/ ‘ Tipumands aasembied at Livervori|l! Conducted this week by the Grote-Rankin Co. is a jf to sheer aud fences sere duile | th cal dar, iW . around the docks as if t . A, . eli EF a regular feature of the store calendar. ae rumor that Mannix would be taken : . rs » joff at Fishguard, but the Baltic | We believe that every special group of Blankets enumerated : | "tee. pevatanaent et fret wa at here is offered considerably lower than prices that will prevail reveal where the archbishop was the coming season, Dace taken off the Baltic. For an hour ; 1] 9 Sukeen” ce eae ee It is our ambition to make the Mid-Summer Sale of Blankets as help- r rounded by destroyers and {tt ful as possible to the many families numbered among our patrons, and peen made. then within wane ve] We want to say in all earnestness that —— Irish soll, . " \ : | ON uy :. oO Tad q 200 at H. B. Kennedy ow is the best time to buy Blankets | Funeral Sunday GROUP NO. 1 ” GROUP NO. 4 | GROUP NO. Z Funeral services Sunday afternoon | for H. B. Kennedy, ploneer shipping Plaid Blankets White Blankets Cotton Fleece jad of Puget Sak whe died Pri | $6 75 Pair P. : ° e ° e ° ay, were attended by more than bi $9.95 ‘air BI. t |200. Th ney: cha lankets Here is a rousing, stirring picture that sweeps [I *..7". rm ts h poinen, woot a i i banked with flowers, Rev. 3.D-0.i1! finished Plaid Blankets Mary's "Winte Won $3.95 Pair you out of your humdrum life and carries you off ixiryuticartert ote | Sy eared “eolors—ex- Mixed’ Manet, "ith 68 by, 80.nch Cottam to sea and marvelous adventure aneeriation a and wr toe | ueny VANS veryveviceatie "sad. ‘Tan. -coareowael ‘ vived by. three, sisters Mra. Le B.| GROUP NO. 2 desirable. i Norton and Mrs. Kate R. Kuhn, of| |Seattle, and Mrs. Harriet Stryker, of | Wool-Mixed GROUP NO. 5 uo! . A nilece, Mra, hCartes | ° GR . : nwatrsn, teva at Blankets Plaid Blankets eter a ‘ a nephews, Paul 8. Norton and u M : Knothole Holds Dog |Makes Wife Pay His vo ee Ants Cut /[France Brings China |#t>ker. of seattic, also survive him} $9.00 Pair $12.25 Pair ay sp ae Prisoner Three Days| Fine for Hitting Her| Path Across France Girls as Servants|s, Pp. Motor Car Tips £6 by eee ee 66 by 80-inch Wool ne ark, Aug. 6o-Mienrens ug, 9 —JSust.os Bmaesiee = ° ixed Blankets in Pink, i i i MIDDLEBORO, Mass, Aug. 9—| LONDON, Aug. %.—A woman.) ¢? tiny rea unin introduced: ate | han hed to ions Penne one Over; Only One Hurt]! Bios Gray and Tan pocae yeeBe kk ints Cray Blarkenn : Alphonse Provost missed his dog for} whose husband had recently, been | Prance by vessels coming from the| to take the place of men killed inthe} MAR’ ILLE, Cal. | i three days, He found him wedged | fined $25 for assaulting her, com-| Argentine, are weeping like &| war, so in order to mect the domenticl Alte « mote, Toute pepe Block Plaids — unusual tions—unusual value, camp use—or as a mat- in a tree, his head sticking out of @|piained to the Willesden police | plague across the country, deatroy- | servant crisis, steps have been taken loperated between Maryavilie, Wood, value. tress _ protector — good knothole, “ Fido was released with| magistrate that her husband was|!9& everything that comes in thelr/to Import Chinese «iris, Statietion|innd and Knights Landing’ turmed GROUP NO. 6 ' value. fhe aid of an axe, and was none the| 1g the fine out of her house- path, | show that for every 160 places there/completely over when struck by a GROUP NO. 3 . | Re gy ay psig” oF j are only 10 servants. freight train last night in the Marys: |! All-Wool keeping money, so that she was hav-| An inn in a remote district of perachin edo AR OSS ‘th Pan pease iy, one nt ale a s | ing to pay for the agsault committed | Cambridgeshire, England, bears) Moro women carry thelr bables on| !!!0 Ti gene mga Gray Blankets GROUP NO. 9 “Gee, but Boldt's apple ple is|on her. The court could give her no| this inscription: “Five Miles from|thetr shoulders and let the young: ine Peat ce on the car was in-/i/ $9.50 Pair Blankets go0d?"—Adv. redress. | Anywhere—No Hurry.” Inter cling to thelr hate Wedd ie eee ok euka ; $14.50 Pair - Sheet Blankets oo 2 Reg 2 cccseere in me ~~ fianding, who suffered an injured [| 66 by 80-inch Gray $2.65 Pair back Sod won patnly out, Wool Mixed Blankets 70 by 80-inch fine | with Pink, Lavender and quality All-Wool Blank- Good weight Blankets” New Fare Works | Blue borders and edges ets in assorted plaid ef- in Gray and Tan colors; Out Well on Cars||| bound with silk. fects—a real value, size 54 by 74 inches, Results of the car fare increase | of the city street car lines showed a/ | 7 |marked improv t durt the | = — Es HW, Ifiret Wonk, declared’ D. Ww. pA ‘U’ P. f. to Hunt Sea-|, Te housing situation is so acute} Miss M. Young, champion | % e Ss u oO e ea son, superintendent of the Municipal 4 ro i in England that discarded busses| hammer thrower of England, he | I I Street Railway, but no actual de | Lions in New Launch |r being used for housekeeping by|thrown the elghtpound weight + termination of the results of the in-| wn. seer taunch, “The Scamper,” small families, distance of 36 feet 7 inches, crease will be made until after this e e week, Henderson declared Monday | built by C. W. Harris, professor of | - that the increased fare bad not cut | civil engineering at the University down the patronage. of Washington, was launched Sun- day afternoon in Lake Washington. Work on Sand Point With his family and J. G. Fletcher, 9 Ps vocational secretary at the univer Field Begins Soon | «ity, and c. J. Albrecht, curator 6f Plans for the construction of the | Vertebrate exhibits at the state mu |seum, Mr, Harris will leave the mid Sand Point flying field have been | " completed and werk will be started | 1!¢ of the week in the launch to hunt Immediately, Chairman Claude 2. |°%® Hons among the islands off the | Ramsey, of the board of county com. |0uth of the Quillayute river at La The Executive committee of the Seattle Caterers’ Association on Sat- |missioners, declared Monday. tis | PU&- expected the field will be ready for | urday evening passed the following resolution: * use within 20 days when the Joint | Enlistments Open | ; gs poe {ficcn ska senate’ uh the ‘yous Fiay to Colored Men) WHEREAS, the Seattle Caterers’ Association believes that the restau- |this city, The delights and comforts of army ‘ rt - life are now available to colored gen- rant owners and caterers:of Seattle can lend assistance in a worthy cause State Scribes to tlemen with leanings toward military sos . . . . : s fe. by patronizing only Americans in the disposal of the swill by-product of Meet in Yakima | "Since tne war the colored soldier | Beginning August 12, state editors has been practically barred from the restaurants: will meet at Yakima for three days | service, but now Capt, Linus J. Kirk- junder the auspices of the State Edi | hoff, district publicity officer, an- torial associations, A dance, ban-| nounces that the 24th and 25th in- IT IS NOW HEREBY RESOLVED that all members of the Associa- tee eae ee ons Oe le ince e amaga te | social program. their enlistment is solicited. tion pledge themselves to patronize only Americans in the disposal of "whe sap 6f Mie’ Bowl indidion |aicharge ma te ieee ate their swill; and to exert their utmost efforts to induce other restaura- teithe aon Ge ine AN teat and all will be required to pass the chewing gum of the United States. literacy test, teurs, not members of the Association, to adopt the same policy; PARTY STUFF IT IS FURTHER HEREBY RESOLVED that violation by any mem- (__ THIRD PARTY STUFF} -ber of the Association of the provisions of this resolution shall be cause : for expulsion from membership. For the purpose of carrying the provisions of the above resolution into effect, a committee consisting of J. R. Boldt, C. S. Colegrove and J. R. Schiffer was appointed. « . a K * ® Restaurateurs may learn the names of Americans engaged in the work ‘ Een ae of collecting swill by communicating with the Secretary of the Seattle iF ‘"¥g Make Your Reservations Early for Caterers’ Association, 1041 Pike Street. Phone Main 3359. : f ° iV) a September in Alpine Fairyland See forests flushed with crimsom — Alpine meadows aflame with gorgeous flowers in the Canadian Pacific Rockies Balmy days and crisp revitalizing nights—the wine-like air 4 j \ r) e e ‘y y Al watt that pastime—climbing, dancing, Seattle Caterers’ Association . aa Seber ne prev ,. JOHNNY 7ND BOB ARE Lake Louise and Banff Springs Hotel—the magic castles of | BOTH BOOSTING THE the mountains—invite you. THIRD PARTY ¢ Full information furnished on application to E. F. L. Sturdeo, General Agent, Passenger Dept.