The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 29, 1912, Page 6

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4 OFFICERG OF MILITIA ARRESTED ant Richard Diech. After the battie this morning the ‘Oregon returned to this place, Maus ordered thelr return to Oakville. An indixnation meet was beld, and the upshot w the officers of the Seoond bat . talien refused to obey the order. | First and Third proceeded to : Later, after abandoning er Accoutrements, the Second re- t to Oakville, The incident brought to the attention of Maus, aud the arrests fol- _— —e — MORE PROTECTION J. H. Wallace, a member of the fmdustrial insurance commission, employes Is needed in factories. In an address before (he United Mine Workers, who are holding a con Vention in Labor Temple, he told ‘of the need in factories. Bince the industrial insurance commission bexan its work, 10 Months ago, there have been 9,000 ations for relief This, he says, indicates that there are not sufficient precautionary measures Seattie’s Leading Dentists The Regal Dental Offices, long established, and as your friends wil! tell you, thoroughly Teliable, are prepared to give You the very best dental service at half the price of any of our competitors. ‘This office ts undoubtedly the best equipped and most sanitary in Seatt ‘The ta and most approved | dental appliances have been in- everything is spotiessty clean, a staff of graduate regis- : dentists is in attendance to assure you a dental service Pthat under ordinary conditions fs always dreaded. Dr. Clark personally overgees every piece ‘of dental work turned out of this office, and for this reason wi afe able to give you a guaran- bsolutely bona fide. L. R. CLARK, Mgr. } 1405 3d Av., N. W. Cor. Union St. -NOTE-Bring this ad with you, in the Cit are the kind served here. That's a pretty strong state ment of don't see how better things to eat can be served by any one. We buy the best ma terials on the market and our chefs who prepare them course, but we are as skillful as can be ob tained. Our prices are most moderate. Lunch with us this week. —THE— Eniddale Cafeteria THIRD AND JAMES. ‘The 20th Cent The PANTAG Matinee Daily. ES Twice Nightly. WOLGAST-HIVERS Flebt Pietures SEVEN MERRY YOUNGSTERS 10¢ and We, are Major Ryland Scott, in Harry T. Williams, Captain ir L. Toose, Jr, and Lieuten:| tinks that greater protection “WI (SON READY ADOLF, DERE ISS A COLLECTOR OF AM, Dor ANTIQUE FURNITURE GONG DROUGH DER NEIGHBORHOOD, tar we ANY ANTIQUE FURNITURE ¢ NO —— ONLY A BROKEN CHIFFONIER, Bur ir 133 FRom GRANT RaBIDS, | | WITH. SPEECH OF ASEPTANGE (By United Press Leased SEA GIRT, N.J., July his speech of acceptance of | They All | Kind LABY, WiLL. |] You KmpLy Stip t Waven'T HAD ANY THING TO BAT iM Hdemocratic presidential nomination |completed, Gov Wilson }wild return here tontg Informa jtion received of what G } will say, is that his strongly progressive son favors tariff for revent sctentific tariff reduction and heavy taxation of luxuries. He will urge at there be no third, and second term for presidents Ing the trusts, Wilson fay | proposition that all trust officials avieted of violating the Sherman law shall be dealt with vn the basis jof pe. sonal guilt, His speech also }will favor direct primaries and a idrastic national corrupt practices act BIG GAIN ___ IN SHIPPING IN THIS PORT Shipping at the port of Seat- | tle is forging ahead with rapid | strides. The semi-annual re port of Port Warden Davies | shows remarkable gains in all branches of shipping. Domes | tic imports showed the biggest gains of anything. | Foreign imports for the first | six months were $12,181,457, a gain of $813,366 over the cor. Foreign exports were $11,228, | 364, a gain of $5,230,651. Do- | mestic imports were $15,442, | 054, a gain of $6725,941. Do — mestic exports were $21,023,355, | Woodrow IVE WORK OVT SIX PRS OF SHORES LOOKING | | @ gain of $3,959,591. TEN TABLES WORTH $50,000 (By United Prees Leased Wire) PALO ALTO, Cal, July 29.—Now that the Menlo student résort is/ closed by the adoption of the mile and a half liquor Jaw, the carved | table tops which contain so much | of the history of Stanford univer sity for the past 10 years have been removed today to Napa by Chas. Meyers, former proprietor of the! place. Owing to the traditions which have grown out of the cary ings and tbe songs concerning the | tables, a high vaine is placed on them, and an offer of $5,000 has = Seg ee oe been made for one of them by the) Low Angeles Stanford club The 10 G8 tables are insured for $50,000, INGS ON EXHIBITION HALIBUT IN AVIATION CLASS! INTHE BON MARCHE Halibut has joined the avia- tion class with the rest of the things we eat. A light catch and a strong demand are re sponsible for the altitudinous condition of the fishy food. A light catch was predicted early in the season and results thus far have jus' diction. T ported so fa Fishermen 4i2 to 5% cents a pound. by H. de Mareaus, and “Old Darby,” by Rosa Bonheur. “The Village painted by Herbert de Mareau in a blacksmith shop in Lyons, France, in 1896, with the brawny smith and |his workshop as a model. Stand. ling by his forge, amid a blazing light, is the blacksmith, the white RUN DOWN BY ie + vg {Pale features and silvery locks, his ¢ eagerness of L. Rice, a 19-| , , : yearold sewenger boy, to deliver | stout arms rosy in the leaping fire @ package of medicine to a sick | light. woman almost cost the life of Miss | handle of the bellows; the anvil and terday afternoon grouped about him, This black Young Rice was riding up Second | smith still lives and works in his av. on a motorcycle at a fast rate of shop in Lyons. speed. Miss Johnson was at the| The canvas is 7x8 feet, and por- |corner of Second and Pike, waiting trays every detall with a lifelike \for a car, She stepped from the distinctness, It bas traveled over 8 Rice approached, The 70,000 miles and has been seen and struck her, throwing her enjoyed by over 12,000,000 people. to the pavement, bruising her bad-|1t is now on exbibit in the drapery ly about the head and cutting her| department of the Bon Marche lip ‘Old Darby,” a painting by Rosa os eee | Bonheur, and for which an offer of ALL READY $60,000 by J. Plerpont Morgan has been refused, js on exhibit in the millinery department of the Bon FOR KIRMESS sr he. The picture shows an Ee old white horse, poking his bead With the girls putting the final! through the door of a broken-down touches to their costumes, and prac-| «table, It is one of two big ple ticing the steps of the dances on inves painted by Miss Bonheur, prob the side, with the seats selling Ike | .y1y the world’s most famous wom [Rotenkes on 2 froaty morning, every. an artist jody is waiting for, and talking) “oid Darby” ts 7x9 feet in size, about, the grand Kirmess of/ rn present owners refuse to self TAKE DOT SHOTGUN UND SHooT ir Fuce of VORMHOLES. “The Village Blacksmith,” | Blacksmith” was) A MOTORCYCLE |" of the flame reflecting on his) One mighty hand grasps the | Frieda Johnson, 157 Etruria st., yes-|other implements of his craft are) dances to open Wednesday night | The dress rehearval tonight will put the finigking touches on the work of six weeks. Every dance will be staged and costumed exact ly as it will be du ance, The Juvenile Bostonia is have re- turned from a most successful tour of the Hawaiian islands. it for leas than $65,000, preferring to hold it for exhibits such as the one now at the Bon Marche. | The horse in the picture was own ng the perform. |ed by @ fisherman near Hrvre, | badly injured. France, and was used to drag the nets from the sea, Miss Bonheur, always a lover of animals, saw it at work, and, both admiring and pity ing the animal, bought it. THE STAR—MONDAY, JULY 2 Speaking of Wormholes, Adolph Pulled {Pes ME A IDEA, Fall A COUSIN. OF PRESIDENT TAFT AND I'M ALITTLE HARD UP To DAY, CAN You “PEAU-TI-FUL ~ LADY, WON'T YOU HELP A ‘DOESN’T FEAR FOREST FIRES J. L. Bridges, chief warden of the Washington Forest Fire association, returned to Seattle last night, after | tour of the southern part of the tate. After investigating condi tions in the various timbered dis- | tricta, he reports that the state wae | never in better shape to enter the jong dry season. Mr. Bridges saye that farmere and loggers everywhere are co-op erating with rangers and fire war dens this year in an effort to keep the fire loss as small as possible. ‘TUBERCULOSIS CONVENTION Washington Society for the Pre vention and Relief of Tuberculosis meets in Tacoma tomorrow morn ing for it# annual convention first ses and will consist of addresses and lectures on the subject of tuberew losis. The business meeting will be in the afternoon. Some of the most |prominent men and women of the State who are interested and con cerned in the fight against the dis ease are present, HEAVIEST IMMIGRATION VANCOUVER, B. C., July ” An Ottawa dispatch to the World says | While the Canadian immigration this year is the heaviest on record, there is a smaller percent turned back than ever before, This is due to the inspection at ports of embarkation, where the steamship companies are exercising great care in the class of immigrants which they ship. = real La | w =< sz] =| e =z is 7] Nils Martin, 62, was found on the |track at the Great Northern docks He was apparently \ inj red by the backing of a switeh lengine into him, Martin was taken to the county hospital. No one saw [the accident, and it is thought he was lying on the track. TAM )|SAVE WOMEN The | a is open to the public, | e being | 1912. wHY— I Don'p KNOW —— PossiBLy — DOT 183 To AND CHILDREN FROM DROWNING Mrs. August Ovear, 1114 Denny Farrar st, and three children were | ternoon by Captain O. Olsen, mas ter of a government tugboat, and Arthur Clampett, a shingle weaver of Ballard. The two women, with their ebil shole bay, near Ballard, by a man named McGee, When they were tato Oleen saw the struggling wo men to the water, Getting a skiff, he and Clampett rowed out. pulled | all the party in the boat and rowed shore, The t women were un cons us when taken to shore. KANKAKEE., Ilis., July 29.-—-Four lpersons were added today to the The dead; Walter Webster, Mra Louls Berkhalter the ri j them and dragged them ender reaching the struggling trio. | | | SHOOTS MAN; CHICAGO, July 20 jealousy, Katherine Vacek lund Killed her fiance, then killed erself in the little home they were way, Mrs, Andrew B. Hegdahi, Cd bye wer Iocan The man, John Cizek, was fo jsaved from drowning yesterday at| with « bullet hole in his right ple and th ohed to her mouth areful preparations for the (ragedy dren, were being rowed acrows Shil DAMAGE SUITS | Damage suite re half way across the boat upset. Cap-| Colman dock accident of will be tried in the United States courts, and bis srt ftiat a éeicnees EXPLODING BOMB court, the company st is an Oregon cor |Girl Chats While Surgeons Work. WILLIAMSPORT, Pa, July 29.—/ attempt. ax For the firet time in the bie death list of the Kankakee river. |the © Paul Mastelio, Mies Wida Hematock | operation last week Th jwas Mine % The firat three were bathing injold, of Sup when the current caught | she declared |Berkhalter started to the reseue,|paintess. W? | but the whirlpools were too strong | sewing up the incision she curiously! The for him, and he went down before |examined her appendix, | will get well. JULIUS REDELSHEIMER CHEASTY’S HABERDASHERY SHAFER BROS. GAFFNEYS EASTERN OUTFITTING CO. SINGERMAN SONS HATTON OLIVER (CO. J. FRIEDMAN & SON JOHN LINDH CO. Trigger im Time, but Hastily AH, SO Yess-Yess, WE HAF A RAR] OLT CHEFFONIER Fuce mir VORM Hoves! Stacey 4 seni wi KILLS HERSELF! Because of 19, shot laly 98 the court re of Mre Datay «, charged with 1q| attempting to murder her husband na | Bugene Grace, with the alleged mo: w tive of securing bis Insurance 4 as tube at ont See 8 m started here today. Mrs t p a de She hed made ( nfident of acquittal Mrs aused ks last Grace telephoned to the police vuine tom be 25 FAMILIES ESCAPE FROM instead of the su oration jay rejoicing over their ® ingly miraculous eseape from death by on exploding bomb, following aa ¥ Of | destioy the t vaine was used | jive tion with an appe Part of a cot placed on a rear sire patient | escape and containing a aix re tha Geiger, 14 years oid infant, was demolished, but the ary. Di ¢ the ordeal! bany was not «ven awakened usti ha with the surge She the mother picked it from amon hat the operation was) «ie debris and joined ' og le the surgeons were | wor min the 4 | police found an fron be The girl) wedged aguimet a rear door to pre vent egress REGARDING TRADING ——STAMPS— RETAIL CLOTHIERS ASSOCIATION SEATTLE, WASH., July 26, 1912. The Seattle Daily Star, Seattle, Wash. Gentlemen: The following resolution was made and adopted at the regu- lar meeting of the Seattle Retail Clothiers Association: WHEREAS The history of the retail business in every large city has proved the Trading Stamp proposition to be one of the most insidious and pernicious schemes that hangs like a leech to the business to which it once attaches itself, WHEREAS It increases by far the expense of doing business for the retail establishment ; and WHEREAS It reduces the amount of money possible to spend in legitimate advertising ; and WHEREAS It gives the general public false standards by which they do their purchasing. THEREFORE, LET IT BE HEREBY RESOLVED that a committee of five representing the Seattle Retail Clothiers Association, call upon the large corporations selling advertising space in Seattle and ask them to eliminate and discourage all publicity in con- nection with said Trading Stamp propositions. Signed JULIUS REDELSHEIMER, President. Signed ARTHUR H. HUTCHINSON, Secretary. Approved July 25, 1912. ; ty W. B. HUTCHINSON CO. KING BROS. CO. W. K. TONKIN CO. VEITH-CAMMACK (CO. GUS BROWN WESTERMAN & SHERMER WILCOX CO. TAILORED READY (0. ED. BROOKS & CO. Words by Sthaefes Music by bi’ au THIS 18 The rirest Time 1 ever sew GLASS ATTACKED BY WORMS. 'WOMAN ON TRIAL FO MURDER OF HER HUSBAND had been shot With | at bis home they found Grace alon R ATTEMPTED (Wy Unlted Crone Leneed Wire) that he jammed, the trial locked in a bedroom from_ the down, and Grace was near reco charged his wife with shooting Mim to get his insurance in protesting her im there is yt money In the early morning of March 16) nocence, woman in the case FOR M’KINLEY (ay Onited Prese Leased Wire) NILES, Ohio., July 29.—The citizens of this city have raised today more than $35,000 toward a $100,000 fund for the erection of a memorial to Wm. McKin Niles is the birthplace of Yesterday at noon a six days campaign was started to raise 1 the entire sum needed. The ‘ $35,000 subscribed was the re- sult of the first day's work Acriving: The bull waist th for ed he ber b sepai ake 0 EXCU IS ANG nindeda self or excuse | This \ befere | ed with

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