The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 26, 1915, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

gee PAPRAAARAAAA Aaa SAFETY FIRST! A lot of the milk distributed'é in Seattle is perfectly safe. department, Main 8500, and get the information concerning the dairy you buy from. been pasteurize:! or comes from dairies where a tuberculin test of the cows has been made, will help a good deal. You can get the dairymen to comply with all necessary tests by letting them know that you are demanding the highest possible standard. sentiment is stronger than law. Read This, Then Swat Fly One fly will have more descendants one season than any man count lifetime, working cight hours a day Think of this when you see a fly crawl through a screen, and SWAT THE FLY! in could in a VOLUME 18 NO. SEATTLE, WASH., 50. A lot is not. Dr. MONDAY, APRIL 26, wy If you want fo be sure the milk YOU use is pure, call up the milk inspection McBride’s proposed ordinance to shut out of Seattle all milk except such as has 1915, The Seattle Star The Only Paper in Seattle That Dares to Print the News But that won't be in effect for over a month. Public IGHT EDITION. WEATHER FORECAST—Fair TIDVS AY SVATILE Heh, Low. } CENT ON THAINS ANU 1:9 9, mm, 184 fh BRO wom, HE Ht ONE CENT NhWs STANDS, Se 1b p.m, LB 809 pom, OA Et | Patrons of Renton Line May Lose Their Transfer Privilege | + COUNTY ROAD WORKERS STRIKE RAID CAMP OF M'HUGH; SMASH HISMACHINERY Two hundred men employed by Pat McHugh and Henry Brice, contractors building county roads be- tween Renton and Issaquah, have gone on strike. Threatened by an armed foreman, strike agitators late Sunday night retaliated by throwing machinery, tools and an engine at McHugh’s main camp into the waters of Cold creek. | For several weeks complaints have been made| to the county commissioners that men employed in| these camps were not getting a living wage. A series) of handbills was issued and personal complaints made) without success. Determined that drastic action was necessary, the| | WOMAN SAYS TEDDY SMILES “LIKE A GAT THAT HAS EATEN CANARY’ CALL SUDDEN HEARING ON RATE MATTER | Are the patrons of the Seattle, Renton & Southern in dang-r of losing the privilege of transfers? | With practically no warning of this situation, a |hearing has b-en set for Thursday in the Chamber of Commerce assembly room by the state public service commission to take up this question. Receiver Cal- |houn’s petition for such a hearing was filed only a |few days ago, and notice of it was given the corporation |counsel’s office only last Saturday. | FIVE HURT The haste with which the date pa EOE a bearing has been fixed is almost unprecedented in the history of the Many residents of the} fear some tentative | commission. | Rainier valley men at Brice’s camp, who say they have been working} bh cdiaiieaiiian seve tidastee aues-| under a sub-contractor for $1.15 a day, walked out) tion already has been made. cam Calhoun's petition followed his| - Sunday and visited all other ps in that vicinity in| dan cuales dlcoribada: citi an taabon the interest of bringing about a general strike: t Lyrocendinga tn the federal eourt | As a result the Central Labor!labor leaders declare, but the men| | Thurs n which he sought to en Counci! has called mass meetings | work from 10 to 14 houra daily } |Join t iblic service ec sgt for Monday night, to which the| Practically 18 miles of road work from ¢ ing a five-cent rate wi county commissioners have been are tied up, end there is no imme in the city limits invited, and the McHugh car diate chance of a settlement, it is} He now: seeks a modification :of|: Five pemosa were slightly in Preston is surrounded by a said | Ouriee + UNDERWOOD his original petition, asking the} jured Monday morning In two jit- plete line of union pickets Says They're |. W. W.'s | ABOVE, HOW THE SWORN ENEMIES LOOK IN ACTION. ARROW NO. 2 INDICATES THEODORE ROOSEVELT, FORMER PRES. |commission for # straight nickel) ney tus accidents, occurring at Hold Mass Meeting McHugh ¢ the men who| IDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, IN JUDGE ANDREWS’ COURTROOM AT SYRACUSE, N. Y, WHERE HE IS DEFENDANT IN A $50,000 | » city, but with 10] sce the same. thine,” Ge At Issaquah Sunday night alattecked bis camp and threw his| LIBEL SUIT BROUGHT BY WILLIAM BARNES, JR. OF ALBANY. BARNES IS INDICATED BY ARROW NO. 4. WILLIAM &. IVINS, | The transfer ie same Une, ne meeting of 500 citizens was held, machinery into the creek are I.| CHIEF COUNSEL FOR BARNES, IS SEEN ADORESSING THE JURY. BELOW 18 COL, ROOSEVELT ON THE STAND IN AN UNUSUAL | pri contested in. the/ ‘ifferent parts of town. They were A citizens’ committee, the chair-|W. W. agitators, Labo POSE }eourts for © years by the peo-| reported to the police at 11 o'clock, man of which is Hugh Lingry, pres-|deny this, asserting that they were] ot —1¢ : iene ple of the valle case was| C. J, Vaughn, fireman; Mrs, t of the Miners’ union, prom-|men whom McHugh and Brice had| A d dd N d Sh taken (6: the eube urt of the! A. Thayer, 4023 40th ave. S. and support to strikers, unless ook Be Strikers say they were lout. Now the battle is about to be|Jured when Thatcher attempted to G@emands for living wages are|100 per cent more for th Sa Ss Nixola Greele “Smith | reopened, the valleyites fear javoid hitting a team of horses nted tools and supplies Cc y drawing a coal wagon at Rainier baa Seattle meeting will be held in| of losing their § ave. and Plum st, He struck a City Hall park at $ o'cloc moe would have had to Analy and Describes Chief Figures in Roosevelt- ROBBERS GET AWAY lightpo smashing it in two, and y t. presided o” by Wt $ wrecking his ca eer night. = game te Se 3arnes Libel Case At Terry and Howell sts, a de- la ‘Shor ce presen 4 CHILDREN KILLED | xo trace ot iia zo ronbern whol diy Saha Homeland Men Work Long Hours BY NIXOLA GREELEY-SMITH jing deputy « | up the Gaines Henry me struck a jitney bus driven by A. J. The county commissioners have | SYRACUSE, N. Y., Apr If copy to market at Wes! ave. and|Huhn, 1504 Third ave. G. Wy been invited and will CRESWELL, Ore., Apri On he were not e Roc it of | Marion st. Saturday night, has been | Ahner and C. A. Abner, tent and with resolutions, asking th the way he from Sunday hoot t ‘ould test moving and wave Sometimes awning workers, 1907 16th ave, tracts with Brice and Mct were doand F. re actor In the ld as many os a dozen flags t robber. occurred at 9! were hurt. All injured were taken broken or some other ren of auto, was . ng Teddy, as olde his once Health Commissioner Mc | ovek k. Both men carried anto-| to city hospital. applied which will relieve condi A when the machine BY BOND P. GEDDES court aude n his quick TEDDY SEES THE! Bride's bill to insure Seattle | matics and t ve employes and . tions in the camps | a northbound Shasta] SYRACUSE, Apr ¥ “it | have realized why/ FLAGS WAVING HE SMILES! consumers against tubercular | customers in the shop were forced| Prof. Boothroyd puts kibosh on There is no pretense that an of the Southern Pacific! on the stand today in the he has obtained a grip on the Imag-| JOYFULLY milk was to be introduced in |to line up behind the counter. The |star gazing by spooning university eight-hour day is being observed noon the $50,000 libel suit sation of. the American people) He hae pushed the war off the| the city council Monday after- {men then scooped $90 from the students bars ‘em from astronom- See ———-—— | Barnes, jr. the former whi no other man held be- front pages of the newspapers of "00n jcash register and fled al laboratory put in one of the mo fore bir the United States and Since The Star published the first | — able days of the hearing He hax succeeded in making smiles at the story about the milk situation in Se-| ¢ was also the most | drama out of the dullest subject ot Barnes is beautifully attle ave been applications | anfavors to the colonel that has | earth—pollt His serge clothes have obvi, Made t th Commissioner Me yet been yught out, and he y When Boss Barnes speaks he ously just been press His gray| Bride e tub ulin tests of| | evident aina € hold his t . ates He ets his ¥ 4d waistcoat ia of the latest patte cows The applications were Attorney Barnum, suc Ackle out of one side of his th Tedd gray, almost made voluntarily by six dairies. CHICAGO, April 26.—B 4 that or e talk, on the oc Harnes’ lawye is: the: free of charge H , Apri —Be- and that it was now improbable the » of the I Sen. Platt his f 1 of the trial In return for this, the dairymen ‘ 3 { asband would ever return open-work 8 face. ) he f Under the lead of Chief Sanitary) ors can find lp Alaska, Mire. Gabriet Loetfier, ever in the mind of Mrs. Loef eee eet nee e gant {re | mouth as if It were sped by a gat-|and tan spats Also a black skull egeroagel ices or ca paddy Pema pon Inspector M. T. Stevens, & Vigorous) deaths in 1914,” said Dr. McBride, She refused to nm one yr ling gun. And as those words shot cap ves them defective, without ask anti-fly campaign] health commissioner, Monday, “and “sy agen eg pe ree for Han ee a 2 a quent consultations as to appoint ee het 8 in the politic He is smooth #haven, his man-| ing damages from the city c while half of the ame from aan Wiespeid Kaliher, ‘whe’ shot ffler, she told K fae pone rpenee OC HONNETSS' Gatety he » to see occupied ners are as polished as his shoes,| Dr. F. E. Smith, chief veterinary will be immedi: side the city, nevertheless the num: M Loeffler when she refused t six months in oton I admitted th at Platt by William Barnes—Teddy’s face} his English ts as tless as his|in the city Ploy, has been. -ap: ately started by) ber can be greatly reduced by pre- iy seiaeey idol: ta 'wend ge ag teal rag spa at blican (Wore a triumphant smile—the smile hundred-dollar suit pointed assistant state inspector by ? ith of. Venting the breeding of flies, Swat- Kellner took his own life. jot heard from, t rty and that he worked with |f the cat that has eaten the can.) Alt tag dowry ay a3 ay the stage bes me arte 2 ie A hv A take the city health of-| ting the fly helps, but to give it Ho . Loeffl ay not recover ed ary. lawyer In English comedic: OE TES Beatste Misteis fice chance to breed is still better.” Ee you don't t eld trom me withts nouncenfent ¢ Ii attention of Barnes’ attor Flags for Correspondents You «hould.-have seen Teddy Stabi the), While the health office is power, two years you may der your rend Mre ne was directed to show that| It !s ery dramatic spectacle when Mr. Ivins criticised bis Stabres, the! less to compel housewives to put up self free; I w be ¢ * Loeffi 1 made n elt was not alw auch a | this courtroom Jish by # igBest ng bat the sin most fruitful) screens in kitchens, especially, a re- told his young wife he morning a letter from Ala ene ‘ ywnen and ma-| Roosevelt's el t the pron HB—did not seem ad | breeding place for, West to that effect is made by Dr. veal ck keviwak: <Loetfier bad “atracie it solities. ax he appears now: Jury box-this may be a strategic) equate 1 Te was talking the contagion ear-| McBride and Inspector Stevens. ‘The two years passed and no word |r and was coming back to get that he worked hand in hand with | advantage—below are rows of ta: several persons at ones ae i The latter will hold a lecture at a came. Keliner came to the t ife the late F Platt, and later with | bles d by the newspaper men| Mr. Ivins wanted to know which NEW YORK, April 26.—John wil perforce requir:| plase to be designated later Ge Sian ing house wher Loeffler showed Kellner the Boss Barnes and began his attacks | and women ‘ of several per Teddy meant Bunny died at his home in Flat ed to have cement Anti-fly | nesday He will explain how to living. He wooed he He 4 out a revolver upon the latter or had! At each space ts a tiny American] by “he bush today screens will be required in every! make the anti-fly campaign as ef out that the time limit h the himself disagreed and fallen flag, and when you want an oblig Teddy scorned to answer him. | He died of Bright's disease. mudhole in the elty that the inspect- fective as possible. JTOM, HERE COMES’A FELLOW ON } lA WOTORCYCLE —MINBE HE & I THINK I KNOW WivT THE TROUBLE |r GWE ME A WRENCH L ALONG — 4 ts ral \1'4 SO GLAD 1 | | 100 HAPPENED, { ) A Good Investment for You MR. MERCHANT Is an Advertising Contract with The Star. This paper has increased its PAID circulation more than 22 per cent during the past 12 months and this increase has practically all been made right in the Seattle trade zone to people with whom it is possible for you to dog, business, if you*can interest them in what you have to sell. The Star’s rate$ today per 1,000 paid cir- culation are much lower than any other Seattle newspaper. .Call Main 9400 and representative of the advertising department will call on you at once, oa

Other pages from this issue: