The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 5, 1915, Page 8

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| ‘ellow Current From Abroad Melted Up Into Ameri- can Money GOLD RECORDS BROKEN NEW YORK, Nov Straight the heart of the city of Low a river of gold is running into “a huge gray pile of stone with bar windows at Nassau and Pine New York rites of thousands of men— on the blood-soaked battie-| of Evrope—are riding along siuggieh yellow current huge gray pile of stone is the States assay office. Since 1, four months ago, the stream flowed steadily into Its many pots. 115 Millions Received Im that time approximately $115, in the yellow metal has thru the office, representing, the most part, payment for |. shells, guns, cartridges. les, horses, uniforms and thousand and one things neces to war making om all quarters of the globe stream has been fed Into the meiting pots have gone in English sovereigns, in Japanese yea, $3,000, in French napoleons, and a many other milions {a bul roubles and other Emerge in Dull! Bricks emerged, and are still in common-looking, dull that are hurried to Philadel- where they are reborn into Sam's double eagles in the history of the as- office has so much gold passed tm four months,” said an offi- today, as he sat on a truckload Metal, the value of which was $2,000,000. “Since July 1 we Deen running almost to our capacity. Life for us is just round of melting, molding. thing and counting.” A Sign of Prosperity? ia no sign of a drouth that @ry up the yellow stream. The of the war wil! bring it in sigh for long after hostilities have the payments must continue come in. “If the possession of much gold | ¥8 & harbinger of nation-wide pros-| Parity, this country ts due for aa} period,” said the officias,| certaily never in the nation's has there been such a as in the Ist four months. | fsa id Juy | | | | * | | More than 20 breeders of Hol-| cattle met Thursday night at) Danquet in the Arctic club and! the Northwest Association! Fresian Breeders. E. A.| Was elected president and) Stimson secretary. | SUNDAY SCHOOL RALLY | ity Sunday schools wi a it rally at-the University EB. church, 42nd and Brooklyn Friday night. * Infants <2 Lovali 9 ORLICK’S + THE ORIGINAL -MALTED MILK. Food-Drink for all Ages milk, malted grain, in powder form. CONTINUED FROM PAGE 1 MYSTIC MEDIUM JUST PLAIN HOME WRECKER, GIRL DISCOVERS me the shivers his mouth twists constantly like & cold @taft of damp ait 1 was hurried inside the innermost corner of his “web,” a third room, somewhat artistically arrange with small reading table in the center and a small lamp on the reading table which its rays down on two chairs, 4rawn close together Demands Name of Man She Loves “Sit down,” he abruptly commanded of the fellow you love.” He handed me a slate. fietitious name. He sat down facing me in the other chair almost touched mine and he placed a pile of slate rested on both our knees Somewhere in the pile was the one with my three ques- tions. He juggled the pile until I am certain he saw what I had written, tho he pretended he hadn't “Your sister is well,” he I would have laughed had I not been too scared a faker. He could not read my mind, so I seore “Your husband was with friends yesterday afternoon,” went on the “psychic.” Then he leaned over toward me and, looking straight into my eyes, said, “Can I trust “Yes,” I said Just a Plain Home-Wrecker “T can fix it so you will be able to see for yourself that your husband is untrue,” he whispered There! I had my suspicions confirmed This man, this human spider, was, stripped of his mystery. the most ordinary sort of a home-wrecker Tf I were a husband and a man told told me, I would—I don't know what I Seattle would be too small him and of that I am afraid I almost gave myself away, I was so in- dignant “Your lover,” he continued you. You want to be free, d I nodded “You have been indiscreet with your lover! His veiled accusation almost blinded me fether was there. But I if “No!” I answered Accuses Girl Patron of Lying “You are lying to me, I see,” his face twisted up nto a sneer “You have children?” he I shook my head and he “You indeed fortunate mto a sneer, His presence is a “Write the name I hesitated a while, then wrote a His knees so they said He was was safe on that you he But sure what do em my wife should me. for “He is dearly in love with on't you?” “he declared. I wished my recovered no asked went Children on woman.” I, who love children, } him “Come back tomorrow, that your husband is u right here in this room. It He had taken a dollar cents, and kept it “You won't have to The next afternoon I walked Again the door insulting hand and held it so long I blushed shoulders and I shook self free and a newspaper Inside Overton's sanctum I sat again by the little table “Do you still want to be free?” he inquired I nodded Agrees to Get Her Grounds for Divorce “You get him, you know.” Yes, I knew “You are sure you won't be jealous Tt will take per haps 30 or 60 days to do it, but I will be able to show you ur husband is untrue. You still love this other fellow, th ctor?” I could hav myself t “Well, be careful,” ated will “and I said the spider I all be clear tho his fee for you ntrue will show will all to you one sitting ton he said into the He grasped He grasped me by hid face behind pay orrow,” I n ain “web.” man was m the y my can't get a divorce unless you the goods on struck f and I felt like c but I rying held get said the “spider,” and his lips curled intents, invalide wd growing children. | healthful than tea or coffee. yoo say “HORLIOK may get @ substitute. AMUSEMENTS Sun, Mon, Tues, Wed. Nev. 7. 8, 9, 10 | Nights, Ze to $1.50. SEATS NOW Continuous, 1 to 11 All This Week Only High-Ciass Vaudeville ‘Twice Daily. 2:20 and 6:20 EDDIE FOY AND THY SEVEN LITTLE Froys Davi ie Five A iroult, Mats., 2:30-—Nights, 7 and ® THE LION’S BRIDE WILLIAMS AND RANKIN World-Renowned Cornetiste. KELLY AND VIOLETTE 10¢ and 20¢. EMPRESS MAHATMA The Woman of Mystery T-—GLORIOUS = ACTS—7 7:80, 9110 Phone Main 223, DON’T FAIL TO SEE The German Battlefield Pictures Presented by the @hicago Tribune Only Two More Days Today a All Seats 26¢ MOORE THEATRE Continuous Performance, 1 to 11 p. m. get mixed up yourself while again, “that you don't watching your husband.” But how was he going to prove my husband untrue, granted that I had a husband? I wanted to find out, I coald warn f show the devilish intrigue of this home-wrecker Hr told me he had be one he turned away 75 wo from his door, day any he | ut of that 75 are lucky women that were turned away You must keep coming back every few days,” said the “spider.” “You must be ready when the time comes to catch your husband. I will let you know where he is and you can go there and catch him in a room with another woman. I will get the woman who can do such things.” There! I had it. He would get the woman I had the story of the “spider and the fly.” I sincerely trust that Prosecutor Lundin will look this “spider.” WORKER'S A FOOL IF HE CAN'T GET A SHARE OF WAR PROFITS —Machinists’ Head. , otk women and week ) see been so day last 1 [that en unable } them that How The homes could ave wrecked It was out not over- By MAX HAYES | gradually What part of the war spoils be long to labor? Is labor justified tn vantage” of the greedy munitions manufacturers and manding better working conditions and better pay while they are piling up enormous profits? The workers would be fools if they didn’t,” says General President Johnston of the machinists And just what other national labor leaders think of the munitions factory situation in this country now since the start of the war promises to be expressed in bold language at tion in San F n Feders spread westward, a hue went up that German sym were the and cry pathizers trouble. instigating “taking ad American de | There is reason to believe that some zealous partisans of the Fath erland did endeavor to incite the men who manufactured or handled Ammunition to quit work, and thus cripple the allies to a limited ex tent It was but natural that pro-Ger. mans should do so But when this question comes on the floor of the convention it will be shown that, while Am- bassador Dumba and others may have attempted to meddie in the business of manufacturing war supplies, the organized American working man never did, and dorsn't now, depend upon any outside stance to annex a very modest share of the boundless prosperity that has been heaped upon Amer. ican manufacturers through the fortunes (or rather misfortunes) of war General the lead among enforce the the conve the Americ next week At the outset big movement inthe war munitions fac |taries in Connecticut, and which has of the strike President machinists Johnston of who have taken the da and ne will have mightily nteresting this question officially “The workers would be fools if they did not take advantage of the present situation to im- nd Tomorrow cure thing when floor ome aa the to comes on |WATER POWER | His eyes are the kind that dig deep, and} .|the history of the effort to protect we're}! workers to| 4405 Third Ave, STAR—FRIDAY, NOV. 5, 1915. PAGE 8. FIGHT TO OPEN Stone-Webster and Other Cor- porations Send Lobbyists to Washington EXPECT SEATTLE MAN BY GILSON GARONER WASHIN ‘ON Nov hy biggest anticonservation fight The in and preserve the nation's public re sources is predicted for the coming sension of congress. The great water power Interests Stone- Webster, General Hlectric, Pacific Gas and Electric and all thelr allied Interests-——have started the “ble drive” to get past congross legialation that will permit them to complete the acquisition and eventual monopolization of the na tion's valuable water power sites. The last big attempted break down of the conservation policy cul minate the Hallinger Pinchot contre Following that, efforts were made by the water power tn terests to dominate the National Conservation Congress Joker Efforts 0: J Thru the efforts of Gifford Pin chot, James R, Garfield and Walter |L. Pisher these efforts were defeat je and the conservation congress went on record in favor of the re {tention of the title in the federal government of power sites fn -na tonal forests and on the public do- matn. Efforts were made in the Inet congress to joker the Adamson gen eral dam act, but the legislation was defeated The water power lobby, however, was successful in preventing the passage of the Ferris water power bill, backed by Secretary of the In terior Lane, and this legislation must come up again this winter, Lebbylats Gathering Now the water power lobby ts gathering for the battle. An im. posing array of legal talent wil! confront congress when it con venes. Harry J. Plerce of Seattle, for merly connected with the General Electric interests of New York, Is among the power lobbyists who ts expected to be active. He wan a prime mover in the Portland water |power conference, recently held at Portland, Or., to organize opposition to conservation legislation. He has written a book called “Looking Squarely at the Water Power Prob. lem,” addressed to members of con gress, publicists, correspondents, fete, and a pamphlet called “Power Legislation and Federal Control,” which has been matied broadcast same. prove their lot, “If | had the power | would not hesitate a moment to strike every shop and mill in the country and force the owners to grant the eight-hour day and more wages, nro matter how much they might eneer and whine about German interfer. ence.” Thin People Can Increase Weight Thin men and wome tke to tn TELEPHONE TAXES Editor The Star to you, an ad of the telephone company Kindiy note the ad, which says Every fell Telephone Is a Long- Distance Station.’ This would in- jude nickel phones in main halls lof apartment and rooming how You can #tep into any hall where there is a nickel phone without be- ing detected by the subscriber, call for your number for Tacoma or ny other city covered by the two umber system, and you won't have sito pay for the call. But the tele phone company won't lose. It will collect it from the subscriber saiiet ith every © at the end of the month, tho he ke Then welkh andimay not know who it was that jure again. It lent « question of/ used the phone. The telephone com fitnds ‘say and think, The ‘scales |DAny refuses to even try to collect and the tape measure will tel) theirlat the other end Sean i many thin men and! In other worda, they want their can pacily 44 subscribers. to act as agents for ai-|the pleasure of it, and then pay for newlall the calls at the end of the her they knew any certain calls month, w jthing about What do you call ft, Some syatet viahinent fac (Mr. Editor? nd b prepare it in| The company is getting two similated form which the|prices for ite phones anyway. I Ipay them not less than $4.50 per “|month, and then have to spend 10 itlor 16 cents downtown each day be sides. Not counting any long-dis tance business, they strike me up tune of $7 or $8 a month bacrtber happens to be dow ltown and wants to phone, he hasn't Pharmacy Teading drug-|got time to take a jitney home to «ists In this vicinity sell it in large/do it, and he'd be out the jitney onee-—40 tablets so 8 PECmaee—08 ljust the came, wey pack, aa found in each large| 1 don't think there is a town in jthe United States with a higher telephone rate than in Seattle DON CAMPBELL from five to elaht t of iteelf make fat. your food i | rien . PRO BONO GETS HIS Editor The Star In Monday's Star, “Pro Bono” gives the prohi bitionists a good punch “below the belt” in condemning such fool laws to be enforced against the liberties of the people by depriving them of their usual allowance of hooch, dope, “snow The silly “prohis” sonal liberty NOTHING SA VED— NOTHING HAVE DR. L. R. CLARK The Best Equipped — the Most Up-to-Date Dental Office in the Northwest A |sand dollars without first | saving ten. staff of expert dentists, every of whom Is @ graduate and re istered man—a graduate of the b olleges, and every passed the examination of ental board, and every one i hin certificate from atate dental board hanging right wall front of hin dental day and you will soon have the ten. I nterest % UNION SAVINGS & TRUST CO. OF SEATTLE one of er of th » lowent pric are some of the things we ou at thin office. Don't you we are entitled to your dental ou a thorough ex eatimate free of ith no obligation on your Regal Dental . it 8 Offices Capital and Surplus $800,000 lark, Mam wet vhira | JAMES D. HOGE, President N, 8. SOLNER, Vice President and Trust Officer r. | | and USE STAR WANT ADS FOR RESULTS HOGE BUILDING In the Heart of the Financial Oletrict Perfect Fit Absolutely Guaranteed Bince writing |Hevably ridiculous reason that it is the other day, {| ran across|for the good of mankind | The subscriber has to make good! !* or not.| armed people in Dublin, Ireland, no! or any other poifon.| not a cause, of the poor being back have the gall to| ridden want to prevent us lovers of “per to get these things/fighting, if any | You can’t save a thou-| uni | | | A FORTY-FIVE Dollar Suit, Tail- ored to Order by Louis Gross, for Nearly 1,000 Patterns to. Select From From a stock of goods big enough to suit any taste—serges, cheviots, tweeds and cassimeres in the newest weaves and colors— you may select any pattern worth up to $45, and I will make you a perfect-fitting suit for $25. From the imported materials—the finest woolens that the world produces—you may have your unrestricted choice of patterns worth $60 and $65 for $30. The same care and exactitude in cutting and fitting, same lin- ings and. trimmings and the same careful tailoring that has always characterized Gross garments. OVERCOATS at Proportionate Reductions "rice is reduced, quality remains the LOUIS GROSS Custom Tailor 919 First Ave. RAINIER-GRAND HOTEL BLOCK in our systems § for the unbe-|space in advocating the things that ¢ of real benefit to the people at! large j Being a physician, I would |naturally notice the things that tend |mostly to the health. Indeed, this! Editor The Star: I me there is|feature you have not neglected,} ® great e#tir about rural credits\however. There is one thing, it thruout the state at present, and alseems to me, could be beneficially great many plans are submitted for exploited, or the people's attention the benefit of the “poor farmer.”|should be called to it, and that is If the farmers are not careful, con-/the chances for infection and con- Kress will pass a rural credit law)tagion through the oublic tele that will have the biggest Joker of] phone. all proposed. I have a very simple) Almost every telephone in use,! plan to submit to congre 1 be-| which you will notice, the speaking! Heve ft will benefit both farmer,) part is covered with spots, These laborer and all producers. Here it spots are the spittle and moiet | breath thrown out when one is talle Let congress amend the postal | ing savings law so ax to let a person! These dried spots contain various} deposit any amount of money ati kinds of germs that are inhaled) any time, the government paying by the ones using the phones. Now,| 2 per cent interest. Then let the while I do not think it possible to, postal bankmaster loan Mr. Farmer,| entirely evade the dangor, I do be-| on real estate, not to exceed one-|iieve it can be greatly lessened by quent cleaning and disinfect- PRO BONO HOOCH see A RURAL CREDIT PLAN half of the land value, exacting not! fre: to exceed 3 per cent Interest, the| ing, loans to be for periods of five and) It is merely my de: ten years, W. W. McDUGLE, lyour attention to thts, ry esas Sedro-Woolley that you give it some publicity, tg W. C. oRIER, 405 Lyon Bidg. TAFT TAKES ’NOTHER CRACK AT COLONEL | A PARALLEL? Editor The Star While reading in The Star, a few days ago, of the execution of Mrs. Cavell and the outery raised in England by the news, it seemed strange to me that) there Was no protest against the firing, by Mritish soldiers, on un NEW YORK, Nov. Prof. W. H. Taft, former president, has taken another crack at his former pal and associate, ex-President Roose- last year, when three were killed, and one of them a woman. W. CASEY, Yesler see DIFFERS WITH QUICK Editor The Star: 1 want to re- spectfully criticise the attitude that | \ pré-military | your paper seems to have adopted. 1 also want to take! issue with Mr. Herbert Quick, who| says a million men are needed to} defend the United States | In a past article Mr, Quick maid} the rich would do anything for the poor except get off their backs. From this one would assume he had a good economic understanding, and that militarism is a result, and| Ultimately, the poor must do the| is done. Every| year sees millions unemployed in|} America, Seventy-five per cent of] the population do not own as much, as their own homes. And we have! 400,000 whose incomes, on the oth-| er hand, are large enough to come jer the income tax | All reforms, progress and ad vancement are accomplished dur ing times of peace. In the struggle) of the poor to buck the rich off] This Modern Method of El Bring in your dollar to-|their backs, they can best obtain! results without militarism, aration leads to war. War Is a cancer that eats out the vitals of the people who indulge in it—the do the fighting. Ev. ery increase in armament brings} us closer to the position of the citi-| zenry of other nations who are military-ridden Sherman — was} right | FRANK FEHR, | oe | AGAINST TAXING CHURCHES) Editor The Star: Those writers} who advocate taxing religion sure-| ly are overlooking the good religion is doing and the ald rend teaching the mas#es to resp honor authority Hl To tax teligion would greatly re-| duce the means of getting the bless-| ings of Christianity to the benight-| ed, thereby aiding infidels, atheists and rebels in destroying the Chris tian civilization. ; VATIVE CHRISTIAN Prep-| | Kverybody admires the atr red-blooded man, He is the that makes his mark in the the man who succeeds where stat big things-—the successful Nin all the walks of life—-and you will pee men of strength and power men who have confidence in ‘them: | pelves and who are fairly bubbling over with energy and enthusiasm poor 8 . Shelton. Men who suffer in any way ought | to know by this time that drugs can- | hot help them. All that medteine can ae cane te to atimulate—-to bor from your reserve force, and when that is used up you are worse oft than ever There's onl to vital eneray, and is by | ting life ‘into nerves. Every function of the human body te koverned by the nerves. Tf an organ fs weak, it lem sign that the nerves | 1 it lack power, and this is nothing more than one way restore Dur that put new | | | Blectra-Vita white TELEPHONE GERMS | Editor ‘The Star 1 have noticed in your paper that you are always giving valuable restoring health and vim. tricity tt to body |[ FREE BOOK velt, in a speech here last night. Roosevelt's “broadening of execu- tive powers” while in the White House, said Taft, was “an unsafe doctrine. ‘ + ADDED >a OED HEAD STUFFED FROM CATARRH OR A COLD @ Says Cream Applied in Nos- ¢ trils Opens Air Passages ‘ Right Up. PPE ODPPDEDD $969 O00 Instant relief—no waiting. Your clogged nostrils open right up; the air passages of your head clear and you can breathe freely. No more hawking, snuffing, blowing, head- ache, dryness. No struggling for breath at night; your cold or catarrh ppears. Get a small bottle of Ely’s Cream Balm from your druggist now. Ap- ply a little of this fragrant, anti- septic, healing cream in your nos- trils. It penetrates through every air passage of the head, soothes the inflamed or swollen mucous membrane and relief comes in- stantly. It's just fine. Don't stay stuffed- up with a cold or nasty catarrh. ONLY TWO DAYS MORE CARMEN A COMPARISON INVITED CLEMMER Phetoplay Mouse Cures Without Drugs lectric Treatment Is Curing Men and Women After Doctors and Drugs Fail. Into aleor the nerves for hours, while infusing them with new energy and building up the entire system to A strong, healthy condition, It re. news the spirit of ambition and hustle, It makes strong, healthy men [out of slow-going, discouraged weak- drives tt trouble, lumbago, kid If you have a pain it If you have stomach rheumatiam, weakness, ney or liver compl of nerve force, store you to pert lings. Call and teat Blectra- Vita or write for our be 90-page book, white! treatment contains pictures of well-bullt, robust men and women, showing how Blec tea-Vita is applt {explains many things you should know Cons free. Office hours, to The El m 206 Kmpress Theatre Bldg. eoond Ave, Cor. Spring St, Seattie, Wash, lectra-Vita Co. Derr. 4

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