The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 2, 1916, Page 6

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{PAID ADVERTISEMENT) Mabt of der and truth upen nie! ~ | offictal neh gets are EMEA | ceainet the inte the people \ and in the ape tereat of the the Mulla Heattie Employers Managers Blec Commerce ant nee we will nti the at mit ¢ "| Declares Mayor Reproved of an Immoral Resort, Things Griffiths Says About Gill “He isa type of political comedian sometimes met with in a big olty, In politics, he is @ fraud,” “As chief of police, | found that the Influence of the may- ore office came down like a damper upon the efforts of t ® Buffalo, ving them @ ity an a return for nd favor Rre WAN GLLDOES HOT WANT» | BROWN Sah taithtully Ry EDWIN J. BROWN ‘extension of Division A of|| department to keep the city ee car line into Ballard, and Nominee for the City Council the connecting of Diviston A July 20, 1914, @ bawdy with Divtaton knows that Brown w Adie a debt of 817 house was entered under a war- rant and ral arrests made. Within an hour the mayor rush Mr, Fitzgerald now says that he) Gould not debate his record with | try to the me at Ballard last Tuesday night because he had engagements at a» ed into my office, white with ether plac 1 have rented the it knows that he te ob rage and cursing, He demand. Princess Theatre in Ballard for ate tamerald’s elect o- |] ed that | dismise the officers next Monday night and | cha are fearful of | who had followed my orders and obeyed the law, | told him him to appear and debate the same to shut up.” question: “Resolved That Fitzger- ald Has Not Made Good In the City | Council and Should Not Be Re./°'\y elected. Brown will stop! > Company trom the Following publication a job as t Mr. Gil! knows that under our efty| HI Ot! Ar last Monday In the Post-Intel- er the council! has the| tall can } ligencer of a long statement by to impeach him If he will yjand as a sc . Mayor Gill, Austin E. Grif. - Te age Ba ot). gM oy Bagg Big fithe submitted a letter to the Vides as follows ye same paper for publication In Seo. 12, Article V. REMOVAL OF | reply. The P.1. did not pub- MAYOR FROM OFFICE: THE " fish it FOR MAY RE REMOVED FROM | " ‘ At the meeting of the Tax Oo eS RR a att | the seven payers’ league, the Federated “a TERM OF AL r FOR] legistature ‘ Improvement clubs, and the POMMISSION OF Li pows that j a LCR cae ataht: Legisiative Fede n held at on ati and that. Hr a| the Good Eats cafeteria Wed. rox NOTICE THEREOF, " om] nmesday noon, Griffiths read the ER WITH A COPY OF letter. ARGES AGAINST HIM. GIVE It gives an Insight Into the DAYS| AND A TO HIM AT LEAST FIVE BEFORE THE HEARING, OPPORTUNITY RE PERSON 4 Gill administration affairs. . The Star publishes It here with: of police : P Seattle, Feb, 28, 1916 4 Oi knows that Broww k To the Post-Intelligencer: I have 4 oe tee oe eae eho pay the|read the mayor's letter in your taxes, instead of & the eclty's|maper today, It was written for ob him by a good ascribe. The mayor is again asking election on “sym POSE THE x: iT z a pathy.” fear rr wor iD HAVE r This ts his main polftical stock in ING ANY OTF OFF ke trade. He wants or “vindica Mr. Gill knows that Dr. Fdwin J.) tion egy Bil a ees | Unlike the mayor, I have no a ctag a Wings fon ors lapology to make. I am known tn trained doe our city and state from youth to ‘ Mr. Gilt Knows that Dr. ood, Hin threats pass m has known him 1 an open field for the mayor's office. My brte omy te morality, | public ownership |__, __ Tells His Platform denefictaries are. @ representative he always has when In public office, and Gil Knows that Dr. Brown knows what | he Is doing, and will put the search WILSON IS PRAISED|BANDIT SUSPECTS ‘Stay Vigorous LONDON, March 3.—*Plucky” WON'T TELL DETAILS, at Seventy and “courageous” were the terms the London newspapers today ap-| LOS ANGELES, “March 2 to President Wilson's position [of the 16 bandit suspects arrested | Bis clash with congress over the |!n the sudden police activity here| and » Each Kellogg's Vitality In Men and Women When Life's Sun German situation. |remained firm today in prote Begins to Set tions of Innocence. Groceteria Stores Co. | Third-degree methods availed ce-| 50c BOX FREE 4 tectives nothing. The probe seem-| you ARM, not bps oe te . Opens Two More Stores insiy \s at m standstill until the be |Portiand, Or. police telegraph in-\o be formation which has been request-|t ed by Chief Snively Detectives say some of the pris-/ mers have knowledge of the Culver City bank robbery and the murder and women nes,” and not slow Kelloge’s Sanitone Wa ur Vital energy aglow March 9 the Groveterta Stores Co, will open Groceterta 4, at $419 Ballard ave. and March 16/ Store No. 5, at 7213 Woodlawn ave., im the Green Lake district. Mr. Monson, president and gen-|°f. Capt. Jack Henddrickson yaad manzger, reports business on increase dafly and says that Se-| } ttle peopie are berinaise *o rea’ BOLO CLUB FOR GILL: fze that the groceteria plan means/| es saving on all foodstuffs. | The Bolo club, polities! or| ganization composed of a small fac 0000066604004 /tlon of the Spanish-American ® | erans living in Seattle, Wedne Makes Stubborn Coughs ¢ | endorsed Hi Gill for mayor, clair Vanish in a Hurry = @ | ing !t was due him because Griffith» Z | voted against an ordinance—t Geea Cor S| dentally the only one of its k by 34 man > in the United States—forbidding i @ any banner, of any lodge or polit! foal party to be paraded on the 2299904 04090240045 ° streets, except a U. 8. flag. “TRAPS SONG BIRDS I'm the Eaual tn Nerve-Force and Power to Any of the Mising Generation, neaw and peeviah from any Spin x and make {t Into a pint or! cough yrup, and watch that cough| \iteag Cinelli i = rected aa, and strengthen your petered Pour the 2% ounces of Pinex (59| Fauntleroy Park, was fined $50) wr ambition ji ae gents worth) Into # b and costs in J vi . n whe ige Gordon's Hii the bottle with n . and body TY e tota imbedded tar placed on ; Birds picking h aa at the kernels # & the jaws and Sea of Helicase Banat were killed instant 1 eter co FRANK WANTS RELIEF ary, hoarre or tight « the Inflamed membra f 4 Be ot pricy LOS ANGELES rch 2.—F Po bronchial tur Chance, bell player, had = petition B persistent tonne « seg rigltrr dh hand dled ads sons remedy for bron 4 . z a off coughs, bronchial a de relief from floods which whooping cor és his Gle Retest Pinex is a tal and highly con- groves, Relief was promised eentrated con f menuine Nor way pine extract hin gua " a Which is so healing to the mem.| According to the census, Pennay! arecy ) had 7,000 womer ag Ritausste’ for ig the last E our druggist for inex," and do not a A guar isfaction ‘goes or money p Pinex Co, I - COAL USERS—THIS MEANS MONEY IN YOUR POCKET The people « on ACME just en £0 OUTFITTING CO COR. THIRD & UNIVERSITY DRESSES MEN~WOMEN - YP Wet YOUR CREDIT IS 0.K. ACME Coal t nd double hand » atthe m A ‘ to me « t } 5 arat the jump fr t i r yard Seattle This separ If you are My | With col In a ton of Acme Run of 40%, and pea of Mine for $ In cas the coa (much less tt less dirt to be hand This is a gen need, You'll like t tomer, I tL Zane for Dandnth | ait — O. M. LATIMER, } ka The Acme al ¢ Elliott 1400 id ne for it Is p and alvo Fremont and Pallard Yard ' Main 6718 mo, Cleveland, All Officers Who Participated in the Arrests; of His Difficulties as Police Chief Under Mayor +| directly STAR—THURSDAY, MARCI 2, ‘GRIFFITHS TELLS OF | HIS JOBUNDER HIGILL#| You Cannot Stop the Wheels of Progress Him for Arresting Inmates and Demanded That He Fire Tells morality. On this point, in my declaration, IT said |, “This year brings a new order of things. A deadly blow to decent eltizenship would be struck if the epoch making liquor law were not impartially enforced in the largent jelty of the state | “Iam bappy to belleve that for mer saloon men themaelves will, as | Kood cittzéns, ald law enforcement ‘© enforce the law and ordin | ances dealing With vice and erime, }and to make life and limb safer jand better for young and old, rich }and poor alike, I pledge myself.” Mr, Gill violently protested the only Ismue was “taxes,” Thin tn the teeth of the fact that we always pay the highest taxes when he ts jin office. Tells Of Police Experience | The greatest of these ts public | | | | Mr. Gil! brought the senrlet tssub with him. He cannot help it When I took the chiefs place I felt I did with everything to lone and nothing to gain. I did #0 to settle the passions that rent the city over the election of Mr, Gil I believe I succeeded. I kept the office longer than Mr, Gill knew I intended to. One of his last argu s to met me to take the office was: “Griffiths, you can resign any time you like H | never had voted for or sup ported Mr, Gill for any office | But I had no vindictive feeling | toward him. | have fone now Hie infirmities and assocla tlons make him what he Ie. He is a type of political com- edian sometimes met with In a big city. IN POLITICS, FRAUD T took the office willing to grant nod faith tn professions » doubt he was more or less in good faith | | HE IB A ht Beginning March 1914, sev eral days after | took office, a sorien of incident and * showed me that the mayor utterances and wishes did not bh One oF two Incidents to show what I mean Damper on Department I soon found that directly or tn the Influence of the may ors office came down like a dam the willingness and « very efficient officers « per 4 men police department to keep y normal respect to many things, 1 | was to | mayor,” the chief was.” As to gambling and soctal clubs, janitone Wafers Revive! ns to cates and dancing, liquor pell-| they were “friends of the and that he was willing “If jing, certain new games of chance, | 1 was told the same. | On July 20, _|bawdy house was entered junder a warrant and "| eral arrests made. |der observation from May 25th. e Within an hour after,| jthe mayor rushed into my loffice, white with rage and cursing. | He demanded | dismiss the officers, two sergeants included, who had follow- jed my orders and “obeyed ag law.” 1 told him to “shut up” }—that he could not “talk |to me like that"—that “if} anyone goes, it will be me.’ He immediately left. By his influence, three men reinstated in the d fon, it was showing | evading civil service Mayor Overrides H we 1914, a} Sev-} | | | This house had been un-|@ They ought to have come back tn} j the department tn the | 1 had personally nothing aga | the | wever, one of them, !f I recall I had cause afterwards to * chief ®an do well when t mayor says one thing and ts und stood to mean another, I sough to conduct the department with fairness towards all persons } It was hard wledding. PAGE ¢ 1916. 7 With only a brief period of practice the operator can’ set type with a speed that is truly astounding— almost beyond conception The machine takes up very little space, the meas- urements being as follows: Base, 1334 inches wide by 24 inches front to back; height, 23 inches. The entire weight will probably not exceed 100 pounds. The operator presses a key just as in typewriting. The compressed air hits the plunger which connects with the escapement and lets out one type correspond- ing with the key pressed. The exhaust air then con- nects with the valve in the shuttle cylinder and Note its extreme simplicity. There is nothing complicated about it. Any boy or girl can operate it without the slightest knowl- edge of machinery. No long years of study and appren- ticeship are required. It is just as easy to run as a type- writer. All the operator has to do is to press the keys. Com- pressed air does the rest. The type is carried to its proper place in the galley, which is constructed so as to serve as a chase also. Each piece of type is set where it belongs in far less time than the operator could set it by hand. ‘This means an enormous saving of time, and that fact alone is an argu- ment in favor of universal installation. The rgachine will earn its cost in a very short time. forces the shuttle to carry the type to the end of the line of formation. A second shuttle pushes the type down into the galley while the first is bringing an- other type over. All is done as quickly as the wink of an eye. When the line is full, the operator presses the proper key and the entire line is moved out of the line of formation which is thus cleared for the next line of type. The keyboard is simple, having only 46 keys for letters and characters, two for shifting from capitals to lower case and back again, and one for galley shift. The Market—Its Unlimited Scope It Ie Impossible to eatimate with any fair degree of ac- curacy the demand for Wilson Typesetters that exists right now apd which will not be exhausted for years to come, The Wilson Typesetter hae the field entirely to itself. In the cireular letter shops every bit of type must be eet by hand. There is ae yet no machine available for that purpose. For the job printing plants, especially the country newspaper offices, there is no typesetting mchine that gives entire satisfaction or le within the means of the owner. In thousands and thousands of these shops type ts stil! being eet by hand, not only because the machines used by the larger concerns are too expensive in their first cost, but because of the high cost of operation The Wilson Typesetter overcomes the objections that prevent the universal use of typecasting and other typesetting machines, It Is almple and cheap in operation and the Initial cost Is exceedingly low. Through persistent study Mr, Wilson became designer of special machinery and tools, a line of work which he followed for several years. Since the age of twenty-five Mr. Wilson has occupied some very Import positions. Taking as a criterion Mr, Wilson's past successes and the experience of hie associates, the Investor can feel reasonably To a Man With an We have shown you the practicability of the Wilson Type- setters and the enormous ficid that Is open to them—actually Impatient to receive the We have shown you In a small way the profit that can be expected from the sales. Now we offer you the opportunity you have perhaps often longed for—an opportunity that will not linger long for you to resolve in your mind and ponder over. We have placed within your reach and within your means an Investment that speaks for itself. A smatl sum of additional capital Is re- quired to perfect the machines and to place them on the market. And those who Invest now, when the business Is in Ite Infancy, will realize the greatest returns for their money. For these reasons the Wilson Typesetters have a field that is gigantic in scope and, what is equally important, it Is virgin territory—never before touched by a similar enterprise. These machines have absolutely no competitors. Any printer can conscientiously tell you that this is a positive fact. Leaving out of consideration, for the moment, the thou- sande of circular letter offices which would equip themselves with Wilson Typesetters as rapidly as they could be built, and turning to the printing industry, we find that there are about 25,000 Job printers and approximately 25,000 newspaper pub- lishers without Linotypes. Almost every one of these could and would install at least one Ilson Typesetter because of its cheapn id adapt- ability to thelr requirements. In thie field alone, then, there would be a demand for upwards of 50,000 machines. Add to this the profit from the circular letter field ‘and you will see what a tremendous future there ls before the Wilson Typesetters. The Inventor certain of the future of thie latest product of Mr. Wilson's brain. Mr. Wilson's experience has taught him to know the kind of Inventions that “go big,” and the fact that he backs the Wilson Typesetting Machine with his name, and therefore with reputation and standing, should be sufficient to banish all doubt and hesitancy from the mind of the would-be Investor. Eye for the Future The Wilson Typesetting Machine Co. is incorporated under the laws of the State of Washington. Ital stock, 500,000 8; par value, $1.00 per share. At the present time stock is selling at 50 cents per share. It will not remain at the present price long. As a final word, we ufge you not to buy, but to investigate. Your Judg- ment will tell you to buy. But remember, a delay and you may be too ‘late to share In the profits of a business that cannot help but become a great success. Terms: 10 per cent down, 10 per cent per month, 5 per cent off for cash. Open from 9 a. m. to 9 p. m. Ladies Invited. THE WILSON TYPESETTING MACHINE CO. ection toc he chief's office, tt 1 Hee edhe seo ORGANIZED BAND s in this | ason tha The present czar of Russia once | . o the votes of the| played a giant tuba in a band of ple noblemer r nized by himeelf, 1 believe I can, in some es Levy, wife of the ‘ 1 as §«6cornetist, who, with measure, bring peace and 1 daughter, 1 appear-| progress here instead of the ntal_act at the I did not quarre’ i 1° ayor.| ife sat ae fons and thrown the city ina row,|to tear the vitals of the] Petersburg, sie eit S| | purpose 1 hed w aac “took ‘ottlce | city whenever My, Gill is|Scince heard hin purpo had when I took office A short while before that the Conditions Now Worse ped the efty could be kept I hoped he would keep his |} th | norm: pre-election promise not to again for his own good and good of our ety For several months condl- tions have grown worse. Most of the police are good men, | know they are willing to act If properly directed. We pay over $550,000 per year to maintain them, Their work cannot be done by any other office. As usual, the mayor says he does not know In my opinion, nothing of m icernin t the m e not qut city Altho pressed to ak, I without heated wor Personally, | might have kept silent longer had the mayor not anid In effect that there was difference in principle or issue be tween us Knowingly Speaks Untruth He knew that was untrue He knew was chaff to tnjure and deceive the people © mayor or rather bis eo 8A the fallen woman | We all know that This is not the issue The fasue is whether the fallen woman shall be commercialized and whether gambling, bootlegging and blind pigs shall flourish In the 68,000 homes daily, “ECZEMA @ 8 : “no| date ‘CURES MEN }\")}e"5:0085) i se left to run his course. rown prince had organized a band | AUSTIN E. GRIFFITHS] of 100 musicians selected from friends, all noblemen. itation, Jules Le y was en prince's ely and several » Weeping Re rs. Levy pre. pone es with justifiable pride WE'RE NOW FACING | ®A CANARY FAMINE her war famine threatens a, all T oak . a! pply of singing \ t e Ame } WANT NAVAL BASE SAN PEDRO, March 2. A naval ha it ts 450 olty r vitallt fit for t PIERCE’S SEXOID "''° ' si a BULL ai dust Printers, brows THIRD AIN 1043 DR, mail Every box @ Ca ite Ay MoND ne meDy ©0,, Room 6 Hotel Antler th and Union i » Main 1 $2. Star Want Ads go into over| 702 FIRST AVE., SEATTLE, WASHINGTON bach, president of SAYS ANTI-TOXIN KILLED HIS CHILD « «-~': CHICO, Cal, Burlington's from A. J. Yok a few onths, Mare oh 2.—Dr. to recover a Butte rancher for anti-toxin treatments, was an swered today by Yokum with a claim that one of his children dled and the other was paralyzed by the treatment. START ON STEAMER The Seattle Construction & Dry |dock Co, has started work on the $1,000,000 twin screw steel chrgo steamer to be built for the Lucken bach Steamship Co, J. 1. kem 30,000,000 people attend the Movies daily in the United States. 460,000 people attended the Movies Free December, Pa., who distribute MOVIE They appeal to this vast throng in the m« tense and practical w How many people attend the Seattle? The number will surprise you. We will average in this space within a few days MR, MERCHANT:—You had better see ¢ representative immediately, as we grant distributing privileges, and your territe may al be taken ovies UNIVERSAL MOVING PICTURE TICKET CO. the company, }said that another contract will prob- ably be given the local builders in The World's Greatest External Re coughs and Colds (on chest and ancther between shoulder biades) daily awe eee op =o ye es during as guests of the merchants of Pittsburgh, H. H. MUNRO, Dist. Mgr., 1301 Fifth Ave., Seattle,

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