The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 18, 1916, Page 7

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{A national tleup of all rall- roads threatens if the four great rallway brotherhoods — engi. | neers, firemen, trainmen and | conductors—strike to win an eight-hour day, The railroads say the men's requests, if Granted, would cost them ONE HUNDRED MILLION DOL. LARS a year and cause incre: ed rates, President W. 8. Car. ter of the firemen’s union has written a deries of articl This le the first article —EDITOR,) BY W. S. CARTER President of the Brotherhood of Lo comotive Firemen and Enginemen Lulig-2 It is hardly credible that a loco. motive fireman made $116.74 in 28 days while recery- ing only 28% cents per hour, but by being able to prove that he did it, the neutral arbitrators in the last Western rail- way arbitration cents an hour wa: too much for W.S.CARTER switch engine fire man, and therefore fixed the rate at 27% cents per hour on that same engine “saving clause” in the arbi tration agreement prevented an ac- tual reduction in existing rates of pay, but the award fixed the stand ard rate at 10 cents less than this fireman was receiving. At an arbitration the rail- roads presented names of switch engineers, one of whom ned $172.90 in “26 days.” A subsequent investigation demonstrated that this man worked an average of 14 houre and 18 minutes per day for 26 days, an equivalent of 46'4 days of eight hours each. This investigation demonstrated E FOR RREUMATISM! Musterole Loosens Up Those Stiff Joints—Drives Out Pain. You'll _ know why thousands nse MUSTEROLE once you experience the glad relief it gives. Get a jar at once from the near- est drug store. It is a clean, white ointment made with the oi! of mus tard. Better than a mustard ») ter and does not bilster. Brings ease end comfort while it is being rubbed on! *“MUSTEROLE is recommended by doctors and nurses. Millions of Jars sre used annually for Bron- chitis, Croup, Stiff Neck, Asthma, Pleurisy, Chilblains, Frosted Feet, Colds ot the Chest (it often prevents Pneu- monia). At your druggist’s, in 25¢ and de jars, and a special large hospital size for $2.50. Be sure you get the genuine MUSTEROLE. Refuse !mitations— get what you ask for The Mus- terole Company, Cleveiand, Dhio. TODAY’S BEAUTY HELP You can keep your hair at its ‘very best by washing it with this simple, juexpensive shampoo, which cleanses the hair 2nd scalp thoroughly of all the dandruff and dirt and leaves a clean, wholesome feeling: Jnst use a teaspoonful of canthrox dissolved in a cup of hot water, afterwards rinsing th ro.1gh- ly with clan water. One finds the hair dried quickly and ly, is anstreaked, bright, soft an afty, so fluffy in fact that it looks moro abundant tnen ft is and so soft that arranging it be- ¢omes a piessure. All scalp !:rita- tion will disappear and the hair will he brighter than ever before. Vigor for Men Wonderful Invention Restores Health While You Sleep You need not suffer from ioat strength. ous debility or any other weakness remedy that troubles quickly and ther- ‘This remedy is electricity, the power that gives life and strength to the buran body. You know that all you Inck Is force and vim. Anything that will put new Ife into your nerves ana butld up your vitality will cure you Electricity does that when properly applied Vita while you " ep. It Is with new life ng full of vim, Plectra-Vita battery, whieh broken stream of « the nerves for how: with n “4 strong, healthy condition. It renews the spirit. of ambt- tion and hustle. It ma men out of lings. If y » fh. ine Cait or smvtie tee ous FREE heamein 1 5 -onge hook | BOOK | freatment. This noon ~ contains pletures of| well-built. roburt men and women, | showing how Electra-Vite is applied | nd explains many things you should now. The Electra-Vita Lo. decided that 23% | Not every baby may be lulled to sleep by the flutelike voice of a beautiful prima donna, But it's this baby's good fortune for you see the child's mother is € that {n order to make the $172.90, he was not only paid for all these hours | that he actually worked, but $5.85 in addition thereto as 26 penalties for | working this engineer 14 hours and 18 minutes on each of these 26 days | WITHOUT at any time permitting him to STOP TO FAT! The same investigation prov ed that to earn the sum of | $116.74 In “28 day | worked an average of 14 hours and 11 minutes these 28 days, and with NO STOP TO EAT on any day. ‘This switch engine fireman's 28 days were made up of 397 hours, or an equivalent of 49% days of eixht) hours each—an average of 99\%| hours per week | At this rate for 12 months this switch engine fireman would work the equivalent of 595% days of eight hours each. An employe in the building trades in this same city of Chicago worked only 44 hours a week, or an equiva lent of 286 days of eight hours each during a year. Thus this switch engine fireman works as many hours In one year as an employe in the building tn- dustries works in two years and one month! An arbitration board has fix- the wages of locometive en- Qineers at less than most buiid- 9 trades taborers are pa’ and only about two-thirds much as is paid to many build- ing trades employes. This same federal arbitration board fixed the wages of loco- motive firemen on the larger en- gines at about half of what helpers and laborers are paid. This federal arbitration board said ‘engineers and firemen must work at the sani rate at night as they work in day, and when locomo- tive hostlers asked that they work }not to exceed 10 hours per day, R THREE ARE) without which no country can live. |THIS ARBITRATION BOARD| Styled title, of a staunch Wittle WHERE ERED TOGETHER But 1 do not think It is a perfect|of talk, Do you for ono moment| | FIXED THEIR WORKING DAY AT; Cruiser built to buck ice floes “What's all this, Miss Margaret, }arrangement by any means, If it/thinl thet Mr. Dick or Miss Mc oe and navigate shatiow waters, | 01.0 1 ain reading wo much about| were perfect, there would be no di-|!ie's husband or my Terry chose sia pr be raga lately?” asked Anole this morning. | ¥ you know, I believe a mar-jany one ot us? No, It our. KCapeeine “Sest Arsete. Wak of less than a month, will leave (i nee question? I went|riage ceremonial should be @ civil|selves that did the choosing and| Appear in The Star Tomorrow.) San Francisco thie month to |. a lecture last night and a little | service only. I don't think marriage | we know it, every one of us, when buen ear a anna brave the rigors of the region | ouse-colored woman of abowf 45/has anything to do with one’s re-jwe «id ft. The woman who is | beyond the Arctic circle in an |Haciared. vehemently that ‘every|ligion, except in the moral sense /howling about not being allowed i CASEMENT’S TRIAL effort to recover records and |) hould ave the privilege|in which every act that a person|/to make her choice is not clever| data which, it is believed, will |o¢ choosing the father of her chil-| does affects religious faith more or enough to fee that she cin always co EX | be of inestimable value to sci- || , leas.” de the cli eeing, peaviaed she oul) N T WEEK ease ane Mietery. jo Ssitie, who was sitting beside! “Look here, Mollie,” I interrupt-lonly Ist he man think he is dotag | oa | Prospects of hardship in facing|my bed, helping Annie with herjed, “this ts not you talking, but/it all the time.” LONDON, May 18.—-Sir Roger |Arctic blizzards, mushing over un-|paby clothes, beg to laugh Chadwick | “Annie,” said Mollie, “where did| Casement will go on trial for his|>Froken trails of ice and snow, or of It made me laugh, too, Mollie, Perhag she acquiesced, “and you learn ali this?” | | lite earl oe en htag ty f2llowing dog teams over the frozen| darlin” continued Annie with that| yet Chad is quite as conventional] | “Well,” answered Annie with a| life early next month, according tO\expanse of treacherous polar re-|{rish tw.nkle in her eyes that I/and loath to disturb things as {s/ wide trish emile, “It ts not a thing | arrangements today. gions, apparently have no_terrors|jove so «vel, “for I sald to myself,| the average man.” that you can learn in school, Miss Following his preliminary hear-|for her ° Sures we can't be doin’ much else| “Yes,” said Annie, with a laugh, | Mollie.” ingonacharge of high treason, Sir|. It 1s In the hope of realizing the|than *hvosin’ the fathers of our) “I have noticed that whether it dtc be continued) ". . {life ambitions of her husband that| children when we marry them. was Mr. Symone with all his Roger was returned to his cell it/ sry Bayne has consented to join} “What she might have meant,|money and education, or my Terry the Tower of London. |the expedition Annie,” said Mollie, “is that if ajwith only his native wit and good | Daniel Bailey, Irish soldier, is| Capt. Bayne, whois past the|womah wanted children and no/nature, each is quite willing that/# poo, likely to receive clemency, owing three score and ten mark, {s an old-|husband she should be allowed to ae. pi Be Egg neh ean hcl For Alt | $o his exposure of the trenaue plot aa of Far Northern |here ww, Mollie, you are making Which is as {t should be, Anvie. |JF AM the Premier Asquith’s plans for a fe-| ‘The tomb of Sir John Franklin ia|fun of me!” exclaimed Amhie, while} A woman should be more moral) Time organization of the Irish adminis-|the destination of the journey, and|her face expressed both a desire to|/ than a man,” «ald I cal tration have not yet been revealed.|the records of scientific observa-|!augh and a horror of the dea Why?" asked Mollie quickly. | His efforts at conciliation pleas-|tions believed to be hidden tn this| * Annie, I am not; a good|"Ix she not just as human? Does e-] all ltomb are the object of the expedi-|many women are advocating these|she not have the same tempta The premier was scheduled to 8° / tion. , pedi-|Meories now. I'll wager if you had|tions and the same Incentives r nade inquiries that you would| “Yes, but to her is intrusted the to Cork today. K .OF P. TO BANQUET AND ELECT TONIGHT close, Thursday evening. Nearly 200 visiting Knights, their wives, daughters and sisters, attended a banquet Wednesday night at the Commercial Club, aa guests of Seattle temple, No. 9, Pythian Sisters. Leo is the violinist of the trio of brothers, Jan the pianist and Mis chel the cellist All are masters. Thursday night the brothers will be guests at the ladies’ night recep tion at the Press club CHICAGO, May 18.—Three ex-| a Por veld stomachs, gan ana Wednesday night at the Washington press companies affected by the] exco not! fermentation of food, A teaspoonful |Annex, electing G. A. Richardson | strike just declared announced to-| grea and it does|in # fourth of a glass of hot water lof Seattle president | day that they would apply to the| not stain fail it is the| usually gives INSTANT RELIEF, | sce | : ; no dependable treatment for a@ll|Kold by ail druggints In elther pow.) —Tinch at the Hollywood, 212 federal courts for a writ to prevent) .yi, + rien. der or tablet form at 60 cents per Pike.—Adv, the 2,000 strikers from picketing. gemo, Cleveland. bottle, ike.—-Adv, Cluck statintic jove abou every evening .R. Workers Among Longest Worked and Lowest Paid of Any Class of American Skilled Labor Grand Opera Voice, / for public appearances, our t $40 lL editor sayy this dabe «1 ) werth of hillables Well, perhaps the smiling mother believes Mt is word i. Miss Gluck is the wife of Zim lary paid Alma balist, famous pianist a A ‘BRIDE TOCRUISE FAR INTO NORTH | Will Go With Husband in Search for Explorer's Tomb TO PIERCE THE ARCTIC Mrs. P. McK, Bayne SAN FRANCISCO, May 18.— “As second ma " to wi STAR—THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1916. PAGE if Ou Twenty-lEighth Friday Clearance When This Store Holds a Friday Sale the Values Are Worth While ‘Fraser PatersanCo FRIDAY SPECIAL 30¢ MARQUISETTE, SPECIAL Nexeptional value in Drapery Marquisette m and beige All new, fresh bolts A spectal purchase value, Friday, a yard Frane 80c Men's Underwear 25c Garment 21¢ white *plendid value. Regular, 30c PRECOND AT UNIVERSITY 1 Fourth } A (NC TABLE FRIDAY OFFERI! GARMENT-ROOM event tha LEARANCE of an odd lot : se / of lightweight Shirts and who wishes a new Suit. Drawers this lot—Cloth Suits, Silk Suits. Shirtu, elzen 24 to 40, inclusive. Drawers, sizes 30 to. 82 only Balbriggans, mesh ‘and ‘Sea Island cotton, in white and ecru boc garments, special. . 25¢ $2.50 Under Drawers at 95c —8mall lot of Men's light-weight Wool Drawers, sizes 32, 34, 46 and 44 only; $2.50 garments, ape etal at o5¢ Fraser-Paterson ( tet Floor unusual, black and white checks. —Belted styles, Norfolk styl belted Peplum effects. A FRIDAY SALF OF Women’s Dress Skirts $6.50 Gous were priced $11.00, oth- ers $10.00, and some were $9.00, Splendid styles to Chuddah cloth, serges and pop- ling, Navy bines, blacks, and black and white checks. —Full-pleated, aide-pleated, yoke and circular styl Jast 26 Skirts fn the lot, each an exceptional value, that should 42, S_The least expensive Suits in tl At cecccccccsccvcccccccesees were = Now for a Quick Riddamce--300 Pieces Women's Neckwear 10c Ea. 89 Women's Smart New Suits at $22.75 There are just 89 Suits in ionable cloths, fashionable colorings. Values that are most —The Cloth Suits are in gabardines, serges, poplins. —The Silk Suits are mostly taffetas. —There are navy blues, greens, tans, gray, black, —All sizes in the lot, from misses’ 16 to women’s values, and a number are worth $45.00. $32.50 9x12-F1 ANDSOME Wilton Velvet Rugs, very closely woven, In a large variety of attractive Orlen- tal and conventional patterns. In beautiful combina- tions; the colors are fast | —OxI2-ft. wize, $32.00 value, Friday special, $22.50 --VFraser-Paterson Go rth Floor, FRIDAY SPECIAL G t will attract every woman Fashionable styles, fash- es, flared box styles, ne lot are excellent $25.00 Choose Friday Fraser-Paterson Co, Third Floor. FRIDAY CLEARANCE Small Children's Coats at $1 Each be sold early Friday morning. Chol nn 4 arte! ibasraton at ctor Praper-Paterson Co. ra F ROUPING from special purchases and former LEARANCE of an odd lot of special sales. Three hundred pieces in all. sizes in Coats; sizes 2 to 6 Jewelry Some soiled, some rumpled, some fresh and dainty. years, Broken line of sizes and FRIDAY SPRCIALS Surely, every piece a most surprising value at the colors, but values that are ex- rt de—two necklaces or Prine with gold-filled clas ues for . we d —Hat Pine—fold-filled or ster. ling allver head« on steel stems; 2 on a card; 250 value for 15¢ ieee price. In fact, many were formerly 25c, 39c, 50c and even 75c. —Of course, there are dozens of styles, large col- lars, square-back collars, vestees, small stickup col- lars, collars and cuffs, etc., etc. ceptional. Former prices were $2.60 to $4.00, —Friday special ........$1.00 Another Lot at $2.50 —Also sizes 2 to 6 years, con- —Baby Pins — Pretty little Beauty Pins for pinning baby |! __ And you may choose from the whole lot Friday |] taining values trom $5.90 to dresses with solid Kold ¢ . 10c $6.50, A broken line of sizes —Fraser-Paterson Co., 2nd Floor, FRIDAY CLEARANCE FRIDAY SPECIAL $3.50 and $5.00 Corsets at $1.95 Each . VELVET RUGS $22.50 $12.80 Quartered Oak Rocker for $8.50 HIGH-GRADE Rocker with full auto spring seat, cov- ered with genuine Spanish leather, Choice of either high or low back. Golden oak or fumed finish. Just eleven of these Chairs to ko in the Friday clearance at er-Paterson Co. ard Floor. r FRIDAY SPECIALS IN Silks and items that are very unusual values, even in @ Friday Bargain Day. $1.25 Sitk Poplins 96¢ ~Yard wide, fine Silk Poplin. White, Raisin, Navy Blue, Co penhagen and Black. A rich lustre; good weight for suits and dreases. Regular $1.2 Walle, £09 aisssss odeaee ++ O5¢ $1.00 Black Messaline 75¢ Almost a yard wide, full 36 inches, black Satin Messaline, pure ailk; fine for dresses, waists and skirte; medium weight; deep, rich black. Spectal...75¢ $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50 Fancy Silke for 68¢ —A lot of 175 yards Fancy Sitka, inelnding novelty stripes, checks, plaids, etc. A choice lot of very notable values. All good color- ings; widths, 22 to 36 inches. -Former retail prices, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50. —Friday clearance, yard...69¢ . Co, First Floor. 5 Women's Wool Sweaters for $2.95 Each LITTLE clearance lot in which are offered $5.00 to $7.50 values. A broken line of sizes and colors, but all are good Wool Sweater +++ $2.95 NUSUAL —Discontinued Coats that are extraordinary values at ...+.+<-- ANOTHER LOT AT $4.95 Sweater Coats for women that were formerly priced $8.50 to $10.00 \ broken line of sizes and colors. Values extreme. Choose. .$4.95 Fraser-Paterson Co,, Second Floor. —Clearance pri values—yes, models and broken lines. ee, COCK... cccc0ee indeed—it’s a clearance of good styles in Mme. Lyra Corsets—B. &,J. Front Lace Corsets and some others. Corsets of splendid quality.and in good style for medium and small figures. They are in meditm bust and high bust styles. Lyras are in small sizes only—-B. & J. Corsets are in sizes 19 to 27. $1.95 CONFESSIONS OF A WIFE | get so tired of that senseless kind |WON’T BE DELEGATE! | LINCOLN, Neb., May 18.—Wm. J. {Bryan announced today | states to send him to St. Louis as a democratic national convention dele- | Baie. He will go only as a newspaper.) man, employed by several syndi-| cates, ROBERT GOES FOR AIRING; PINCHED! Robert Anthony, . residing at 312 Garfield ave. was arrested Wednesday after he had driven an automobile up and down Second ave. sev. eral times in scanty attire. He will be examined as to his sanity. that he| would not accept offers from, other | Franklin died {in 1847, after six years’ work in the Far North as the head of @ party of scientists who had explored regions unknown even to the Eskimo. Capt. Bayne was with the Hall Modern rooms. Best service. Spe cial rates. Hotel Virginus, 804 Vir ginia, near Westlake Ave—Ady. You are interested In a quick and the courage to prick any bub- ble—no matter how large and iri descent—that was off as something stable. an unn “Ot course she was, for I sald Annie. Well,, perhaps There 1 laughed aloud Irish mind of the “LT have been thinking an have found the woman who made the statement was woman.” married asked," that poor wom. expedition in its search for the] sn. ns ache to clasp a bab After the election of officers and|*Tanktin tomb In et suggested Molle a banquet at Redding’s hall, First) ion in he a ote eT Ming expedi Well, there are plenty running ave. W. and Roy st, grand lodge|! haf, 208, when, the cap-| around loose that would be glad to conventions ‘of the Knights of|(#it *8ys he learned from the na list her clasp them,” was Annie's Pythias and Pythian Sisters will|{¥e® the approximate location of|ghservation. “What would be the the tomb objection to her choosing a baby instead of a father to one?” wa the woman, palming itself a talk- i CHERNIAVSKY TRIO | position paying from | nor about thie inarriage aves | $150 to $300 a month lion wince I married,” sald Mollle, SCORE BIG AT MCORE and will epend "$75 tol! "and 1 have come to the conclusion qualify, call at once ||that marriage as we now lenow it f eing @ perfect institu ——- || 663 Erfipire Bidg, —_|/!8 far from being #1 Leo, Jan and Michel Cherniavaky, || |e ee world-renowned musicians, and the|! Se facie loins ae be : ae -|accompanist, Alex my, gave a : Nd arab Tron} Jo ag Oe thoroly enjoyable recital at the you don't believe in marriage?” Moore theatre Wednesday night] Te Overcome Eczema | Certainly, Annie, I believe in It as the best thing we have, to date, ed for the propagation of the race and tr Send pow oie” atop burne|the sanctification ,of the home, Jit hing eczema a by ap-|— 2 Ate Diving @ iittle semo Yene4 ar at for Mxtra large ack heads, t e« akin Wiseanes k a | ISURATED ESIA est of all work of civilization.” » into the conservation bust ness very extensively 1s what most | men believe,” interrupted Annie, | ‘which brings us back to the first | question: Why should not a wom- | an choose the father of her child?" | “Arnie, my dear, please don't let | your Irish sense of humer get the; | best of you Gut, my dea WOMEN DELEGATES — ON WAY TO GOTHAM, PORTLAND, Ore, May ©18.— Members of the Oregon and Wash-| delegations to the conven: | great “C ington tion of the Gere: Federation of | Women's clubs were en route to ;New York city together today, The Washington women arrived in Port land late yesterday The Washington delegation is juninstructed in the » for the; | presidency of the General Federa tion of Women's clubs The Ore gon women are pledged to Mrs. | Josiah Evans Cowles of Los An-| geles S. W. CLUB BANQUETS The tone & Webster club of Washington, composed of employe of the Stone & Webster corpora held = its unnual banquet tions, Come in and Hear it Play This is the fine, modern Cabinet Talking Machine, the LEADER Grafonola, which we are now 50 of these fine Home Entertainers. Walnut Cabinets, sent to your home with a fine selection of records, for just Five Dollars and Special Monthly Terms of $5 pays for it. Over half of the Instruments have already been sold, so if you wish to take advantage of these special terms you had better see about it now, This LEADER, with 12 selections, complete for $79, with the special terms of $5 down and $5 monthly, Ke Lilevrlel/ bing XachineCa Third & Universit Seattle’s Talking Machine Headquarters Your Favorite Music offering at SPECIAL TERMS. The Your choice of J ARMY Indestrial Dept., 1902 Ninth Ave. 8. We ask your kind donations ef useful articles or material which you no longer — need. Help us in our work of making: Our wagon or truck will cal ially there f* a great need for paper of all kinds, especially newspapers magazines, no matter how eid. Den't burn, but them. If you need @ man for work, call Elliott 2746. Just Printers 1013 THIRD MAIN 1043 offer is limited to Oak, Mahogany or Fun and Amusement for Everybody in the Home

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