The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 13, 1916, Page 7

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usreflected neath every cover of WILD ROSE LARD nh Because WILD ROSE LARD is the last Jin perfection of thie Refiner’ Arf and 1s fhe ar by which ofhers ere measured. REFINED BY FRYE & CO. ‘DOZEN CASES OF WHISKY GONE Police Chief Becxtngham Tues |day continued his Inquiry Into the jemuggiing of whisky and other ‘iquor fram the police evidence |rooms, uncovered by the arrest of | Elevator Operator Lee Meyers. | Two motorcycle policemen and a | police chauffeur are now under sus picton, the chief said. Sergt. Harvey Michiner, property stimates the loans of “evi at 12 to 15 cases of bonded whisky and two barrels of bottled beer. STRIKE AND A QUESTION FOR THE BUSINESS MEN OF SEATTLE TO ANSWER Galbraith, Bacon & Company are pay- ing their truck drivers $3.50 per day, the full union scale. For years they and all other hay and gtain dealers in Seattle have follow ed the custom of employing their teamsters and truck drivers in the warehouses when there was not need for them on their trucks, in order to provide the men with steady employment. Recently the teamsters’ union has been exerting great pressure on Galbraith, Bacon & Co., to force the adoption of the closed shop policy and surrender to Make Your Reservations Now for Wednesday Night SUPPER the union the control over their em- sieves DANCE } y at noon two employes ph ned peat Titeaey S ded ‘ h P k NEW WASHINGTON HOTEL who were not needed on their trucks Main 7098 were assigned to work in the ware- jn many Instances. |of the Pantages theatre bill for the house. This they refused to do without permission of the union agent. They NUXATED IRON) left the warehouse and failed to return during the remainder of the day. Next Increases strength morning they returned for work, but is were told their services were no longer people 20 pe required. $100 forfeit if it ; On Saturday the union agent appeared per full ex: to demand that these men be re planation in large employed. Following the refusal of Bear in this paper | Galbraith, Bacon & Co. to accede to druggies about it this demand, the union agent, on Mon- end hottcd Puciuasy siwaye verte day morning, called out all of Galbraith, ft in stock. Bacon & Company’s truck drivers and teamsters, declared a strike and sent union pickets to surround the company’s prop- erties, harass its remaining employes and Iriv business MR. BUSINESS MAN: What has happened as told above may happen to you and your business at any time. If Galbraith, Bacon & Co. are compelled Absorption Process Makes Faces Young | ‘ome to xelen ra have ht f removing th in canes whieh w noth painless and harmie: process I# so simple, #0 in the wonder I# no one had dine It has been amply dem © away ant The new xpenaive overed | ounce/army officer, arre: the federal grand jury, following a hearing before United States Com 4 |missioner McClellan to yield to such demands, YOUR TURN ease te Secunia guaeed »p skin beneath nd washed off inthe morning, The ina haif-pint of wit hagel a ay for a while After the firet application the finer lines disappear and the deeper ones soon follow, Advertisement. |two men STAR-—TUESDAY, J REYNOLDS OUT; MUM ON REASON ‘As Long as Politics Remains as It Is, I'll Stay Out,” He Says RUMORS oF TROUBLE | | Hidden deep eee the sur. face of affairs at the state cap- ital liew a closely guarded se ret of the motive back of the resignation of Charlies A. Rey- is chairman of the pub. ervice commission. | Reynolds has not told the | real reason for his resignation. He admits tha “As long 4s politics remains as it | he said, “I shall remain out of body and soul, Tam a progres: | ft sive democrat When the dial swings around, as tt surely will, for the standpatters can't get by for I should then be glad to get into the harness for the peo ple, if the people want me. Asked if bis resignation had been influenced by any friendship he! might have felt for ex-members of the industrial insurance commin. jsion, who Were asked by Governor | Lister to resign, Denies He 1 do not care t there will be an expl standpatters must go he said atmply I have done the best I could and I hope I have served the people well. I have made mistakes, but at the same time I quitting the place believ. ing I have served to some pur pose.” Reynolds dented he was consid ering seeking a higher offi “lam not a candiate for any thing,” he said. Soon after his appointment it! became apparent that there was | friction between Reynolds and Commisatoners Spinning and Lew This trouble has continued ever since Many protests were made to the governor, but no offictal notice was taken by Lister until Rey- nolds made known his purpose of resigning. WII! Finish Tourtst Case He will complete the Northwest tourist rate case, now pending be fore the interstate commerce com misdion He has promised Governor Lister | |to see tt 3 without cost to the |wtate, provided the state will pay | his transportation to and from Washington, D. C., when the time to argue before the commission comes, Whether the state accepts or not will make no difference In the event his offer is rejected, he will co to Washington as counsel for the state hotel men’s organiza tion, which has intervened in the sult, or for some other {ntervener. Talked With Lister “The rate case,” he said, “T con sider the most important thing the public service commission has un. dertaken We have beaten the ratiroads, I am reasonably sure, but I want to see it safely thru.” Reynolds talked with Governor Lister concerning his intended res ignation some weeks prior to May 26, when he wrote the executive a asking Lister to accept the rn tion as effective July 1, or let him know without delay !f this date would be inconvenient The governor accepted Monday. He'll Grow Roses Reynolds and Mrs, Reynolds wil! fo to California July 1 to spend a month with their parents. They will return August 1, when Reynolds will probably join with Attorney Howard Hanson in a new law partnership. shall retire to private prac said the resigned commis. ‘and to growing roses. You tice, sioner, ought to see my roses. TWO SMUGGLERS Louls Ding, member of the “Ye! low Owls” emuggling gang, is under sentence by Federal Judge Neterer Tuesday to serve four years on MeNeil's island and pay two fines f $500, He was convicted twice of smuggling Chinese and oplum from Canada. Louls Lung Gin, an accomplice, must serve 15 months on the tsiand MELODRAMA THRILLS ON PANTAGES BILL “The Heart of Ls hicago, * with all tes old melodramatic thrills, well staged In four scenes, ts at the top| week But for the play, headline honors might have gone to the La Scala sextet of grand opera singers, or to| Harry Breen, the unconventional | chatter-box, singer and dancer } The Three Comiques present aj combination of whirlwind tumbling | and acrobatics. A daredevil ladder| act is a feature of the offering of the Five Florimonds. May and Bil He Carr have a cheerful fund of pop ular songs and patter. The tenth episode of “The Iron Claw” {a shown on the screen IS HELD Thomeen, Canadian ated last week for alleged violation of the neutrality laws, is being held in $2,000 bail for Capt. H. J " TEAMSTERS- STRIKE Fifteen union, teamsters employed by Galbraith, Bacon & Co., are on strike Tuesday, in sympathy with| who were discharged for| refusing to do trucking in the ware:| house. They walked out Monday, UNE 13, 1916. PAGE 7. CLOTHING AFLAME, WORKMAN DROWNS Claude Parmer, of Edmonds, le neediessly dead Tuesday, leaving a widow and four chil dren, and the Standard Oj! company's dock at Richmond Beach | in ruins, The to by a fire that started while Farmer and other workmen were filling a big oil Is estimated at $50,000, uninsured. Farmer, drum, Hi Crawford and Jack Martinus were In the act of filling the drum when it exploded, Far mer’s overalls caught fire. While beating ont the flames with their hats, he ran to the edge of the dock and jumped Martinus and Crawford followed clinging to the piling underneath anti] a small boat arrived If there had been any oars and oarlocks in the boat,” sald Mar tinus, “we could have saved Far mer. When we reached the place where he had been struggling, by paddling with our hands, he was gone.” About 250 drome filled with dis tillate were standing on the dock his companions were when the explosion occurred, at 25 p. m. Monday The flames spread rapidly, ex ploston following explosion, as one after anoth the drums were blown into the air The fire boat Duwamish was called from Seattle and arrived in cover Farmer's body 1 WRITE TO MALCOLM STUART Alice has waited on me all day in a kind of beautiful daze. IT have asked her no questions because I want her to enjoy this, the one exquisite period of her life, in her own way. When the time comes, I know ahe will tell me just as much or Just as little as she wishes, and I will rejoice with her. | remember, little book, how happy I was during Dick's and my brief engagement. Looking back, little book, it seems to me that the |happlest time of my life was that short courtship, and the last entry | made in “the book of my girl hood,” the night before I was mar ried, seems to have been the ginning of the end. I have never |been quite as happy and carefree again Do you know, little book, that I have been trying to read you and all the other little books that have filled with my thoughts since I was married, but I have not yet had the courage? There is too LONG WEIGHT AND SHORT WAITS FRYE’S QUALITY MARKETS WEDNESDAY SPECIALS Butter fresh churns DOC Stee. Lene Bolling Beef........ LOC 15c .18¢ veh Oc! Choice Steer Shoulder Steak..... Choice Loin Pork Chops ... Choice Club Sausage....... Choice Shoulder Veal Roast...... 11 Choice Veal Chops...... 15c AT THD FOLLOWING MARKETS, OLYMPIC MARKET 118 Pike St. BRICAN MARKET 505 Third Ave, STERN MARKET 00 W BA Lid 5443 Balle Look for U. 8. Purple Stamp It Signifies Purity and Quality Shope Open Until 6:20 P. Mm. 50 Cents a Week Come and Hear the One You Like—At Seattle's Talking Machine Headquarters. time to take an active part in} keeping the flames in check Efforts are being made to re CONFESSIONS | be- | much of a dead and gone Margie Waverly in them; too much of a dead love; too much of a past that I want to forget Today I wrote to Malcolm Stu art. To tell the truth, I debated long before I wrote to him, think- ng perhaps | would send my grate. ful thanks by Mollie when she sent her letter, However, I felt that) would be almost an insulting way of treating hie interest in my re covery, and decided to write him myself. It was a hard letter to write, for the things I wanted to say I could not write for fear of being misun- | derstood, and even the things I said seemed rather more friendly than they should Sometimes I rather envy Dick, who says he never writes personal letters and proves it Here is my letter, “Dear Mr. Stuart little book: We are offering these “summer models” It certainly gives me great pleasure to know that I may at/ last send you at least some of my gratitude for your continual inter. est in and thought of me since I} ha i m cherished the little jade god jot iecaten: and oh! how I hated to |thro him into running water, as you asked me to do He had made me, too, dream dreams, When I held him in my| hands | was transported almost immediately to the summer lands f Egypt, and it seemed to me at times as tho the ¢ t called me I know now it was only ‘the other self calling him And the glorious coral carving! which came to me with the most beautiful compliment I ever re-| Oo 4 You must have seen in me, not the mortal that I am, but the angel have not the little jade god in my | ing usually stops and healing begins, hand | That is why doctors have prescribed “My only excuse for this long,|| it 80 successfully for over 20 years long letter is that, being tled here || evenin severe cases of eczema, ring- | like a log, when I find myself in|| worm,rashes, and many other tor- communication with some one 1I|| menting, disfiguring skin diseases, |know understands, I am apt to|| Aided by warm baths with Resinel | paragraph and skip until this last | | long to be, To hold my head to the sun and bloom and blossom until the last is ‘a consummation —f)}GOOD MUSIC FOR LITTLE MONEY of the famous Columbia Grafonola—each one equip- ped with New Columbia Reproducers, the Tone Shutters and other exclusive features, ON SPECIAL VACATION-TIME TERMS 75 Cents RCLIPSH » for dank ok THE PERFECT FLOUR FOR EVERY PURPOSE —— devoutly to be wished.’ “One thing I will acknowledge, and that {s courage. There is noth- Most sincerely yours, “MARGARET WAVERLY.” ing I hate so much as I do a men- (To Be Continued. tal, moral or physical coward, and een ths ae yet—stretched on a bed of pain as THE ORGAN in 8t. Paul's ca- I have been for over six months—j I feel my will growing weaker, and I know that I fear the future, “And now, dear friend—you see I am ever after this going to cail| | you friend—this greatest thing of i all to which you are calling my at- tention! “I am not going to let you take!| from yourself one bit of the glory of knowing that to you must be given all the credit for writing to tell me this great man is coming. Probably my husband, being a busy man, would not have known of his || arrival, and I am sure I would not heve done so. “Whether this man brings me health and life, or the sentence of || death, it will have settlea matters, and that is what ' am most anxious for now. “I sometimes think of your beau-| e tiful yacht, almost with envy—to be esiIno able to sail away in the silver path of the moon to undiscovered coun ‘The moment that Resinol Oint- ment touches itching skin the iteh- thedral, London, Is the largest in the world. tries where one may forget all the ugly things that are left behind, is one of my dreams, even when I write too much | “If you are bored, stop at any| Soap, Resinol Ointment makes a sick skin or scalp healthy, quickly, easily and at little cost. Resino! Ointmeat and Resinel a One alee sentence. “I shall always be most grateful tly hee to ch to you; indeed, your beautifully ex-|| Sram Seid by all'druggiaae "Per thal ral fees pressed thought has been almost || write to Resinel, Dept. Baltimore, Md, the one light in my long, dreary a Week One Dollar a Week fonola—Great qin the house or on N selections, and you $38.90 fine JRWEL illustrated, A splen- Instrument, sold — with for $1.00 a week, brings this Columbia, equipped with top did all-purpos TWELVE selections

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