The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 28, 1916, Page 9

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nilway Men’s Unions ssid Poindexter; Criticize Humphrey The joint national legislative boant of the four national railway men’s organizations has given a written indorsement to the eandidacy of Senator Miles Poindexter for reelection against Congressman Will E. Humphrey H. Alvin Moore, of the Washington state railway men's organisa tion, Wrote to Washington, D. C., for information concerning the records of the two rivals, : He received the following reply from H. BE. Wills, national repre sentative of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers; P. J. MoNe . vice president of Locomotive Firemen and Enginemen; W. M vice president of the Order of Railway Conductors, and Val fapatrick, vice president of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen “Mr. H. Alvin Moore, 2427 Fifth Ave. W., Seattle, Wash. “We are sending you herewith copies of the labor records of Sen- ator Miles Poindexter and Representative W. FE. Humphrey, whioh speak for themselves as to the attitude of these gentiomen with refer- ence to matters pertaining to the welfare of the men we represent “It will be seen that Senator Poindexter has been uniformly tn fa- vor of our measures and against those which we opposed, while Repre- sentative Humphrey, with almost the same regularity, has been against eur position. “Trusting this information will be of interest.” ‘Then follow the records. “Tend are reproduced herewith: is N POINDEXTER’ 's LABOR | RECORD | cAEOKST atti | REMARKS be Foruier siestios Of senators, amend stitution Yoo | ravoret | Adopted ition, motion Carried Enacted strike fmvestigation tion to table resetution Immigration reatetet) | stetie Motion test mot aa Motion lost Passed senate Keacted read employes i-12 | Right-hour law on work done for | _ the United States Immigration restriction Bxemption of unions from presscu tion under Sherman law, motion uation ef 9 9-16 | industrial relations commision, mo: tion decreasing appropriation Exemption of untone from | tion under Sherman law, 1 a4 prosecu- motion to tadle amendment st: tn sundry civil appropriation | ij } | oat pre | | ate | citrten Sa Apwst act, vital te labor | organisations Clayton anti-trust act, motion to | concur In conference report | Immigration restriction bill, motion | | | | | ' i } | - 2-15 | ‘9-28-18 to strike literacy test Immigration restriction bill Time mearuring device, amendment prohibiting tm arsenals Bonus system of wages, motion te 3-39-18 provision prohibiting tn otrike Bit Yeo te @ copy of the later record of Senator Poindexter, as it te tm this office frem the Congressional Records. It will be seen that tn he has been im sccord with the attitwde of labor. This te an e1 ‘seed record. aN 12-12- 8 Conpaineey investigation of labor a leputes 4-28-19 | Exemption of walons from prosecu- tien under Sherman anti-trust law, motion to recede from amendment to sundry civil Dill. Phosphorus mateh tax Chitéren’s bureae dit! Popular election of senators, amend- ment to the constitution . Infunetion limitation, bAl curbing ., netwithetanding vets by President Taft Wem restriction dill, te strike out literacy test Immigration restriction bit Convict labor-made goods bi Children’s bureau, increased priations for Clayton anti-trust act, vital to labor 1 a 4-16) 1 ) ew B- 4-16 4-17-16 + 16 10- 6-16 1-18-15 report ! ow j notwithstanding ‘veto ¥ demt Wilsen . Favored Pa 6-15 | Child labor bit .. 2 14 labor bill Hs \\onn | Immigration restriction biti, 1 Favored | Favored atrike out literacy teat 2 | Immigration restriction bill Opposed Favored ‘The following ts @ copy of the digest of ti recera of ntative phreys, as it is complied from the C Ri Represe jecords and kept in this Excursions East VIA THE “MILWAUKEE” Every day until September 30th For a daylight “Electric” ride over the Rockies, take the celebrated “Olympian,” leaving Seattle 10:15 each morning. To view the wonderful engineering feats through the for ested Bitter Roots by daylight, take the luxuriously ap pointed “Columbian,” leaving Seattle 7:30 p. m. dally. Information and Literature City Ticket Office, Second and Cherry, Elliott 4812 NATIONAL MARKET Always has big money saving specials. Butter, Eggs, Olive Oil, Macaroni, Delicatessen and Fancy Groceries. Whipped Cream Chocolates, 50¢ Ib. NATIONAL MARKET 405 PIKE ST., NEAR FOURTH The _STAR—PRIDAY, JULY i W916. _TaGe 9. A Full Size Mahogany Finish Talking Machine Which Plays Records Special Terms Of $3.95 First Payment, Then 50c Wome, a Week IF YOU SIGN THIS COUPON q at hee er ees eceenstqedueeneeneseesceouoes jelivers the Hermeay Talking Selections, with One Thousa: Mechios edlee—the price complete is $14.95—§3.96 cash, then boc a week PPER-KELLY TALKING MACHINE 00, ” Third ana Universtty, Seattic. allowed if the exchange Harmony Home Outfit ON SPECIAL i a ME se much surprised and greatly pleased. —Little Folks Like It —Big Folks Like It Lots of Fun and Entertainment for 1,000 NEEDLES Now Offered to Readers of The Star on SPECIAL TERMS Our Guarantee and Exchange Offer Out of Town Customers ven the same p' ilege. Mail the Cou- pon with first pay- ment and we will send the instrument Or set it aside until you come to the city. This practically gives you SUCCESSOLS, to Cilenssalki Mhiing [Machine Ca. Third & Universi NEW EDISONS, VICTROLAS, GRAFONOLAS Seattle Talking Machine Headquarters CANADIAN DOMESTICS ORGANIZE A UNION! WYOMING SPENDS $50,000 TO DEMAND DIGNITY, SHORTER HOURS, UNIFORM DRESS AND ELEVA- TION OF CALLING TO DOMESTIC SCIENCE. CALGARY, Canada, July 28—A union for domestic servants is the latest development here. An ult! matum that Calgary maids will present to their prospective mis: tresses when they answer adver tisements, “Maids Wanted,” is tn HOW TO REDUCE YOUR WEIGHT A SIMPLE, SAFH, RELIABLE WAY People who overburdened with superfluous fat know only too well the discomfort and ridicule that over-stout people have to bear. If you are nd five ten pounds o t. you are unnecessarily w organs, and are which destroys the figure. here is no need fering from superf! rying a burden beauty of your of any one suf- ous fat. If you rr owelght in a le way, with tiresome exer- st worth trying time an you can breathe deep! id Drug Co. box of oll of k one after each tion diet much Weigh yourself Once a we to know just how faat you ar ve off the treat- ingle dose until |you are OM of Korein ta ab lens, In pleanant to take, and helps digestion. Even a few days’ treat- ment has been reported to show « noticeable reduction in weight, foot- become Hmhter, your’ work easier, and a lighter and more buoyant feeling takes possession of your whole belng w fon who suffers from hould give this Albert Sieme | Jeweler and Silveremith 010 Second Ave, Near Madison eal | Reimer, course of preparation. It includes a 10-hour day, a min- imum wage of $15 a month, and payment of 15 cents an hour for all overtime. “Housekeeper” Her Title The by-inws provide that the “housekeeper,” as it is stipulated the maids are to be called, will wear a uniform, master a course in domestic scien and have a suitable room one ning a week in which to entertain, “Mary Ann” will mv resound thruout the hou stead, when the mistress wants to apeak to the maid, she will have to address her “Mise Smith,” or whatever else her name may be. CANDIDATE FOR PRESIDENT HERE Capital and labor were defined after the true Marxian theory Thursday night by Arthur BP. Bostoo, socialist labor didate for president, in Stevens l, 1523 Fourth ave, The present capitalist system,” he said, “tends co make the laborer a revolutionist.” Reimer left for Tacoma Friday. Who wants a wife? Mrs. Nellio "tappolt, 615 83rd st., New York, writes to Postmaster Battle, saying she is sick and tired of old Manhattaa. She is a widow with three boys, |and she wants a husband who will bring her West, so she can get a full breath of Puget sound air. Besides being able to cook and run @ house, she is 40 and not fat, Will some good man please write, These aro a few of the more Ment reforms that will, if the eme works as its promoters hope, lift domestic service from the monotonous level of unending drudgery to the plane of a skilled profession To Sign Agreements The new plan, which it is ex- pected will be introduced shortly in the United States, resulted from a. conference of gary trades union officials, Y. W. Cc, A. girls, advanced preachers and two or three radical soctety women, Under the new plan, both em- ployer and employe will be requir- ed to sign agreements which pro- vide for all the reforms the do- mestics plan to put in force. Be Young Looking Darken ra: Hair Remove every tri remature- ray aded hair, aifly. utc! , and turn tt an even dark, beautiful shade with 9 Cal- And keep it full of life, lustrous, healthy, soft, wavy and fascinating druff, iteh- ng hair, too Removes all tr ing acalp, and No dye—harmiess to une—une ‘can not be detected. Large 50c and $1 bottles at your druggists. Bend for yaluable booklet, “Beautiful Hatr,” Philo Hay, N ON. J, aT pRvuG co, FRASER: | GO BACK T0 CHEYENNE, Wyo. July 28. Wyoming is going back to the days when the “forty-five” was a bandy| tool and the “town bad man” was an institution. For four days, July 26, 27, 28 and 29, Cheyenne will bold a “Frontier days” celebration. Indians, cow- girls, cowboys and all the regalia appertaining thereto will try to) make this, th vival af the old Wild West, as real as it actually! was Indian war dances, steer roping contests, bucking contests and oth-! jer forms of entertainment will be staged by 2,000 performers, at a ost of $50, 000. Thousands of dollars in prizes GUARDSMEN TO GET OUT PAPER Staff Special JEIXCO, Cal., July 28.—A reg- imental newspaper, telling of the doings in the ranks of the Second Wehingtona, soon will be finding its way thru the mails, back to Se. att It will be the handiwork of enlisted men, subject, of course, to the army censors, “Scotty” McDaugall, editor of the University Datly when he isn't sol- diering, is going to be editor, copy boy, reporter and about everything, in fact, except the business staff, which will be Private Chitty of Spokane. They're going to try to cover all the news of the regiment, its move- ments and plans, The paper will come out once a week, and 1s to be printed on the presses of the Calexico Chronicle, It will have six columns and four pages, Summer uniforms are being is- sued to all the men of the regiment. The uniform consists of cotton olive drab trousers and a light-weight shirt. No ACQUITTALS NEW YORK, July 28.—The first official report of New York's new traffic court, available today, shows that no excuses are accepted, every autoist or other person arrested for violation of traffic regulations being fined During the first thirteen days the court was in session 129 persons were sent to jail because they didn't pay their fines, Most of them stil! ure there and others are following them every day, “BAD MAN” DAYS are awaiting the winners. With |that ahead, the contestants are ex- |pected to make the event attrac- j tive enough for spectators from oe parts of the United States to init, \* That is what Wyoming wants. It jfinds here the opportunity to boost itself. Wyoming wants to grow. Tt sees itself a state, big: in area than all New England, yet smaller in population than Seattle! Wyoming is young, yet practical. lly undeveloped. It has spent more than $50,000,000 in constructing tr- rigation works, and irrigation still| is in its infancy. More than 30,- 000,000 acres of vacant lands in the jstate are open for settlement un- der the United States land laws, IRISH LEADER GOES TO TRIAL LONDON, July 28.—Laurence Gin- nell, author, humanitarian and prominent Irish member of the Brit- ish parliament, who created a scene in the House of Commons yester- day, was placed on trial here today by his government charged with violating the Defense of The Realm act. Penalties for conviction of the violation of this act range from | a ten shilling fine to imprisonment. \* Ginnell was arrested by order of General Lloyd. Information came to the officer that Ginnell had vis. ited a detention camp at Knuts- ford near Manchester under an as- sumed name and there spent some time talking in a suspicious man- ner with Irish rebel prisoners. Ginnell has long been known for bis sympathy with the Irish cause. He has frequently and openly criti cised the government for not giv ing Ireland home rule. He was} particularly bitter in denouncing | the government for what he termed | its failure to deal more lentently | with the Irish rebels following the Baster rebellion. He 18 « self educated man and a| fine natural orator. He was one of the founders of the Irish Literary Society of London and is the au- thor of several books dealing with Irish qhestions. “COMING | “CVILIZATION | The many who have already called at our store and heard this modern, hornless Talking Machine, were By special arrangement we are offering 100 of these new instruments, with six selections, chosen from our list of thousands, and 1,000 needles—all complete, all ready to entertain you—and the price is only $14.95, with the Special Terms which may be had by simply clipping and signing the coupon, Come and see it now—and hear it play your favorite music. The Harmony Talking Machine is guaranteed exactly the same as our higher-priced instruments. Each one is sold with the privilege of exchanging the instrument for any larger one, and full purchase price will be is made within four months’ time. without cost if you care to make the exchange in the fall. a summer’s music a dental work to your entire tion. Do your guma dlesat it Fas. have pyorrhea. should be era Insure preserv health, ated at on jon of teeth and Extracting absolutely without pain or bad after effects. Our prices are right, stimate before going elsewhi All work guaranteed, _ Examination and consultation Seen the ex-government physician? If not, why not? He Bs. gladly and examine prescrib for out charge. Our eye, pectalist will ex ribe for any disease. Chas. Chaplin In His New Two-Act Comedy THE FIREMAN TODAY and Tomorrow Only COLONIAL THEATRE 10c Children 5c 10¢ If you have a house to rent, find you a Star Want Ad will enant. ‘any | patron of the Right Drug Co, = :

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