The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 30, 1916, Page 2

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ao employed in Flour. using Holly, Flour. Get your order _ order received. If “strike is on. | ACME COAL gives don't delay. Run of Mine, $3.00. Wrapping The Unbleached FLOUR; | No unnatural proce It is as Nature intended it, the CREAMY WHITE of the wholesome flour. food you need not fear. guard your family’s health by Manufactured by JISZ3 Seattle R. R. STRIKE WARNING If the threatened railroad strike starts it is going to be hard on you if your coal bin is empty “We will deliver all orders as long as supply lasts, in the today or tomorrow. Ro clinkers and no soot. Acme has friends all over Seattle. Aske them, Regular Bunker prices: 0. M. LATIMER, MGR. ACME COAL CO.—ELLIOTT 1400 West Seattic Yard, Weet 549.W—Leschi Heights Yard, Beacon 286 Wrapped in Sanitary Parchment by the only Bread 10c Per Loaf Made at the Three Girls Sunlight Bakery—the last word in sanitary perfection. Three Girls Home-Made Bread—2 loaves for 15c Ask Your Grocer appy Children Keep them so with— es are making Holly color It is a Safe- the Unbleached BY JACK JUNGMEYER SELDOVIA, Al: Aug. 30.-— alued his dog's life as high- his own. And for that reason Paul Buck- ley’s battle with the snows and starvation on Kenai penine you want to make sure, attend to this/stands today among the most ter- Coal trains not move while the|rible of the North records. | Known widely grayed and chi for ACME COAL to us without delay will w 4 by hardship, for 20 years in | the van of gold kere and turers. He le now United States deputy marshal at Unalaska. “Most men,” he said, “kill eat their dogs without compunc tion when starvation threatens. But | have never been able to do that. “My ordeal began when, in at tempting to reach Seldovia from Port Dick, my three doge and | were caught In a terrible bilzzard. “Already half starved for lack of cupplies, which my partners had jvainly tried to get to me, the |storm caught me at a low ebb of | most heat per dollar. Acme leaves least ash, Lump, $4.00; Furnace, $3.80; Nut, §3.25; vitality. I had but two hardtack, | |a few prunes and a pinch of cocoa) jleft. And I had counted on mak ing Seldovia in one day. : Loses Trail in Storm “So blinding was the storm that) |I quit trying to make headway aft-| ler I had circled tn my own tracks) jthree tUmes That is a frightful | sensation to an experienced woods. | man. I! sat down to talk it over! |with the dogs. | “For the next seven days, Spot, | a Llewellyn setter, and Doe and) Captain, his 2-year-old pups, squat ted around a smudgy fire with me in the swirling snow. “My pinch of food was gone in| two days, I had a rifle, but no| smmunition Snares for rabbits | produced no meat “Every living thing, except us, | was holed up. | “On the fifth day I began having irrational spells, Crazy hallucina |tions. I thought the storm taunt- ed me, and I used to Hft my fis, sith curses of defiance. At sucl ltimes, Spot would leap before me, |bis guardhair bristling, ready to |fight for me to the last | Man and Dogs Starving | | “Then we'd all grow, weak and| |lie down around the little fire, |lapsing into stupor, moaning, fam ishing, waiting I used to speculate about kill | \ig the dogs, in my weaker mo ents. Often I talked it over wi pot, a trail companion who h |mushed with thousands miles and shared every hardship without a whimper. | How'd it be, Spot,’ T used to say, ‘If we killed Doc, or the Cap tain—what do you say, old man” “But the pups, hearing the Machine on the Pacific Coast METRO POLITAN— TWICE DAILY—AT 2:20 AND 8:20 LAST 4 NIGHTS—LAST 4 MATINEES 95e AT ALL MATINEES names, would lick my hand and with weakness—-dead game, like) their breed Then, while I wept they'd watch me wit with DOCK ARBITERS TO MEET AGAIN Mediation committees appointed by the Chamber of Commerce and organized labor to arrange a plan —OF THE— of arbitrating the longshoremen's SUPERB 11-REEL CINEMA SPECTACLE strike reached no agreement at a meeting held in the office of Im migration Commissioner Henry M White, Wednesday morning The meeting adjourned at 11:30 to reconvene at 4 p. m. to further consider th submitted by the Chamber of ¢ nmerce committee at Tuesday's meeting | We hope to arrive at some ‘thing definite to submit to the em |ployers and strikers,” said Senator }Sam H. Piles, of the chamber com mittee, “when we get together this | efternoon. NIGHTS 67 seats at soc WANT GILL AT B, C. 642 Seats at 256 Mayor Gill W an invitation — fre Children at Matinees 15c Ameri un club and the of Vancouver, B. ¢ the gue, , to d STAR WANT ADS BRING RESULTS I! an address on his the dry law at a mass m be arranged in his honor. vie ting to wa thruout Alaska, | vetually try to play until they fell | FRYE'S cocked and talls Wagging wearily. | ma! “1 Couldn't Kill Them” “IT couldn't kill them, life—not these |case before hearing half the testi pale of my lonely trail life! “When the came too acute to bear, | used to| with her tn the courtroom scenes, steep cottonwood fiber in hot wa-jand it was plainly stated by Hill's ter to relleve the palin. And I man- to keep the fire going, day and night ‘On the seventh day, Too weak to make Seldovia over I started back for my to save aged jthe ran, | cabin, “But things cades. BERLI Paul Buckley and His Dog my Ke, were own hunger ten miles away, and |to try reaching Seldovia by dory jaround the storm “I shook my fat at the pitiless sky again, muttering in my deliri- um, ‘You haven't got us yet—we'll beat you after all!’ » far fate bad only been toying with STAR—WEDNESDAY, AUG. 30, 1916. pot pangs be it cleared. determined | ‘opt peninsula. to come-—the first within « few hours.” (Continued) A$5.10 Trip for $1.75 Popular Railroad Excur- sion to the Cascade Mountains SUNDAY SEPT. 3 the natural stream, lake N SKYKOMISH | Children et ween 5 and Malt Fare LEAVE SEATTLE 8 A. M. RETURNING AT 10:30 P. M, TAKE A DAY OFF For recreation or fishing amidst beauties of forest, snow-capped peaks to be found in the Cas and INDEX and Return .. GROTTO land / Return | Chops | Beef.. ‘Ticket FURTHER TICK AND Office Second Ave. ell. Phones, Main 117; = PARTICULARS ETS AT Columbia $1.50 $1.75 12 Years, | SHOP EVERY QUALITY MARKETS Choice “Shoulder | Pork Steak, | Choice Steer Bolling Ib. | Choice ‘Leg of | Spring Lamb Smoke Spare Choice Steer Shoulder Steak d Ribs New York Full Cream Cheese, lb. . | THURSDAY SPECIALS | | Choice Lamb WESTLAKE MAR Corner Weatinke and Pine SEATTLE MARKET Look It Sia Bher MARKET ry haan Mattnrd Ave. for U. nities Oren 8. Purple Stamp Purity and Quality Until 6: TT RET Ad Queen, Arena, Sept. 9.) 50 Votes for. 20 PM PAGE 2 MAN WIFE TO DIVORC In vain, Maniey Hill pl with his wife to return home, Bhe had gone to her moth er’e, she had taken their little son, C , and had started a divorce. Nearly everybody knows how Manley Hill wae served with her summons to court the night before Christ 1914. He was working at the top a telephone pole, on the Bothell road, when a deputy sheriff ca nd gave him the papers. The next day Maniey had thought to be at home with his family in thelr home, 4238 Graham st. of He seized the papers and read. Mrs. Hill accused him of aban doning her, and called him a vul r lineman, ‘I had seen a lot of fellows whose wives sued them for di vorce He low and say nothing, and I had always thought that about the best thing for them to do, but when a man ts accused of some thing he Is not tity of,” sald Hill Monday afternoon, “I don't think it fs up to him to stand for it, Bo I fought her divorce.” Judge Dykeman found out after two days’ trial of the case that tt was not Manley Hill who had aban doned his wife, but she who had deserted him, and dismissed ber case. Stull sil forget their differences—ob, they had had differences, young married couples have—and | come back home, Still she remain- ed with her mother. And the following Christmas, Hill was handed his second sum- mons to divorce court “I made up my mind then,” he said, “that there w chances for reconciliation 1 would have let her have her di voree if it hadn't been for the un. just things she said about me. And there was my That a difference.” Judge French made fast work of the second divorce, dismissing the pleaded with her to yon, mony, Mrs, Hill's mother was alwayr attorney, Thomas 1H, MacMahon. that It was a case of “too much mother-in-law” that held the couple | apart. There was a scene the court room waa emptying, and Manley} Hill took his child In his arms to kiss him good-bye. Mrs. sill hurried home with her mother. Finding herself unable to get a divorce, © started sult for arate maintenance, a case which Judge French straightway dis. missed, holding that «be had vol- untarily left her husband thru no fault of his, and that he was not legally bound to furnish two |homes for one family. | Monday afternoon Hill w: Packing up some of his b | longings, making ready to | leck up his cold, unhomelike | house and move into a room | by himself downtown, when he saw Mrs, Hill and their boy coming. Could it be that, after all, she had repented and come ee |HEALTHEUL THIRST QUENCHER | . Horstord's Acid Phosphate t | prontul in a glass of water jis refreshing and invigorating. Buy la bottle, | no more | Maybe | took their child and | | his advances on September 1, SOUGHT EAT XMAS NOW IS SUING HER | home to stay? He was almost antielpation ith motherinlaw was with Mre. Hill, They came Into the house, |where he had suspended packing operations and was awaiting therm. Mra, Thompson was the first to speak, What was he doing, pack ing up, #he wanted to know Something held his tongue, did not answer her. The inquisttiveness grew. “Where are you going? Mrs. Hill Hi hesitated, and resumed hearted. | m going & while,” he | He went \in the Right happy again in asked then turned away his task heavy downtown answered He put bin baggage hotel and registered to stay for a room, then hurried to bis at.) torney’s and started a divorce “Just on the ground of aban- donment,” he said. “No mud- le a good straight @ string. worm has turned—the turned. ie ALIDA BLAKE IN LEAD FOR QUEEN am AD MASQUE QUEEN han Blako ........ 2,949,860 | Grace Rippe ... 2,839,000 | Flossie Stecher 2,267,250 || Emily Brown .. 2,033,400 || Elsie Scherpf .. 1,954,000 || Ruth Noble 1,503,100 Anna Klinger 1,280,100 Catherine Wilson 948,000 JUVENILE QUEEN || Pegsy Standlee .. || Margaret Lakan Edith Barstow . Nedra Seecamp | Ellanor Danks . Alma Bane | Ines Primeau . 1,926,450 1,896,600 1,768,100 721,400 709,200 | a | The officers of the Ad club have decided to remove contest head- room 216, on the second floor of the Post-Intelligencer building. Votes are to be delivered to the new quar- ters, where @ staff of adding ma- chine operators will keep count. A_committes of three, consisting| of T. J. Church, George T, Altnow| and Bert Drury will have exclusive control of the contest. None of the jcommittee is acquainted with any of the candidates, and they again | wish to emphasize the fact that the }Ad club ts favoring no candidate, and that no officer of the club, ex- cept this committee, has any voice jin the management of the contest of the show the ad men assure an entertain- ment and exhibition that will crowd the Arena ASKS $40,000 FOR HER LOVE Robert Abrams, a wealthy ower, of 44 Roanoke could not | be found Wednesday, following the filing of a breach of promise suit against him by his former alleged | fiancee, Mrs. Mattie Rieger, a widow, of 4407 Eighth ave, in which she asks $40,000 balm. According to Mrs. Rieger, Abrams is worth at least $375,000, and, after a mutual promise of marriage, subtly induced her to drink intoxloating liquor until she wid st, |was stupefied and could not resist 1915. Thereafter, Mrs. Rieger says, he DR. 1 . KR. CLARK | | Ad Queen, Arena, Sept. 9. 50 Votes for___ |What Do You Think of a } Letter Like Thi T must thank you for gentle treatme: tal work, which tory to me Gentlemen jtooth, you that wt |the least pain, and did not hurt me a dit. And I will be glad to recom mend my friends to you who are tn |need of perfect dental work VICTO NDBERG 4ist Ave, N If you were op a business Jar 1 got a letter t from one pretty « ould a are |very glad ested at any time The point of the whole thing ts that we are able to do absolutely PRlplons dentistry, and “we CAN | PROVE that we van do It. ‘And{ are interested tn ecessary to have nt to be n office Of needless and n ture. Fear caused more peop AY actually wary dente an an factor pr to your faction that kind of dental w & the pa tlent a t be the slightest de mind at all Our prices are the very lowest we use the best of materials—and our work will be done by a dentist who knows his bushtess thoroughly at this office. Hach and every oper Jator in thin office Is a graduate, reg istered man, who has his certificate from th ntal board hanging € ¢ in front of ht sleht of a | Regal Dental Offices De. Jn M. Clark, Manager 1405 Third Ave., . Corner and Union. ¢ Third jown wisdom at} » | film induced her to continue their rela. tions by. repeated promise of mar- | riag wedding has never |taken place, altho, she alleges, he made known their engagement to the world, binding their agree- ment by placing a ring on her eee ASKS REWARD FOR MURDERER OF PAIR | Prosecutor Lundin said W ednes day he would ask county commis- stoners to offer $200 reward for the arrest of Francis Von Heiden, alleged murderer of John A, Col- {2 |linson and Martina Antone. Gov. Lister declined to offer a reward until the commissioners had been consulted, Lundin said The slaying took place August 18, and altho Von Helden is known | to have remained in the city two} days, the police falled to arrest lim. WAITRESSES WILL | SEE “CIVILIZATION” “Seattle's 400" an invitation Alex Pant have been extent by R. Rosenthal es to attend V nesday night's projection of “Civil ization. the preparedness feature at the Metropolitan theatre Seattle's “400” is the wait resses’ union, so called because of the number of its members, | The union button will badge of admission CONCERT FRIDAY Cherniavsky will play Cho: pin'’s “Revolutionary” etude Friday night, When he appears with his two brother musicians in concert at the Moore. According to Manager Hood, a number of requests were made to him, asking that the selec tion be included in the program, be the} Jan oceans ra | Ruth Heeht . 688,500 | Virginia Clark 2 Hambul Caston Evelyn Call 121,000 | | Esther Samuelson 69,600 || Faith Haas 51,400 quarters from 1312 Fourth ave. to) The program for the entire week | is now complete, and) TODAY UNTIL SUNDAY Special Return Engage- ment of Robert Edeson in the Greatest of All Comedy Dramas / HEAVER” OR OTHERWISE ENTITLED “The Cave Man” ack, © coal heaver by profession, ts suddenly jon of social Hon, his instincts are those of and bis cave man methods win in the end. M. GUTERSON’S FAMOUS RUSSIAN ORCHESTRA MUSICAL PROGRAM A sneneenenereneere +e++ By Ziehrer “Vienna Reauties” . “Light Cavalry” .. CLEMMER Seattle's Best Photoplay House INSPECTORS GALORE ARE HAVING '- SNAP AS ROADS ARE NEGLECTED C. C, Botting is inspector of state sf state lother p< political field deputies as highways in the South district of] road supervisors. King county at $125 a month. They get $4 a day. Like Pete Smith, inspector in the} And six automobiles are main- North district, he was appointed by tained for their convenience. the state on the recommendation of Nevertheless,” said a South End |Lafe Hamilton, resident, “we haven't had even an In Franklin and other counties/ounce of gravel put on our roads there are no inspectors of state/ this season.” highways, but the law permits their | gauss appointment, and Lafe has not over- looked his friends in dishing up the plums. The county pays their salaries. The county engineer is ex-officio supervisor of public roads and | maintains a force of men to aid him in that capacity Yet, in addition to Botting and |Smith, the Hamilton machine has |found it advisable to appoint seven STILL SOME THIRST Prediction that August liquor per- |mits will number 20,000 was made at the county auditor's office Wed- nesday. Tuesday the record for a single day was broken when 1,069 | permits were issued. PACIFIC QUTFITTING CO COR THIRD & UNIVERSITY DRESSES nt ~WOMEN oT Wrtt OUR CREDITIS O.K. VERY PAIR OF by coming to Upstaira offices, on are lene than one-fifth of ground-floor expenses More than twenty-five years’ expertence. DR, KNOWLTON 100 Nocthern Nank tid _Fearth and Pike, For Good Looks ja must have good health can do her part my where expe produced and acted. A William Fox feature. woman She Jack O'’Dale at the Giant Organ by helping nature to keep the Plays Just the blood pure, the liver active Music to Bring and the bowels regular, with the Picture Out the ee of the mild, vegetable at Its Best. remed | BEECHAM’S _ PILLS t Sale of Any Medicine oe EMMA GOLDMAN | THE NOTED ANARCHIST | | | | | Second Ave. | | Delivers Last Lecture Tonight, D August 30 | Between Spring Tivoli Theatre | and Seneca First Ave. and Madison St. Subject: “Birth Control—Why and How"

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