The Seattle Star Newspaper, September 4, 1916, Page 2

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“fet us send youa VICTROLA on 30 days’ FREE TRIAL!” FIFTY-TWO YEARS’ SERVICE T0 THE HOMEFURNISHER | wn es NO CASH DOWN! “make your own terms!” make your selections of homefurnishings up to $100 without a cash payment at time of purchase. ~we invite you, the Seattle homefurnisher, to “easy to bu y- “make your own terma—our well-known liberal t credit services will (it your individual needs! easy to pay special demonstration and week sale of ACME EMPRESS combination sea demonstration of ¢ perfect tary type com- dination our Model Kiteh —the Acme EMP RESS combina tion coal and RAS steel ran is undoub base ena and sanitary porcelain white neled white range top for coal a burners £ —full asbes lined STANDARD FURNITURE CO. Second Ave. and Pine Si., Seattle L. SCHOENFELD & SONS 101 to 111 So. Eleventh St, Tacoma ——— | ‘to drown herself Saturday after noon at Lincoln beach, near si FRATS ‘BUILD HOMES, int rhe girl is the step-daughter of Members of Betts Gamma soror Levy, 2750 Alki ity and Sigma Nu, ave, and she said she tried to and Theta Delta drown herself because of a spank- at the university, will move into} ing she had received. She was re- new hdmes, bullt for their organiza | moved to the detention home. tions, when college opens. A cow plete gymnasium and glass covered| sleeping quarters, with open sides PARIS Sept. | — ay eather | | COR. THIRD & UNIVERSITY ini age north the Somme, it was an to FOR EIGHT TOWNS F nounced today. The French spent 0 lat nitht improving their newly agg sep Heat eager no attempt! Business courses offered by the YOUR CREDIT t 0 K ? cagiainuns the important posi. |¢*tension division of the Universit SAVES GIRL AT ALK _ . Walter Gordon, 12 12, of 7074 Alki} pluckily saved Wilna Levy, from an unsuccessful attempt OACIFIC OUTFITTING CO Delta Tau Delta Chi fraternities, | Mr. and Mrs, J. M “ of Washington will be given in Sp ae ae & “pg peg a dia French yester: |i ane, Tacoma, North Yakima, Eve { i ett, Olympia, Hoquiam and Aber.) | | deen, as well as Seattie, this com (PAID ADVERTISIN ing year, cording to the ar nouncement just made public by JOHN E. BALLAINE’S CANDI- i225 administration, In charge of thi work DACY FOR CONGRESS AMONG HIS NEIGHBORS IN THE IWVESTIGATE Pun UNIVERSITY DISTRICT. McGregor, labore were arre jat the Oregon hotel, Second ave ‘3 and Washington st., Monday m A ing by Detective A. A. Brow nd | | The North End News Gives Particulars for Benefit of held on open charges, pending in-| Voters in Seattle and Kitsap County, Incidentally | \°*\!«*!ion of information that the a Showing Up Methods of Secret Opposition by Agents of the Alaska Syndicate. FOUR LIVES were the toll of the Bering hing season, it } ae | His long and euccessful struggles was lea he arrival of the against big odds to open Alaska by | schooner a, with a cargo of |the building of Government rail ) pounds of fish in San Fran roads there are familiar to his cisco | neighbors. His work has added mil-| ————— a lions of dollars annually to Seat- The Kosine | Treatment for, tle’s commerce and given employ ment and opportunities to thou leands of laboring people. Mr. Ballaine’s force of character, EPILEPSY his ability and his clean life com mand for him the respect of the people of the University district in all factior degree that and all parties ia “unusual of any to a man in any Community | An Alaska banker who handles the Alaska business of the Morgan |Guggenheim Syndicate, and has joffices in the Pacific block, has | phoned several reputable residents of the University district, whose |names the News has, and urged |them not to vote for Ballaine be cause he owns property in Alaska Mr. Ballaine does own property {n Alask dehn E. Baliaine for Congress and y and has owned it for many ut in all of his statements 000 Miles of Government Rail-\'9 Committees in Congress he has bd Pee oO publicly and manfully stated what! foads in Alaska, Prosperity for)iis interests in Alaska are, and Beattie and Washington. successfully advocated the building of (éitortai trom North End, Univer. Of Government railroads Preatanor, wy, News, Sept. 1, 1916.) regardless of his individual inter. The candidacy of John E. Ballaine| ests | for congress has been tollowed| Every business man and Inboring| D with more interest in the Univer-|&" 1" Seattle has financial inter ests in Alaskan development, it fs hypocrisy to pretend that we have not. It is because we do have financial interest in Alaska opment that we want Alaska de-| and sity district than that of all others together because of bis long resi dence and wide acquaintance in this community. He d his family Jhave resided at 470% Fifteenth ave-|veloped, rather than to have {t ‘Bue northeast for sixteen years.|strangled by exploitation for the| Vis two daughters are students at! further and exclusive inrichment of the University |the New York millionaires who own| From general expressions itis cer-|the Alaska Syndicate. | 4ain that Mr, Ballaine will receive! {f Mr. Ballaine | devel. | should be elected I shall have something of impor | early 4 unanimous vote in all the|to Congress he would take rank| tance to say to you in next Satur University district north of Lake|among the ablest and most influ | day's and Monday's Star. U ential men in that body. EDWIN J, BROW STAR—MONDAY, SEPT. 4, 1916. PAGE GIVE PRES. WILSON ~ WOMEN SCORE + REPEATED OVATIONS. LABOR ADVANCE BY ROBERT J BENDER triotic United Press Staff Correspondent | every aire vantage point in the bh nope of | Will Never Be LOUISVILLE, Sept. 4.—(On lneeing the chief executive, | / Board President # Wilson's The cheering at the station de Relinquished Train.) — After a day anda |Veloped into a deafening roar an : 4 Alght of ovations and’ denon |the train finally came toa stop, t|OUTLOOK 18 BRIGHT trations by crowds led b Jeontinued intermittently as the —— bands that greeted the presi: Japectal waited for an hour while BY AGNES NESTOR dent's passage thru every city | th excursion trains bound for President National Women’s Trade and hamlet en route, Louis |Hodgenvilie got away, loaded to Union League ville today presented the cli the guarde The outlook for the women max of greetings when the Virginians, West Virginians and| workers of our country is bright presidential train steamed over | Kentuckians v with each other| forthe coming the bridge and entered the sta in according t president tion here thusiastie reception on hin first Shrieking calliopes on the big /teMded trip since his renomination | river excursion boats wailed out ag flrs danoorsi party - “My Old Kentucky Home and pa very namie, Ge y jwhieh the train passed turn regardless entire trip here, manne during the RAILMENTO * FIGHT FOR LAW anish War Veterans. The day parade of laborate and bi Ank were organi lingering year of warfare still | clung to the railroad brother hoods today. Tho reasonably confident the eight-hour bill means a year of peace on the veterans, and rail tine brotherhood men Every state in the Union ts frankly said there will be a |#ented. Missourt, Ohio, strike if the transportation jand lilinols were represent chiefs ever try to restore the more than a thousand soldier Jeach state 10-hour system Featur of the ROLAND H. HARTLEY | HARTLEY To Labor: You have built the Nation; for it we honor you today! But— Y responsibility is as great as your achievement Unless you realize that responsibility you may bring down with a crash the structure you have builded Che agitator who exploits labor for his own gain robs the toiler and victimizes the public his tyranny thrives at the expense of the honest workman, organized or unorganized, who scorns the methods of the highwayman The selfish labor union that waxes over-fat while fellow laborers grow lean is a curse to all labor—-a creator of class warfare—a blot to true Americanism. Union labor agitators intimidate individual members and force them to support highshand ed deeds of violence Labor agitators, almost at the point of a gun, hold up employers of labor and take from them money that should go to all workers. Look at Detroit—look Los Angeles—cities whose growth has amazed the world; cities built by “open shop” labor, where every man has equal chance to earn his own and his fam- ily's daily bread It is a well known fact that within those Prosperous cities a higher average wage is paid to labor than in any city dominated by arro. gant labor leaders : You can do more than all other powers with in city and state to make Seattle and Wash ington great Show your loyalty to Seattle and the state by casting your vote for the man who stands for industrial freedom Consecrate Labor Day to truth, to the best to your fel low man, interests of Labor. to patriotism, To thine own self be true, And it must follow as the night the day Tho canst not then be false to any man.” f the hour,| (25,000 SPANISH WAR |. “VETS” IN CHICAGO wae started with a huge the et wince the vet —— ————— labor was so scarce, year. The prospects for organizing women into trade unions in great num- bers never looked more promising to an en thru! ra Pte | National eo Trad Union leag be le ves great work CHICAGO, Sept. 4.—-From 25,000|can be accom BY CARL D, GROAT to 30,000 Spanish war veterans | plished, has asked | (United Press Staff Correspondent) jsathered here today for the an: |its affiliated local WASHINGTON, Sept, 4,—A [nual national encampment of the leagues to join In Agnes Nestor |holding interstate conferenc giving early this ‘tail union women, leaders in different sections of the country |may confer to plan a campaign thru which we may effectively organize s, t mont 80 trad repre Wisconsin the thousands of women in the un ed bylorganized trades, * from| national campaign | day and plan, too, # ow an eight-hour the employer There are trades everywhere this state of unrest and ready organization. In Iiinois, we realize, we are far behind other states the matter of legislation for prot workers, because we etill have the 10-hour day and 70-hour we we do feel we have advan we consider that in 1913 measure we could have re attention was a 10-hour day and 60 hour week. In 1915 th gislaty had sufficiently advanced to co wider a ninehour day, and legislation for the shorter Was not obtained, the shor got considerable support year Illinois will have to eight-hour day. We look forward in the coming for rkd: ter w xt ate @ separate division in the de-| partment of labor, to be known my & woman's division chief. This bill was introduc the present session, and while. no| committee action has been taken, has the endorsénient of the » tary of labor and the support of th committee, A favorable report assured early in congress, is the next session of} ucation to be granted . Opportunities will be lopen to women, giving them train jing for trades and occupations that jwill fit them to enter more profit able employment. We must not only p! ing the greatest harve prosperity the country is enjoying. but we must be ready meet whatever unforeseen situations may develop after the war. SHORT NEWS WITH A cargo of railroad mate rials, the | 8 tir port Crook sailed for Seward Sunday, where 2,500 tons of cargo will be discharge n for re it from to HEALTH COMMISSIONER Mc- Bride addressed a letter to the city council, j| struction of roads in the Cedar riv ler watershed | K, OKADA, a Japanese coal pase eron the Tensho Maru, leaped into the waters of Elliott bay Sunday and disappeared at Pier 5, where. it is belfeved, he drowned in at tempting to enter the United States. COUNTY AND state road offi cials left Seattle Monday for a ma chine trip over the Scenic highway, to consider improvements made necessary in the Cascades by storms and snowslides SEATTLE’S PIONEERS funeral of Mrs, Louisa Boren Den ny, last survivor of the first 12 per sons to land at Alki point in 1851 FRANCISCO MADERO, father of the late President Madero, was found dead in a New York hotel from heart disease. He left a for tune of $6,000,000 THE LADIES’ MUSICAL CLUB has included in its 1917 program such artists as Mischa Elman, Ju lia Culp, Walter Damroseh, Charles Wakefield Red feather and the Cadman Flor fanina aloy HAIR GRAY? THEN APPLY (-BAN If your hair with gray, prematurely or just turning gray, or if your hair is dry, harsh, thin or falling, simply sham. poo hair and = scalp a few times with Q-Ban Hair Color Restorer. Soon every strand of hair (wheth er gray or not) becomes evenly dark, soft, flossy, fluffy, full of Mfe and health, full and heavy and fascinating, and entire head hair is so beautifully and evenly darkened no one could suspect you had applied Q-Ban, It is absolute ly harmless and no dye, but Q-Ban acts on roots, restoring color glands, Sold on a money-back guarantee, 50c for a big bottle at Hartell's Drug Store, Seattle, Wash. Out-of-town folks supplied vy mail-~Advertisement, gray | With prospects of federal aid to protesting against the con-| Crowds gathered at | Short Hours and Better Pay meet the} both thru organization and leg: | The Adamaon bill was passed late encampment will /tslation Saturday by the senate. Brother-|be & competitiive drill, maneuvers Unorganized women have |hood leaders then se mos |and a sham battle by two brigades! been working long hours for sages to their rs,/of the United States Veterans’ le) low wages so long that an un jcancelling the to | gion rest exists, certain to find ex- |strike at 7 a. m, today Pr nt Pression in uprisings such as Wilson signed the bill in his private} ELVIN ASSELIN, 40, an employe! we witnessed in strikes last car Sunday while stopping in Wash-|of the Cascade jumber mill at Bal-| spring. | ington on his way from Shadow|lard, fell into the bay Sunday morn-| Shorter hours and Increased | Lawn, N. J., to Hodginaville, Ky ing and was drowne | wages were demanded, and because not being able to draw on the im migrant, the demands were easily | won, in} ion of woman) session of congress to a bill to cre | q—— with a Soman turned) out Sunday in a body to attend the} quartet It Darkens Gray Hair Evenly) streaked | The old town's one best bet tonight! Tomorrow RED-HEAD MATINEE All little girls with hair just the color of Billie Burke's will be our guests. 4! roa ' 15¢ | Children | Sc BILLIE BURKE “Gloria’s Romance” AT THE COLISEUM UNTIL WEDNESDAY NIGHT —————— Tonight (Monday) at &—Contestants for Ad Club Adv, Show QUEEN will appear on our stage. + LEAGUE HERE WIRES WOODROW WILSON The Woodrow Wilson Independ- nt league of Washington, thru eorge R. Martin, secretary, Satur- wired the following congratu- latory message to President Wil son This is to convey on your no-| tification day something of the great feeling of admirati for y which springs from the big, warm heart of the sacific Northwest i Berctol cats plomaize pot ay n each carton. in buying for you t f best foods obtaj | We only -ask-4u to “it a meal at } BIRD’S | Daylight Cafeteria That done, we know you will become one of our many regular patrons | Continuous Service (Daily and Sunday) | 11 A. M, to 8 P. M. | Second at Seneca | aay “PLAYERS Grvake wm SONG Dramat Tue A Or SONGS” Sensation | R20; 16 ¢ and 500 Satur Kvenings, Matinees Thu: ay NEW PANTAGES Mat 40, Evenings, 7 and 9 JUNIOR REVUE THE FIKLDING otoplay Star, in Person. Big Features, Ie and 200, ——$<—————————— PALACE HIP" . 1:80 to 1 pom, ay aeh tyeneay | avcH BROS, VON DELI | Wittiams and Company, Sketeh Millurd-Clay ‘Trio; dutes and Frances || Gartelle Bros. | Feature Photoplay and Selig-Tribune. News. Mats, 16 Any Sea ave and Sun, ie with America and | Alaska we feel that you have interpreted world You see as Lincoln saw in his that surface issues of this nation is fundamental right of humanit; day THE STEFANSON Arctic expe dition schooner Gladiator is expect u ed shortly at Herschel island. left Nome several days ago. GRAND | We are for you because the ideals of mission in the vision clear its back of the con issue of the common THEATRE Third Eugene Levy and Cherry Mgr. Five Super- Acts ° udeville Abrams, Johns & Co. IN “The Factory Girl” pee The Most Thrilling Patriotic and Sensational Serial Ever Made DON’T MISS THE FIRST ee Ww 5 iis Matiness 10¢ Eveni

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