The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 23, 1916, Page 6

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VIENNA QUIET | SUNDAY AFTER | ASSASSINATION | | BY CARL W. ACKERMAN U. P. Staff Correspondent | BMRLIN, Oct 23--Vienna an | thorities took prompt action to pre monstrations following the assassination of Count — Karl Stuerghk, the Austrian premier | The usual Sundey ngs were! | prohibited. Crowds gathered In the! streets indignant over the shooting, | lbut there were no disturbances. Dr. | Frederick Adler, the Jaansin, who dinplay |neas when first a when he lecrned of the authorities action He told bin jailer that he be the Vienna crowds would b | » great der ratic by and expected other radical) socialists to head the disturbance. | 22 MORE STEEL SHIPS LAUNCHED Two more steel hulls of vessels! were launched Baturday in Seattle shipyards | At the tle Construction & |Drydock yards, the Panu christened by Miss Hertha ldaughter of J. H. Todd, superin tendent of construction for the lcompany $1.25 Velvet Carpet, | After the launching of the special, $1 10 Panuco, the crowds moved to the per yard . yard of the Skinner & a cor. » poration, where the Hanna Nielsen $1.00 Velvet Carpet, was sent down the ways, Mra special, $1 35 Ji sonn W. paddy tponsored the Niet Se ate e'e per yard ° jeen. A band played thrilling muni 95 Brussels Carpet, Axminster Carpet, |during the ceremony | The eleen tn a carrier of 8,000 k per yard .. $1.75 tons, } feet jong end of b4 feet i Ber A $3.25 Axminster Carpet, beam, with 29.9 ¢ | $1.10 Velvet Carpet, pth of hold. The special, special, per yard..... 80c WE’LL TRUST YOU WR credit system has been established for your conventence a yor furniah y home along your own indivi Our ve are easier idea: dour pr are lower than will be found anywhere. Ne extra _ 10.00 Dewan, 15.00 Down, eo 1FTY rolls of highgrade Carpeting, the entire local ware house stock of a large Eastern manufacturer, We were ‘Able to secure these at prices that were tn effect before Market advance in the price of all textiles and, therefore, are able to offer you Carpet at prices (hat mean a substantial | paving. These Special Prices Include Making, Laying and Lining $1.25 Bi is Car BE speci, por vast, 95c $1.50 Brussels Carpet, Panuco ta of 6,000 tons. per yard $2.50 | The Seaitle Construction & Dry dock Co. have announced plans for the construction of a new $500,000 Moating dry dock to be started in the near future, | DR, NED SEES END OF WARS | Rev, Charles F. Aked, San Fran cisco divine mentioned in the 4 ches from the Ford peace # |Oncar I, Is in Seattle. | Preaching at the Queen Anse Con sregational church Sunday nlght.! booming fall of blazing trees he deciared his faith in the eventual | lution of the war menace Wab-let-ka again was) Just when the outoftown pa-|#° | of attraction at the|trons felt sure the heroine was) The Overthrow of secret di theatre Sunday, Where she about to be grilled Sunday, a life jeomacy and the fetish balance of | answered a volley of sized railway engine came along power,” abolition of private muni ‘on all possible subjects.|and she was rescued. “The Forest |{!on manufacture, gradual disarma Espaneze and company hare Fire” proves the movies have no| ment and the form m of & leacue fy pretty pantomime and danc-| monopoly on thrillers. pele gore Sg Mag The men and women in the cast| yo | ee *\ ean act the plece, too. And with these reforms will come Blenair Brothe Josie Heather, winsome English |!8ternational peace feats of strength and nerve Singing comedienne, with a pair of @. ine 4°Dike Street: __ bur 416% 42 of nations to pre Dr, Aked was scheduled to speak Mose-| Clever assistants, ts back in town at the Commercial! Club, before ite i cong | ar capecailtengi singing|and as cunning as before. members and Municipal Leaguers, F dancing act. Ellsworth and! Other favorites who hove been|@t 12:30 Monday have a new line of comedy, > on Orpheum time in other) they a clever are Ward Hrothers, in “Bert ALUES soles tay Meaiat and’ webeont. ei] bo Or Os Vi ROADS Sharp Note,” comedy; “See | and Lacey, in the comica! “Piano i —_ First, No. 57," and “The| Movers.” WASHINGTON, Oct. 23.—The in Flashlight,” make up the! Other acts were Friscoe, xylo-|terstate commerce commission an ” j phone artist; Edward Miller ané{nounced its first physical value | Helene Vincent, songsters; Kitaro tion of railroads, placing the value Brothers, acrobats, and an interest-.of the Texas Midland ratiroad ten ing travelogue tatively at $1,282,004, and the At oe lanta, Birmingham & Atlantic at 716,886, These are the costs of The Wilkes players have a production. The Tex hard, gripped the seats|derfvl opportuntty to demonstrate |!e** depreciation. is va then went wild applauding their worth in Robert H. McLangh-|257.417; the A,B & A Forest Fire,” on the new Or-|lin’s drama, “The Eternal Magda. 9°. vaudeville bill at the Alham-|lene.’ which is playing thia wee Sunday. at the Orpheum, with Miss Phoede| SLAVS ADMIT RETIREMENT 0 MeCormick has figured Hunt in the leading role | PETROGRAD, Oct 23.—The ‘effects with electricity and| Miss Hunt plays ber part with q|Rus#o-Rumantans continue their that make Lincoln T Carter | quiet grace that is powerful tn its [retirement in Dobrudja, under en-| He has produced ev-|effect. Norman Feusier, as Eijah|¢™Y pressure, tho offering stubborn Bradshaw, is a strong character,|resistance, it was officially an- while the remainder of the cast|sounced today If the thief who elie creates an atmosphere of natural-| oe eee ees mp menssser IN FIVE MINUTES h Elston of 3380 15th oa, | neas in the production . W., between 1 and 7 2.| The biggest tnugh show of the! Sunday night, will show Monte Carter reason at the ¢ NOSICK STOMAC any time tomorrow night, ‘heatre is this week's offe ing. ’ 2 eee JAMBRA ; who thinks people don't foned melodrama, | hould| ORPHEUM be one aid in Americ arte? 3 A Mo “I will pay him $100 in cash—!15 funnier than « Bi; 3 good service for robbing a. new comedian, Lou Davis, has INDIGESTION CAS |the role of the colored-servant, and me in TOsErH ELSTON. | {Airy ‘rocks his audiences ‘with BE: ’ ¥ laughter over hia rendition of the| Ps ‘ 5.99 song, “Buckwheat Cakes.” “Pape’s Diapepsin” Is the Walter Spencer, the male juven-| Quickest and Surest ap Blanche Gilmore, character wom "AND and, and George Weiss, inan Amer) 1 what you Jus! is souring on | h . rally to the success of the per- je . ’ : ad, refusing to digest, or you belch SHORT WAITS torman Phyllis Gordon's spe-| gas and eructate sour, undigested - |i* @ pretty novelty, and yesterday heartburn, fullness, nausea, bad }earned encores at every perform }taste in mouth and stomach head ance. The Dancing Chicks havelache you can surely get relief in UALITY |new costumes, new songs and some itive rainutes get A thrilling episode of “The Yel- the for: 4 plainly printed on these ETS low Menace,” the big serial, is also) tifty-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, peptic troubles of all kinds must go, Steer and why it relieves sour, out-of-order soeee opened Sunday st the Palace Hip.\utes. “Pape's Diapepsin” is harm- 1] It is headed by McCarthy's Min-|less; tastes like candy, though each Mtesk.............. Cc |strels, a big company mair rf Loin jall the traditions of minsirelsy at!similation into the blood all the 20c a high standard, Carson Brothers, |food you eat: besides, it makes you tree Sweden's Representative Ath-/go to the table with a healt and skill when they lift cach other|most, is that you will feel that neing your stom and intestines are OS See Ireland,” hes wit and humor. The|need to resort to laxatives or liver Sugar-Cured Smoked 18c Two Stenards offered “Both Sides | pills for billourness o: nstipation | f fle; Ethel Davis, prima don: Stomach Relief. | LONG WEIGHT | can old-man character, add mate-|your stomach or lies like a lump of |elaity, “I'm Looking for Some One." | food, or have a feeling of dizzines lexcellent specialties | Ask your pharmacist to show you TUESDAY SPECIALS offered ane then you will understand why dy. PALACE HIP 10c Hippodrome Road Show No. §| stomachs or indigestion in five min aining |dose will digest and prepare for as. letes,” show wonderful strength |petite; but what will please you and do hand-to-hand bal 5c William Cabill, “The Man From/clean and fresh, and you will not Pork Loins........ of Vaudeville,” that of the per-| This city will have many “Pape's New York Full former and that of the audience.|Diapepsin” cranks, as some people They got big laughs by giving a/ will call them, but you will be en- Cream Cheese, Ib... 24c vaudeville performance and picking |thustastic about this splendid stom- | AT THE FOLLOWING Markers |! 1° Hleces ach preparation, too, if you ever wine MARKEY Alexander & Co. have a|take It for indigestion, gases, heart 1422-24 First Ave. AMERICAN MARKET 619-21 Third Ave. WESTERN YWAKKET 1102-1104 Wentera Ave, pretty novelty surprise feature, A| burn, sourness, dyspepsia or any young woman #ings a song and her {stomach misery partner illustrates it by painting et some now, this minute, and its scenes on a canvas. rid yourself of stomach misery and Leever and Le Roy sing, dance, intigestion in five minutes talk and yodel pm nr The 12th chapter of “The Grip of Evil,” the Pathe Weekly Pictorial, | eatdane manne and Geo, Inn ce Hip Or} 6445 Ballard Ave. cheatra are ot sof at show. Monday and Wea-| OPEN UNTIL 6:20 P, m-|neadey, the feature photoplay will be "The Fugitive,” with Florence Lam Badie as the star, Albert Hansen deweler and Biiversmitn eT Occidental Ave. | 010 Becond Ave. Near Madiaon, STAR—¥ INDAY, OCT. 23, 1916. PAGE 6 [RTT (PAID ADVERTIGEMENT) IN A SPIRIT OF FAIRNESS Prior to the enactment of the present so-called “dry” law the Seattle Brewing & Malting Company brought into Seattle each year $2,400,000 from its export business alone, and the figure was mount- ing year by year. The Pacific Brewing & Malting Company, of Tacoma, was doing an export business of more than half a million dollars a year, also increasing annually. The Olympia Brewing Company, and the Bellingham Bay Brewery; the Aberdeen brewery and the big plants at Spokane, and other cities of the state, swelled this huge export total to more than $5,000,000— making beer next to lumber, the largest export product of the state of Washington. This great export business, reaching into millions, was wiped out completely, so far as the state of Washington was concerned, when the present law went into effect. The immense sums that were expended here for grain, hops, labor and supplies of all kinds; the thousands of dollars paid out for taxes, water, light, fuel, rents, local improvements, ctc., no longer go to the farmers, wage-carners, business and professional men and women of Washington, and to the support of the government, but to rival states and cities quick to grasp the advantage. Added to this great loss during the past ten months is the constant stream of gold flowing to San Francisco and other points outside the state, under our present “permit” system of this law act wisely when they of the state, yet permitted beer and be shipped in by outsiders, who pay noth Did the fran e manufacturing that which the law says can be legally consumed here? Was it good business to confiscate millions of dollars’ worth of taxable property and deprive Washington of its $5,000,000 (annual) export business? A keen sense of justice, as well as consideration for an important local industry, led the framers of the newly adopted “dry” law in British Columbia to permit the manu- facture of beer for home consumption and for export. The Calfornia measure, which is to be voted on this fall, per mits manufacture of beer, wines and liquors for home use and for export So long as our national government legalized the manu- facture of beer and permits its unrestricted shipment in interstate commerce: and so long as the state of Washing- ton under the present law declares it legal for the individ ual consumer to’ possess beer in limited quantities, does it not seem fair and right that Washing citizens should be o on taxpayers and manufacture it under the Initiative Measure No. 24? And what about the moral question? We will concede, without argument, the passing of the loon as being a good thing for the general public But how about the “permit” system; is it a practical temperance measure? The mail-order houses of San Franci elsewhere who are flood viskey and other olden harvest, will vote the “permit” system a grand success the state with cheap ardent sp its, and reaping a likewise transporta tion companies But does not the present law have a tendency to pro mote the consumption of whiskey and other hard liquors, instead of mild beer? SIGNED: HENRY BRODERICK F. K. STRUVE JOHN DAVIS VINCENT D. MILLER JAMES D. HOGE = = = = = = 2 = = 3 = 2 = : = = = a closed the brew ardent spirits te for the privilege Was it fair to deprive Washington of the privilege of = | 2 = = = = = = = 2 = 3 = = = = = 2 = HERMAN CHAPIN J. D. LOWMAN IRA HINCKLEY THEODORE N. HALLER Se TURTLE LER ELLE LLL EL Lec ccescbicaalebiial bbles al ne baal ainda Is it not true that “bootlegging” is confined wholly to the sale of whiskey and alcohol? liave you ever heard of a “bootlegger” being caught with beer in his possession? Is it not true that because of the ease with which whiskey can be concealed about the person “bootleggers” ply their trade among the younger element—at dances, in cafes, at picnics and parks—almost without fear of detec- tion? Initiative Measure No. 24 limits the purchase of beer, which must be kept at the buyer's residence, to be con- sumed by himself, his family, or guests. It cannot be sold by the purchaser No agencies, sub-stations or storage warehouses will be permitted, the sale of beer (in limited quantities) being re- stricted between the manufacturer and the consumer. This eliminates all possibility of illegal traffic of any kind or nature A purchaser buying more beer than his needs require, and a brewer selling beer to such purchaser, will both be guilty of a gross misdemeanor, and liable to a fine of $1,000 and imprisonment in the county jail for a term of one year. This places an iron-clad responsibility behind Initiative Measure No. 24 So vital is Initiative Measure No. 24 to the welfare of the state of Washington that it should not in any manner be confused with, or connected in any way with any other measure that is to come before the voters November 7. Let us cast aside personal prejudices, and look at the matter in a spirit of absolute fairness If we can regain the great $5,000,000 export business, without detriment to the moral welfare of the state, by all means let us turn the great tide of gold flowing into our own coffers. And if the Nation decides to go dry, let the brewing industry of every state be treated impartially We believe that every business man, taxpayer and wage-earner in the state of Washington, interested in the continued prosperity of our great commonwealth, should give Initiative Measure No, 24 broad and careful considera- tior H. C. HENRY J. F. DOUGLAS J. C. FORD JOHN C. EDEN JAMES R. STIRRAT J. LORING WHITTINGTON M. GOETZ DR. FRANK I. SHAW R. W. HILL ALFREDRAYMOND,M.D. F. W. SUTHERLAND (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) AUUUAVAHQGNEOOAUANENOAUOOENAAAAOOUAGGGiaddNOEUOUUAAGGAREUU QONEEANEOUOUUUOEAAEONOTOUUUUGEOUQAUUUOUGANOOQUUCUOUAGOOAOGONGOUUUDVOUAAOGGOOGEOROOUANOOONONGERONCOUONOAAQORNEGEUOOGODUNGOQNNGQEEGOUOUUUOUUOUNANONANEQNNNEEUINY LULU UU AUUOUA HANA Le MMMM DO MUU DALLA LLCA LULU LUCCA LALLA LALLA LLL LL OUOENSSQSQNPONONOGCOOAUIUUbNESSGNAOOGUTUOONEEOGGUQGOOSQOQGQOQOAQEGOGUECNONSNOO08NN00GQONOOCOUEONEOGONQOOOOOOGUUUUGNSNOGOOOOCOOGUUUUUUOON ST

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