The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 31, 1916, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

our conventence own individual lower than will be along Genuine Brass Bed in the new | Solid oak Dining Table, tn velvet finish. Has two-inch | fumed or waxed finish. Has and five filling rods. | heavy square pedestal and a ranteed not to tarnish. Reg- | 45-inch top that extends to atx ular price $14.00 $ feet. Regular price $ ee 10.95 | (*"" "="" >" $12.45 Wandhouse-Gninbaum tyre «inc: aoe din fe ne NATIONAL ORGAN PRAISES WILSON now employing floor walkers. Thousands Have Discovered Dr. Ed wards’ Olive Tablets Are a pets, can acuat WASHINGTON, Oct. 31.—That Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets—the | every G. A. R. veteran owes a debt substitute for calomel—are a mild | Of Statitude to the administration of but sure laxative, and their effect, President Wilson {s the declaration on the liver is almost instanta-|°! Col. John McElroy of this city, a neous. They are the result of Dr,|!ife-long republican and for 32 years Edwards’ determination not editor of the National Tribune off treat liver and bowel compiaints|@ial national organ of the Gri with calomel. His efforts to banish |AT™y of the Republic. Col it brought out these little olive TOY has refused to go on the stump colored tablets. for Hughes These pleasant little tablets do|_ “For me to take the stump against the good that calomel does, but | Wilson would be to smite te Lor have no bad after effects. They | that helped us.” he says don't injure the teeth, like strong |/80!diers owe much to Presiéent’ wit} liquids or calomel. They take hold|#0". The new widows" pension law if the trouble and quickly correct it, | Comes more nearly to doing justice cure the liver at the expense |t0 the wives and independents of old fof the teeth? Calomel sometimes | *ldiers than any pension law ever * plays havoc with the gums. So do|Pasted. Commissioner Sallzgaber Strong liquids, It is best not to/SPpolnted head of the pension bu- fake calomel. Let Dr. Edwards'|Tea™ by President Wison, Ime been Olive Tablets take its place. Jone of the most efficient pension Most headaches, “duliness” and| Commissioners we have ever had that lazy feeling come from consti-| “Of course, most G. A. R. veterans pation and a disordered liver. Take |®f@ republicans. I am myself; but Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets when owever much we disagree with the you feel “logy” and “heavy.” Note democrats over purely party mat how they “cl clouded brain and how they “perk up” the spirits Me and Z5e. must admit a debt to President Wil-| jeon and bis administration.” |White Rubber Is | Protecting Traffic | Cops During Rain : : i i Good Old Home-Made Family Cough Remedy ters, as Veterans of the civil war we! \ | piles, H It wasn't hard to pick the traffic lofficers out of the crowds in the lrain at Fourth ave. and Pike st Much Better than the Heady- Kind—Fastly end Cheaply PP SDE BOC Te SOEO0 60-0 60-64 60000660648 and at Second ave. and Pike st If you combined the curative Monday afternoon peeves ot yp gee ¥ They wore white rubber uni. forms, which protected them from head to foot The idea hax been advanced by the National Sa‘ety First associa tion, and is being tried in San Fran cisco, New York, Chicago, Boston and Detroit, as well as Seattle In white rubber, it ig believed, the officers will be more easily een by auto drivers and pedestri ans, who must heed his directions during the rains. The uniform consisted of cape, cap, coat and boots—all white hardly have in them ali the cu his simple rup whieh to prepare int bottle and fill the bottle| ith plain granulated sugar The total cost ts about 54 cent Bives y full pint of really | cou rup than you could buy feady-made for 41,50. ‘Tastes pl ant and never spoils. This Pinex and sugar syrup prep- tthe cause t loosens the phiegm. sto y throat. tickle and hea . irritated membranes th: t, chest and bronchial o gently and easily that it is ; SLINGSBY BABY GETS MORE TIME LONDON, Oct, 31.—The house of lords today granted Charles Eugene Edward Slingsby, principal in the noted “Slingsby baby case,” which involves vast Yorkshire estates adjournment until December 1 Thru bis guardian, Charles Hen Reynard Slingsby, the boy had! jasked for adjournment for six ‘months becanse of lack of funds for bronchitis, croup, whooping ough and bronchial asthma, there is nothing better | Pinex is a most valuable concen trated compound of genuine Ni pine extract, combined wit has been used for o break wy) ere coughs: ppointment, be sure iggist for “2% ounces directions, and don't accept anything else. A guar-| antee of absolute satisfaction or| money promptly ref ded. goes with this e Pinex Co, Ft erations nk your with full aa Our Next President 7) One. 5 ‘ of The Star of $5. See tikene All sketches must be in this they will not be considered. you can guess which o (Did you save the pictures terday’s paper? You know we bwccats by Address yeare GOLD DUST IN SAFE Eighty pounds of d dust was [nestling In the Rainie nd hote safe Tuesday, following the arrival of Mr. and Mrs. isaac Matthews and Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Buck of Atlin, B.C. They arrived in Seattle from the Atlin mining district, carrying their earnings tn pok Mat took from claima during the year For Pile ulferers ea the leased hews. four Ing. bleeding or protruding rectal hemorrhoids and all macy of yor Sec a box at all dru x often cures, Fi with booklet, matie pper, if you send us coupes} troubles, in the pr home. Pyramid Kindly Name Street GREED Catarrh Jelly abs ithout equal lend The ‘only an and ge 1 catarrh jell offered Sold at all druggists in 25 cent tubes, packed wit dir ms in y tull it ETROPOLIT THEATRE ¥ Nov. 5] Mats. Wednesday and Saturday THE LIEBLER COMPANY'S Stupendous Production {100 PEOPLE 100 Week Starting SUNDA SEVENTH AVE. AND PINE This high-class, new market offers you scores of splendid, money-saving “bargains every da For ex ample, we cite you two remarkable SPECIALS FOR WEDNESDAY Best Japanese Rice 6 Pounds for 25c 9 Bars Lenox Soap 25c (While It Lasts) Both Specials at Sugar Stall The Pine Street Market Is the Place “Where Little Money Gets Big Results.” Arabs Camels eee DENTISTRY 2K. Crowns 5.00 pAINLEsgis'"\5 AusTIN PAINLESS AUSTIN he $8.00 (815.00 Third and Entrance 1504 oc Nees and send it to the Sketching Contest Editor The best sketch of the man Ang it will be printed in The Star the day after election. sample ple Pack- | who is elected wins a prize and then draw in his ne will win, office by Monday, November 5, or of Wilson and Hughes in yes told you to!) (MINISTERS HEAR HENRY M’BRIDE Speaking before the mnbers of the Seattle Ministerial association STAR—TUESDAY, OcT. at the Plymouth Congregational hureb, Monday, Henry MeBride. republican nominee for governor. won applause from the large gath-! ering present, and was given a ris ing vote thanks for his when he stated his strong nition to the two pending “wet” initiative bills, urged the people of the state to vote them both down, and assur ed them that he would veto any at tempts to weaken the present dry law The only changes he advo |cates are those that will strengthen the enforcement features | present law | A speech by Mra. Harriot Stanto Blatch, in Chicago, making the last appeal of the woman's party in this campaign, will be heard in Seattle by long distance telephone arrange aes at the headquarters, 130% Fourth ave EVERYONE LIKES THIS COLD CURE “Pape’s Cold Compound” ends a cold or grippe in a few hours. Your cold will break and all grippe misery end after taking a dose of “Pape’s Cold Compound every two hours until three doses are taken of the! HEAR CHICAGO TALK It promptly opens clogged-up nos-| trils and air passages in the head,| | stops nasty discharge or nose run ning, relieves sick headache, dull ness, feverishness, sore throat, sneezing, soreness and stiffness Don't stay stuffed-up! Quit blowing and snuffiing! Ease your throbbing head—nothing else in |the world gives such prompt relief as “Pape’s Cold Compound,” which costs only 25 cents at any drug It acta without assistance tastes nice, and causes no incon venience REAL PAINLESS DENTISTS | store A introduce \In order to our new) (whalebone) plate, which 1s the lightest and strongest plate known. | Joes not cover the roof of the mouth; you can bite corn off the cob; guaranteed 15 years. | Gold crown $3.00 $10 set of teeth | Bridge work, per | White | Gold fillings [Silver fillings | Platina fillings $5.00 tooth, gold $3.00 $3.00 .$1,00 up crowns r Pinte | and | » relief from conditions that are rap-| countries? That the results in each igle idly becoming unbeargble. Wilson|case were as follows? Russia an tint and his party have given us no re-| failed to bluff Austria, Germany have tested o te" work When comin® |iief fiom the greed and avarice of| failed to bluff Russia, England and | Seen tee ne thiw aa with you | big business; they have saddled| Relgium and France failed to blutt upon the nation a conseription law) the Teutons, ete., ete. Now, what Cut - Rate | that means a death struggle against! proof has Mr, Hughes that he OHI Dentists $15 set of teeth (whalebone) $8.00) national far enough in your denouncing the and the unneutral shipping of war powers that be for the manner in| supplies to the fiends in Europe which the masses of the people are would be stopped | being exploite that war profits For these reasons, |, a republican, may be swelled prodigiously shall vote for Allen L. Benson, and | My first vote was cast in 1872,|/1 hope every laboring man and for U. 8, Grant. I continued to in the United States will do | vote the republican ticket till 1 as-| ve! LF. WHEELER, SR sisted in electing Grover Cleveland | for his first term. | saw that a|/ INTERNATIONAL “BLUFFING!”" change in the administration did cditor The Star: Mr, Hughes not mend matters, and I realized| says, in effect, he would have then that Cleveland had given the “pluffed” the European nations into banks a stranglehold on) abiding by international laws to the the finances of the country letter, and that if they, or any of I have not been blinded by the hould have falled to do this, | events of the past three years, so would have been a rupture that 1 could not see that both the| between this country and the coun old parties are irretrievably tied to! try that would first attempt to devi Wall st. and the corrupt interests, ate from international laws as we rest of the heartless corporations 31, PAGE 1916. (PAID ADVERTISEMENT) WILSON “Labor Unions reward the shiftless and in- competent at the expense of the able and in- dustrious.”—Wilson at the People’s Forum, New Rochelle, N. Y., Feb. 25, 1905. “The objection | have to labor unions is that they drag the highest man to the level of the lowest. I must demur with the labor unions when they say, ‘You must award the dull the same as you award those with special gifts.” —Wilson, same as above. “The Chinese were more to be desired as working men if not as ens than most of the coarse crew that came crowding in every year at the Eastern ports.”—Wilson, ‘‘His- tory of the American People.” “I am a fierce partisan of the Open Shop, and everything that makes for individual lib- erty.” —Wilson, address January 12, 1909. “We speak too exclusively of the capitalis- tic class. There is another as formidable an enemy to equality and freedom of opportunity as it is, and that is the class formed by labor organizations and leaders of the country.”— Wilson, address Waldorf Hotel, New York City, March 18, 1907, “You know what the usual standard of the employe is in our day. It is to give as little as he may for his wages. Labor is standard- ized by the trade unions, and this is the stand- ard to which he is made to conform. The la- bor of America is rapidly becoming unpopular under its present regulation by those who have determined to reduce it to a minimum. Our economic supremacy may be lost because the country grows more and more full of un- profitable service.” — Wilson, addressing graduates of Prificeton, June 13, 1909. When Wilson was asked to sign a declaration in favor of the Eight- Hour Day, he declined, saying: “It seems to me that nothing of this sort can be decided thus in the abstract, and that no valuable conclusion can be arrived at ex- cept by a real discussion of specific cases.” The Chi Woodrow Wilson.” WHICH IS SINCERE—WILSON OR HUGHES? WHICHISLABOR'S REAL FRIEND? | ago Building Trades Council, representing 165,000 wage earners, has just, gone on record against Wilson for his “lack of sympathy with the American appealing to one and one-half million men constituting the membership of the Building Trades department of the American Federation of Labor, to “work and vote against the re-election of HUGHES: “Every measure proposed in behalf of labor has received the most serious and sympathetic consideration. These interests cannot be sep- arated from those of the community, for the welfare of the toiling masses is of the deepest 4 concern to all.”—-HUGHES, Speech of ac- ; ceptance, 1909, “I believe in a six-day working week. But do you know that the men who are making the six-day week a possibility and an eventual fixture are these men and their associates? (In- dicating labor union members present). I long ago came to the conclusion that the labor unions are going to solve the Sunday labor question to the best interests of the country. Join hands with them and you will double your results while halving your labor.”— HUGHES, to State Federation of Labor, 1908. “My friends, there are some who regard la- bor as a source of strife and menace of difficul- ty. I regard it as a fine opportunity for the amelioration of the condition of men work- ing with no other purpose than to make the . most of themselves and to achieve something R for their families.”.—HUGHES, Address, August 29, 1908. The Legislative Labor News, of New York, October 10, 1910, said: “Now that Gov. Hughes has retired froni politics and ascended to a place on the highest judicial tribunal in the world, the fact can be acknowledqged that he was the Greatest Friend of Labor Laws that ever occupied the i governor's chair. During his two terms he has i: signed 56 labor laws, including among them e the best labor laws ever enacted in this or & any other state. f “Only 162 labor laws have been enacted 5 in this state in 133 years. One-third, exceed- a ing in quality all the others, have been enacted and signed during Gov. Hughes’ term of three years and nine months.” Gov. Hughes’ Workmen's Compensation Law on the New York statute books is the model for all other states. man,” and { rae rg eg 'S MAIL 7 REPUBLICAN FOR BENSON 1 believe that it Allen Kditor The Star I have feed | should elected president, and with interest what you have had with an aroused electorate behind to say about the enormous increase | him, there would at once be an em in the cost of living, but I think | bargo placed on sending food stuffs you ve not In any instance gone needed at home out of the country view them. Thus, have been that all laws would have been strictly adhered to, and the i e., the steel trust, the food trusts. the ammunition trust and all the which fatten on war, blood and) “Lusitania” would not have been | destruction sunk if Hughes should be elected and| Has it ever occurred to Mr. to no Hughes that that was exactly the method employed by the European a republican Washington, congress we need look sent for would have been more successful in his bluffing game than were the Puropean nations, now bleeding to death? militarism; they have done nothing to protect the people against the rapacious food trusts, and promise nothing. Benson | the result would | work not Wilson's plan did work, I know that, and while Ms Hughes may firmly believe what with him, fer ex am a petty officer in the regular | naval service good to the naval men | in | crease of pay and many other bene.) fits, for a president of the United States, not for a president of the navy, o! the army, or of New Yor state, any other state, or person, or cor- | poration. 1 Perhaps Mr. Hughes’ plan would | 1 do not say that it would) but this much I do know: Mr, he says, and many A BLUEJACKET AND AMERICAN he has no remedy to of- CITIZEN. ppt his beliefs in his policies. | haly, Iam no politician, 1/HER POLITICS WRONG 4 CHICAGO—Mrs, Scott Durand, — Roosevelt was very|famous owner of Crabtree Stock It was dur-|farm, pleaded she was in a hurry & his term that we received in-|campaigning for Hughes when ar raigned for speeding. The judge I shall vote’ was a democrat and fined her, “THE GOOD UUDGE GETS POSITIVE INFORMATION.) [BRR yeo rou anew 0017 SURE: ITS a wuper. im OF A CONTENTED MAN! | MY FRIEND MURPHY- { Cont INACAN HE'LL TELL YOU WHy A BILLY GOAT INACAN AROUND THIS LUMBER FACTORY>: I'VE FOUND came? THE REAL CHEW, ANDI DON'T HAVE TO DISLOCATE ME UAW T: Pe but when I vote, c UST put it up to a gentlemanly fellow and watch him take to the tobacco that calls for a small sized chew. A few facts like these appeal to his common sense:— W-B CUT Chewing is rich tobacco. It’s shredded, you get next to all the good tobacco taste. The touch of salt helps bring out the flavor. It’s not sweetened and flavored to death—you don’t have to keep grinding and spitting. Made by WEYMAN-BRUTON COMPANY, SO Unien Square, New York Cy

Other pages from this issue: