The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 3, 1916, Page 10

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STAR—FRIDAY, NOV. 3, 1916. PAGE 10 service and low price. YOU SAVE TEN STEPS FROM YESLER THE UNION MAN’S STORE of colorings—plain, plaid and mixed. These Mackinaw Coats made, and you'll find them Black Bear Summit nd for the boys, too. Your big boy wants one. (GRUDGE IS CARRIED | BY MAN SEVEN YEARS FORGAN, Okla., Now 4— Ansoa| Green, 44 years old, returned here after seven years to visit, and was shot five times and killed by D. O. McNeill, a farm hand, whom Green accused seven years ago of burning his threshing outfit When your hat falls out, Yack of nature's nourishment, comes from the blow The Modern Vacuum Cap draws (he biood to the hair foots and gives it RENEWED LIF This te forced ctreu! the hair roots blood. your balr have « healthy « from falling out amt renew: the dormant hair feilfeles, so th again grow = healthy he send our caps out om gs 8 SIXTY DAYS FREE TRIAL What's rheumatism? Pain only im your own heme. We let you be the Stop drugging! Not one case in fudge. If you are not satisfied « the | inns tat treatment showing made, you retern the cay ea on’ plage pe ag there are no charges. We run a Rub the mise ig that you will be giad to pu ply* soothi enetrating “St. Ja Don’t Suffer! Relief Comes! the Moment You Apply “St. Jacobs Oil” at the end of 60 daya, oF ae On rs ae as “tae der spot” and relief comes in stantly St. Jacobs O1l" ts a jharmless rheumatism and # Modern Vacuum Cap Co. relief which 720 Barclay Block, Denver, Colo. *" a cin not | Limber up! Get a small ¢rtat ur druggist, and in be free from | bottl just a moment yo rheumatic and sciatica pain, sore ness, stiffness and swelling. Don't ! St. Jacobs Oil” has re Do you know that you ¢ your dental w done even by the Right Dr. Brows. suffer oft ees gre now open ¢ lieved millions of rheumat at from 7 to 11 7 ; ‘ ; 427 FIRST AV ferers in the last half century, an q Directly foot of Cherr é is just good for sciatica, neu Sver Piencer Drug Sore. Iralgia, lumbago, backache, sprains and swellings “Swift’s Premium” | Qleomargarine is made by churning together oleo oil, neutral, vegetable oil, milk, cream and salt. Oleo oil is pressed from choice beef fat Neutral is made from leaf fat Both of these are taken from Government inspected livestock. ‘The vegetable oil used is selected for its purity and flav ‘The mille and cream are purchased in the choicest dairy sections, are delivered to us fresh and sweet and pasteur- ized before use. The process of manufacture is carried on under the constant supervision of Government inspectors. ‘The publicis cordially invited to visit our factories and see forthe Ives how Swift's Premium” Oleomargarine is made, Im addition to inspection by Government officials and the public, our own experts give close attention to every detail and work constantly for improvement in our product and processes of manufacture. “ 2 ? Swift's Premium” Oleomargarine is good on bread and excellent for cooking and baking. Swift's Premium Oleomargarine is made and packed without be- ing touched by hand. OVERCOATS ‘] SUITS We feature Leopold Morse — the strongest Union-made line in Amer- ica—famous for style and quality. Other high-grade lines, too. A beau- tiful blue pencil stripe Suit of Lester worsted at this price... .... $15.00 Scour the town, look upstairs and down, you'll fail to find such real money-saving values as these. Schermer combines in the greatest degree possible quality, style, WHEN YOU BUY FROM (CARL ‘SCHERME 103-107 First Ave. So. This is the real Mackinaw headquarters. here in vast assortments, in all weights and great variety Oregon City Chippewa Falls Come and look them over, try them on. Sizes to fit all sorts of men, | SHOHS 3GVW NOINN They are are the best all here Skirt Will Tell Wonnan’s Age if » This Plan Goes! year See that way down her leg? She n? How do y Her skirt says so! That's how you w ell the » of girls and the uggestion of Mra. Charles W Stockton of Ridgewood, N. J., presi dent of the ate Federation of Women's Clubs, Is carried out Mrs. Stockton says women should wear skirts according to their age. Here's a barometer you might carry with you, if this law is ever passed, so you can tell ages But will women let their chief se cret be revealed, under law? WOMAN LOSES BAG WITH ALL HER COIN Police are searching for a blac bag containing $225, a ticket t alifornia aad a diamond ring, the property of Mrs. Carl Rauten kranz, which she lost Thursday or mont-Ballard car one hour he was to leave for t South to join her husband The deatit n, togethe with her little child, are under the care of the police matron, await ing results we Special Train Pulls Out Tonight’ for the Football Mix Saturday More than 200 University of Washington football rooters will de part from here on a special G train tonight at 10:45 t d for Eugene and Saturday's big gridiron encounter between the Universities of Oregon and Washington Not in many moons, if ever, has} pn in the] aé much Interest been football encounter between th most bitter rivals in the Pacific Coast conference wo (CURTAIN FIRE i attl be in tte path, When finally} OF (wo exceptions, Is a jettion can be crsanised. en the| TECTIVE TARIFF le j forward run into th |move to the attack a score of ser | PAID ADVENTISNMENT | 3 prorects MEN HUGHES or WILSON “Yyasnineton DURING CHARGE: Thinking Now or Regretting Hereafter? hall th Stat wae = aie BY HENRY WOOD ly ashington cast its ele é U. P. Staff Correspondent ltoral vote for ‘the P¥o WITH THE FRENCH ARMY | pregcive Republican, ON THE SOMME, Oct. 16 z ee ateEre (ay Mall)-Prenen artillery. (CHARLES E. HUGHES, men fighting on the Somme | Who favors protection to have developed their barrage \inerican oindustr and and curtain fire to a wonderful |iabor, and efficiency in Segree of perfection government, with a cab French soldiers now dash to ; the a ult of German pos! inet representing the tlons under protection of a Ibest ability of solld sheet of artillery fire that) Jor the Democrat, Wood often precedes them by not more than 200 feet The ourtain of exploding shells ‘ “ moves steadily forward, not only|Ucts of this State, who screening them completely from|advocated and approved the fire of the enemy, but wiping |the Underwood tariff, and out every remaining obstacle and every remaining German that may row Wilson, who favor Free Trade for the prod whose cabinet, with one they reach and capture a position ulel of inefficiency the curtain fire keeps just in front of them, offering protection trom |OUR EXPERIENCE counter attacks until the new po| WITHOUT A PRO- ench first began the d ment of curtain fire, a distance of) Trade tariff for revenue 600 to 700 feet In front of the ad 1 : {in 1893. W save tric vancing infantry was considered|!" ! Ve have t necessary to make certain that the/#t again under Wi troops might not by a sudden dash | Wha was the re own fire. | \Widespre aneint | But French aeroplane observers! ont and distre have so improved their methods ; und artillerymen have become so) attic skiliful that the distance has been ! lot reduced by two-thirds { Every time French infantry now | \ oplanes hover constantly over| them, and, with thetr wireless ap-|Unued until the workers paratus, tell the artillerymen|of Europe st work where to place the curtain offing and began destroy burating shells, ing. The temporary ar TWO KIDLETS HELD (22 pire ner FOR TAKING BIKE) tier is 10 way to judg ‘ jthe fu but | KENOSHA, Wis, Nov. 3.—John| past. The war 1 1] Brandenburg, 12, and Peter Porst'| The war is ne a com. | ner, 10, held on charges of stealing | plete tariff many | a bicycle, are the youngest offend “vat ers ever held here. It ts probable stric ia all that the parental alipper will be the Phe ‘ disposition of the two cases | who are now de- | stroying pr RABBI GIVEN CROSS .\;: PROPERT heir AMSTERDAM Nov 3.—Dr Steinbal, rabbt of Charlottenburg, | has been awarded the tron cross. | He is the first Jewish clergyman | to be decorated during the war, | | the most splenc the United Sta ject immediately inspired the enactment of like laws in al- oducts most every St of the Union ry will In all these orts Hughes was a pioneer, building idly as went. The stability of his social measures | For this market in the past, and th A woman is the patentee of a doublelooped strap for street Care| ie thre ir ndustry heir permanent place in our national record are due to theic that will serve either tall or short|: cat 3 t Underwood tariff combination of social idealism with sound legislative deta had & . ei adlaa ecap cand (Ruy Bae ex tepy : indnatries’ of the EFFICIENCY IN GOVERNMENT stand jotate of Washington na rd snar tine aT . | Hughes stands for EFFICIENT GOVERNMENT. He err roy jaa WE RECALL HENRY PAULLY AND may be depended upon to put at the head of the Departments + STOP CATARRH! OPEN RESTORE THE HOTEL LIBERTY AND of the ARMY AND NAVY men who will efficiently employ } NOSTRILS AND HEAD {) THE HOTEL DE GINIK? the vast millions which are being appropriated for prepared- } ee ‘ | So-called tariff for revenue made them necessary in ness, instead of putting those two most important depart- + Sage Ghoum Apeiiodin Keniel™ } Seattle and it will make them necessary again if it is in ™ents, as they are now, in the hands of men generaily } Relieves Head-Colde at Once. {i force when peace prevails ‘ acknowledged to be not only incompetent, but ABSOLUTE bevecerccce ceeeeeeeeesed Your vote may det ne the qu s. De you ent FAILURES in every line of practical work. If your nostrils are clogged and | |, ; your head ts stuffed and you can't|the Hindu and Japa breathe freely because of a cold or| supplying the demand of the nese workmen in Canada or elsewhere As Governor of New York, Hughes supported and ap- cat American market De proved the large appropriation made by that State for a rep- ere ce Bele smal betieter you want the industries of our Eastern States paralyzed by resentation at the Alaska-Yukon-Pacific Exposition at Seat- store. Apply a little of this fra-| Eur on so as to disable them from’ buying tle, and brought about the installation of the magnificent grant, antiseptic cream into your| and hington products . exhibit of the Empire State here. He further showed his ane edhe yeti qs Py ashington depends upon such industries intense interest in all that that exposition stood for by per- soothing and healing the inflamed,|4$ the manufacture of lumber, shingles and cement, the min so} y coming to Seattle, where in stirring speeches he de- swollen mucous membrane and you|ing of coal, the operation of the fisher and so forth, TO clared his strong, carnest and deep-rooted sympathy with ee eo ha ee KEEP ITS LABORING MEN EMPLOYED AND TO the Development of Alaska and of this great Northwest trils are open, your head is clear, | Pl .l MONEY IN CIRCULATION The labor record Hughes has been consistent along no more hawktr a snuffiin . blow In the matter of shingles ak millions of American the most sympathetic and progressive lines. At the expira- ing; no more headache, drynes 1 1 . tior i . * r of N Tork cr Ea Fp hl secre i wo af ng sent to British Columbia under the Under tion of his service as Governor of New Y ork in 1910, the Balm is just what sufferers from| ery cent of which would be spe the State Legis ative Labor News, the organ of the State Federation bead colds and catarrh need. It's n we had a re: tariff shingles of Labor of New York, said hed at n the papers. It is “He was THE GREATEST FRIEND OF LABOR LAWS that ever at oe gc occupied the Governor's chair at Albany. During his two terms he te gis : Ket goods pr signed 56 labor laws, including many of the best labor laws ever en: t « similar ed in this or any other State. He also urged the enactment of labo! labore men and women, who laws in his messages to the legislature, even going so far as to place e 4 or overcoat FRACTION OF THE AMERI the demand for a labor law in one of his messages to ra session that is sold in my estab- |) \\ din Fibevenk: thin ecanetition tock of the legislature. Only 162 labor laws have been enacted in this state lishanent es ie Pp 4 pet ’ At since its creation in 1777—in 133 years. One-third of these, exceeding ishmen' your vote at d the votes of others You must vote now in quality all of the others, have been enacted and signed during Gov- FOR YOU CANNOT VOTE AGAIN FOR PRESIDENT FOR ernor Hughes’ term of three years and nine months.” FOUR YEARS WILSON’S LABOR RECORD tanding trees in the State of Wa do no good During the time that Charles E. Hughes was ACTING Y any one ut the de r 1“ he 1 y i] 1 to any one. Cut them down and they y furnish er in the direction of genuine labor legislation, Woodrow Wil- ployment at iges, but put millions into circulation in son was as ac talking against it. Wilson’s real con- $ our State, cred prosperity in w every citizen share victions are against the laboring man, as shown by his pub- Will you convert these trees into gold dollars, or will you — licly declared hostility to organized labor. His heart is not. vote to give the and Japanese « itish Columbia with you. Read his own words. In February, 1905, at the that privilege, while your industries remain dormant So : People’s Forum in New Rochelle, N. Y., he said: ith other pee ae “Labor unions reward the shiftless and incompetent at What has happened before will happen again under the — the expense of the able and industrious same condition If you favor maintaining the AMERICAN “The ot 1 : 1¢ Objection I have to labor unions is that they drag STANDARD OF WAGES and keeping in circulation insthis ¢} tad he highest man to the level of the lowest. I must demur K NE country the money that you disburse for living expenses, with the labor unions when they say, ‘You must award the A vote for CHARLES E. HUGHES for President, otherwis« dull the same as you award those with specia! : vote for Wilson and FREE TRADI “eat = 1 Make a Suit or Overcoat That Pleases The Tailor the followi is taken from W row Wilson's HUGHES AS AN EXECUTIVE “History of the American People 709 Third Ave. Charles Evans Hughes first attained public prominen ., __ The Chinese were more t desired as workingmen, eatabliched 1600 as the able, courageous and indefatigable opponent of abuses if ng as citizens, than most of the coarser crew that came n the great insur e companies of the world centering in crowding in every year at the Eastern por cian er a New York Upon that record the people of New York And here is what Mr. Wilson said in < s at the lelected him a reform governor, HE WAS THE BEST EX Waldorf hotel, in New York City, March 18, JECUTIVE THE STATE OF NEW YORK EVER HAD “We speak too exclusively of the capitalistic class, There |As Governor, Hughes used the power, the vision, the spirit, is another as formidable an enemy to equality and freedom class formed by the {the intelligence, the organization, the resources and the f Opportunity as it is, and that is t |facilities of the great State of New York for the reformation Jabor organizations and leaders of the country” lof abuses, and for the improvement of conditions throughout Again, on January 12, 1909, in reply to an invitation lor the State a public address on labor questions, Mr. \Vilson He reorganized the Department of Labor, and made it “Tam a fierce partisan of the open shop.’ The Bank a real power in the State WHICH WILL YOU TRUST? Your Savi He secured the passage of laws restricting the employ HUGHES holds convictions which compel him to con Our eying ment of children in factories, and prohibiting their employ tinue his record as an executive FRIENDLY TO LABOR. ’ ment in certain kinds of dangerous trades WILSON’S convictions will lead him to oppose genuine P 0 | t t He insisted upon the adequate inspection of mercantile labor legislation whenever he feels that he can safely do 80. 4% Interes estahllstiniental dor che: grates atagee and roscoe HUGHES HAS NEVER VIOLATED A PLEDGE of fi rom = women disappointed an expectation in any office Noveinhar lak He strengthened the regulation of employment agencies Can the State of Washington vote for FREI TRADE? a all Ratan Mapoalted so that the New York law now offers the most adequate Vote for Hughes, Protection for Wash- on or before srotection the unemployed have in any State : ’ . . : November 5th ! He initiated and pushed to completion the movement ington s Industries, and Efficiency im Gov- Faun Ave for Workmen's Compensation. New York, under Hughes, ernment! At Plke was the first State to adopt the principle of compulsory Now is your last chance for four years to vote for th compensation REPEAL OF FREE TRADE in the products of Washing-") § He protected the savings of the people by a thorough — ton. Shall you or THE FOREIGNER have the American system of banking reform market ¥ He protected the youth of the State by ‘the abolition DO YOUR OWN THINKING—AND THINK TWICE jof race-track gambling. ‘The Hughes statute on that sub BEFORE YOU VOTE. Washington Branch Hughes National Alliance

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