The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 7, 1917, Page 1

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Lumber Employers and Employes “Getting Together” Today! )MELOYERS and employes in the lumber industry are “getting together” today, as The Star had sug- gested. Out of the conference between leading lumbermen, union representatives, several disinter- ested citizens, and Dr. Henry Suzzallo, chairman of the state council of defense, WILL come a plan of settlement of the grievous strike now on. _ The Star has an abiding f faith in the efficacy of employers and employes “talking things over.” When men are willing to be reasonable, when they are willing to discuss peace proposi- 4 tions, peace is bound to result. And The Star rejoices today that it has, in some measure, been able to contribute toward today’s conference. pSsttstissitiusssississsssscesstsetisrssss ie ssistesssS x5 au | LAST EDITION r Yes, you can take out the tin six tonight without fear of rusting the b fenders. Weather Man Salisbury Greet Fliers Tonight Fliers from Europe will exhibit movies and ex. plain how airplanes can hurry the end of the war at a big free open meeting at the Arena at 8 p. m. tonight. Be there | GREATEST DAILY CIRCULATION OF ANY NEWSPAPER IN PACIFIC “NORTHWEST | (| says: “Fair tonight and Wednes welt day SEATTLE, WASH,, TUESDAY, AUGUST 7, 1917. ONE CENT RVERY WHERE Fossssssstisstcsicctsstssissssetsstssssss sssbssessstssssssis VOLUME 19 ist Condo. “I Wanted to Wallop Him But ‘ TO HELP U.S. MENACE TOU, §,| Dian: Dare, So This Is What I Did to Him a A R M ) R Yy! ! Col. Rees, British Daredevil, That's Warning as Warring Next Day in The Star.” : SEATTLE WILL 3 THE SILVER NOTES OF A BUGLE Presi Win War” | Hold First Meeting | PRA DNGNE Sate. 38] SUNOS, 2S Tye Le : Te » — - 2 2 Have NO ONE DEPENDING! / THE IDEA OF WEARING A AN D, IN A DARK ROO: Vv. AYOUNG ee AT wer, SEEKS END OF STRIKE ON You. m You wor DEN LEE THE Retr \ SOLDIER STIFFLY AT SALUTE $' suyrallo Has || Prenension inthe wear cepa. | (DRAPTEDS [- | . WITH HIS FACE TURNED 3) Ch F Gistee svalisnt in Abe Nerthc “ : z TOWARD THE FLAG, WHICH HE Cheery Message {| sem wee the so for No . With’ whieh “Chairman | Henry CANNOT SEE, BUT KNOWS IS for Northwest th which © Henry THERE. Suzzallo opened the meeting of Seececeeeseoesesoseees RETREAT Seattle has # special interest the State Council of National tonight the Defense Tuesday, when the warring factions in the lumber industry were brought together }| for the first time since the strike was deciared July 16. | “The pressure upon the State | Council of Defense is great,” }| said Dr. Suzzailo, “because the situation in this state ha By a Star Reporter But in the office the typewriter rattled like a machine gun, as the AR isn’t all fighting. Nor is|young sergeant worked away alone !\ of war. Aeroplane W it all drilling. Nor yet ts except for me, and I didn’t count.;) and the lumber industr it all standing sentry, with |I don't think he knew I was there ® gun over your shoulder. | eee ' to Be tee in First Draft.” For every 10 men called before select service exe | r ready had a marked effect on | | in S i T saw another side of it yester |» nowy know what {t was that terest the oreaeain of the allies.’ amt boards in Seattle Monday only one man Tigao a Leo Armory, | T made me look up from my list.) to be at the Are ting Dr, Suazallo was borne out In bis found ready to go for war. Tenia # he bugle, because Re: the m of the seriousness This figure is c tad f saath Watside the stern, dark building, | nce yorded every font niinctee tt |) visitors, the ¢ Maal pe “ne anteten This figure is compiled from the results of Where Second infantry troops are! wasn't the band, for the same rea-|| evening, Dr. Henry Su first full day’s physical examinations, but board offi re no 1 personal representative of : Se na Shen they. are not Some! son. It wasn't the stopping of the || have mting menage, it | nt Wilson, who Is preparing THAT HADN'T OUGHT said that fewer men claimed exemptions Tuesday than Boots were pounding the brick |scrrants typewriter, | because it renca,joday between lume }] carteeese cn casAitiona ther ing XO BOTHER You comm on Monday and it is possible that the ratio may be pavement of the street. Recruits ) M4 You've Liven THIS | A, little while. en and om representa { hamper the completion of army ca being drilled in the manual Ghen Ais qenetel pubis ats tie ray wpasmeebent “ It wae something In the air, | " onments and the construction o ms and tm A fl — pilin +4 ; +4 Ae ive aren base pe think—something that had net been |) !2Vited. Doors will be open at 7 || the American air and nea fleets On the basis of 1 in 10, 15,000 men will ha WITH A WOODEN HEAD a: to one in eight. D. m. {| The etin held in t of ye a, r Sed ‘5 a i ? te mieally going thri the arm-semi-|there a moment before. | glanced 31 tices of tha: vedmaie Of the wal jto be called from Seattle's registration of 27,000 phore signals to the monotonous |¥P- SOLOIST | Oey te the ME balding, beat | secure the city’s quota of 1,450. drone of an officer's chanted “A,| Near the window, but facing at} “Every airplane America ning at 10 t 8 expected Sev o > ine hy a > S \< m0. D” right angles to it, the young ser-| sends to the front is one to the (1.7K *t 10 & mm Ik was expected | Several men examined by the doctors Tuesday Behind the armory, or some geant was standing ..ffly, his hand! good,” says Lieut. Col. L. W. greater part of the iy showed patriotic spirit of high order, say the officials. here up in its towers, two buglers | to his forehead ,| 8. Ress, of the British Royal Air Fleet at Stake | ‘Thomas Tottenson, of the Pacific, r were practicing taps. At the guard A minute passed. Another, Still | Flying corps, who, with the | ne guzzalio called the hearing ed front ntrance, a private was he stood motionless other foreign members of the M the hope that out of the discus about "and sleepily wielding a broom. Others Suddenly the music that had federal aircraft board, arrived ‘Stood stiff outside official doors, or | been slipping into one ear and out| in Seattle Tuesday morning to ¥ | block, swelled out his chest and de z clared i. sion peace might be brough | “I have taken my chance. 1 had , | between the aber employ i ; a ja fair deal and I'm ready. I might paced beats with solemn responsi of the other took on significance. | tell the Northwest what Ite line striking mil d timber opera claim exemption, but I’m not go bility. The band was playing “The Star-| part in the war in the alr is to tives, who quit to enforce demands ing to.” And in the company headquar. Shansied Bender” me } be : lfor an eight-hour day | Newlywed Is Ready | oe ters, where routine clerical work got to my feet. Thru the win-| The members of the commission} 1) ss Maclaren Aint tha ctke Widiles: Sateke 68; Lancs 2el pas? as being carried on, officers were gow I saw the brown ranks on tt ent the morning Ling spruce! ation wax being watehed careful) ied tho manne eek @ictating orders, sirning letters | brick stree houlder to shoul anuf of the district and|)) in, ral authorities at Was | ay ‘ en't and straightening out the minute |they stood, their hands at their | investigating labor ditions a al rr - rian aed whore oa cb Me Picea Binary ear) 5 complications that arise in the sta- | foreheads, facing the Armory Tuesday at 8 p. m. at a public between the two factions con claim exemption on the basis of ‘ A (oe of detachments of troops) And then I knew, The soldiers|meeting in the Arena, the not x in macerdanene Out tae te aa” Seas ae, heat SIS Of By United Press Leased Wire a wide territories. were Pager en Some- | visitors will expla n00 OF thO] otsc to chtala Lier cent of the | Raymond W. Miller, Hotel West Wakes eae Bless) 1 where on top of the building, the | airy in war and will illustrate : : rio sare ns , , ; ccchere of oe Tet wie, flag was ates ing down its “ataff woptioon sides the work | soem ipumhor “neotes lake, was turned down by the phy vice president of the Lai t odd corners of th . es at n . = . r the an effective "| sicians of Division 5 on account of} pPharmacal Co., shot and kil 5 fngton Second infantry boys are and the young sergeant, with the|that it is doing in “mab the | tieet | caaetiaaash ’ “a doing sentry duty in the dead of |sixth sense that tells a soldier in| world safe for democrac poe himself in an exclusive apart — cially prominent. Lambert and” | F \ 1 Need Vast Supplies He was very much disappointed,| ment house h i 4 night along mountain bridges and|What direction from him the flag} Means Sure Victory 1 ts of the war . an o Draws. verett' and the officials will endeavor to| He was 43 years old, Ye : railway tunnels is, no matter where he may be “Every machine from the United | pa on e lumber, ax ont-| arrange to have his teeth treated i t LD OE RBRE ore |was facing it and saluting. | States is one to the good,” declared Parker, wer > lari so that he may 88 the: i ¥ § n ker, were so large \s ay pass another exam g <ING f pleu bie, a |Col. Rees. We have enou now prosperit , 4 ination Wie ‘second wits, cs. ae 74 Be Ss MAKING myself as inconspieuw & prosperity — te n Kendall Lambert, formerly a ] « ‘ous as possible in a corner of 5 STOOD, statue-like, till the back the Germans; with hy m i | Yl 1e ever a a 1 | All save six of the 5% men exam-| Webster Grove, Mo. heiress; it 9 one of the offices, as I dug last notes of the band died f American 1 pushed t ined in Division 2 Monday passed) fave been separated since Ob. ovt a list of names from the files, away; and then he turned to ctory of the the physical tests, but a large per tober, it is sald. Mrs. Lagieene Watched a young sergeant operat- his typewriter again a war ip ent to fill centage of them claimed exemp-| jg now in New York with her ® ing a typewriter on the desk oppo-| “Rattle, rattle, rattle,” I heard tt s along the btained e S evel ) oe Ol ) a er, fons of ¢ kind or another. 6-month-old child. Lambert te 4 tite me. going, as 1 went out thru the com 1 it is the alrp r try | Division 7 examined 100 men and| gaid to have deni¢d that there : cide the war.” hina ‘— The typewriter was too high, but | pany quarers. ‘or it. It The men were pouring upstairs 35. Fifty-five of the; has been a separation. OV THE GOITOR filed claims for dis. is one of the few men We in this country there was no better Who draws Everett True Lambert was divorced from his) ~ was misbehaving, and he had to |from the drill grounds, their guns ears both the Victoria |to make plans without the proper hg sop olka iaytoaak ak | first wife several years ago. Stan stop and wrestle with it e once |in the hands, the big news on their|cross and the military cross. Hoth /harmony between those plans and| ,,, 1 he ® bkeable growth, | 5 inspected by the physl:| are two children by the first iaRel io ehile, His sunburned lips, their eyes dancing. jof the decorations ¥ the elements which are needed to| PVCrett? OF it ie erett?. Or | ion 3, eight were Te | Ting barron P. and ae we was a deeper red with haste This was war as we usually think |daring air exploits carry them out FR ge he i only 30 men clatmed | fambert, Jr Bie: bald jaw was set as if he were charging of {t—marching men with guns,|/cross came first dritt atal to our dignity, asswell| '8 eee wr | A tele sphone call from an une | b as to the self-evident plans of the n failed to “get by” the an enemy; and he jumped like a and a glamor of novelty and ad-|on b ust by the king v known woman re: esulted in ee oon ‘ had. taken 18 wile of trend th departiber I have been looking thru The doctors of Divisio , anc e re f the 3 every five minutes, IT when I think of real war| The Victoria cross was awarded| ‘The crucial issue, which was dis| to the younger days of The | art carried away exemption /and asked if Mr. Lembert wal best Outside the breeze blew cool and B hereafter, 1 shail sometimes | (Continued on page 10) cussed at the hearing Tuesday] Star, when we were a little jdlanks. Six called did not appear When the maid went to his TOOm sweet; but it was hot in the little| recall a young soldier, putting | | morning, was the tion of the] paper, and I found what is | for examination. It is said that|she found his body. some of them have enlisted al ~ _ 4 ready } The King county division 2 had : Day Has he poorest day of a On ‘ow * 4 but of on passed the Be vo Arrived at Last | ams and all four filed claims “meatless day” has arrived Thirty-four men of Division 6 | in Seattle. went to the desk for exemption At least 300 Seattleites on Thurs- 7 forms, Nineteen out of the 71 ex-|day will gain their nourishment > : a ques : room tho the window was open his strength and skill into running yelght-hour day which the lumber] probably the first Everett True In the halls, feet pounded past/a balky typewriter in a hot room, employes are demanding cartoon. : vs the door, and the jingling notes of and standing at salute all alone | : Business Men Attend ‘hé date is December 29, a bugle and occasional snatches of | with his face toward a fla The hearing was held before the 1906. nee ee WORRYING U, S. full membership of the state coun mversit' 1s traveling. The cil of 4 » and five net rust conductor passes | : fense and five neutral bu 1 sis Lae pardon, Mister | _ band music came drifting in not see, but knows Is there, aia — I ness men of Western Washington Ah fs ogeeb Play te 4 SAREE | WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.—The la-| They were Judge Burke, President} Conductor,” says Everett, “b} aoe ae bor situation in the U. 8. 1s cans.|A. J. Rhodes, of the Chamber of| What time does bape can ing the government alarm, War|Commerce and Commercial Club; Paanol” ‘gays the .grumgy | amined failed to pass. from carrot rolls, nut and vegetable —=— , - work is threatened to such a point | Judge sorge Donworth, Judge| conductor | = Eight of the 81 sent before the loaves and other vegetarian delica= 1 ‘ g {that a concerted campaign started “+ ade A Ballinger and J. W.|Seattle Shy on Condo, Creator of Everett True |doctors in Division 5 went down cies. They are patrons of Harry | Summer today to dispel unrest among the| Maxwell, president of the National G C . before the stethoscopes and steely Stahl, Fourth ave. restaurant man, | workers City bank rumpy Connies is Condo's ideal, because he Is jeyes of the M. D.’s, Forty-two who announced today he would not Merchandise | AS MURDERERS War, n 4 labor departmenta| The representatives of the lum We have all of us met grumpy everything Condo isn’t |made a bee line for the exemption serve meat on Thursdays hereafter, a committee to study | beT employes were BE. 8. Grammer conductors who return surly . tm: counter, Is being closed out no nt of wage schedules in| Chairman of the Lumbermen's Pro-| answers, and we would all of | Condo, I've been told, is a | Kight, three of them because of 5 Seattle's progressive ofibc WASHINGTON, Aug. 7.—Denon-| navy yards, arsenals and other gov re eee mast Ree a 5 : | us like to do fo thee what fe mpant pean rom the wife's | bad teeth, were exempted by the British fe Sailors to a Som marks ues are|ciation by Representative Johnson, |ernment works to bring about sat-| Burnside, G ong and erett. True did—if we only point of view is sometimes | nhysicians of Division 4, and near 4 ine ee These values P aonttie the I. W. W., as ctory schedules , Bloedel. dared. necessary for Mrs. True to wal lly all filed exemption claims. Two Have Movie Shows. ‘ are fully described in the ads.! “murderers nterrupted Miss committee, including As: J, G. Brown, president of the In That is the secret of the na pouse, Such a need |of the three exempted were al-| By United Prose Leased Wire c In toda Star you will find:|Jeanette Rankin's appeal to the|sistant Secretary of the Navy {ternational Shingleweavers’ union; tion-wide popularity of the Ev- ises in the Condo |jowed only temporary grace, the) LONDON, Aug. 7.—Latest films Diechard | Purntiees house today for government opera-|Roosevelt, Walter Lippmann and|J- M. Nordland, secretary of the| erett True cartoons, True pun household. Condo is a meek, | physicians telling them to have|Will be shown British sailorg in | é “ 2 tion of all metal mines, She had|Wm. Blackman, are to report their|™nion, and J. M, McDonald repre-| ishes pests familiar to us all gentle husband ltheir teeth repaired so that they |their arduous wait for the German 7 GroteRankin Co 3\ charged the Western mine owners | findings to the government August |Sented the strikers artes | Mentally Condo 4 ; ¥ | fleet. Liverpool citizens establish: McCormack Bros Page 3/with holding up prices and black-|24. Employes will then have an Everett, I notice, ts quite a (Continued on page 9) led the necessary fund. —! » ‘ H r 2 LIMP ») . * | ‘. Red Front Clothing Co listing employes when cries of,| opportunity to submit appeals from STATE COURT RULES lot stouter than when he first Gives You a Swat ically Condo used to be 10s P8 3!“What about the I. W. W.?" came|the recommendation of the com de his bow to the public. Brit ond | FrascrPaterson Co.'./Page 4|from all parts of the house. |mittee iy ‘Sept ic is noved alt) AGAINST BELT LINE| he tents aay older, | raver tun ow he fills his DARING BRITISH AVIATOR PICKS MacDougall - Southwick Miss Rankin replied difficulty Condo is stouter, : hgptteest get fe “i855 ke shape 4)not much of that out The high cost of liyng and a de-| Sustaining the decision of Super-| like Everett, isn’t a day older, Reon plain, almost shab- GERMAN BULLET OUT OF AIR 4 \ REE Woodho se - Grunbaum Johnson jumped up and shouted: |termination to share W war profits for Judge John 8, Jurey, the state Condo, you know, invented My clot nes, and steel-rimmed | LONDON, Aug. 1—(By Mail.)—The Pall Mall Gazette is ’ Furniture Co. _....Page 5|"The I. W. W. murdered the gov-|are responsible for the unrest, of-| supreme court has denied the port] Everett True, fn at sharply to him || responsible for this The Rhodes Co. Page 6 ernor of Idaho, They threatened | ficials state. commission the right to build the I've known Condo a_ long seals soit ora Na mt Flying low over the German lines, a British aviator was Frederick & Nelson..Page 7\the life of Utah’s.governor. They | st Marginal way belt line. The| time—15 years or thereabouts ey rereiibiia dash. t ne right soon in the midst of a whining swarm of German bullets, The Bon Marche ... Page 10 otherwise conduct themselves | | One horse-power will run 270, decision came as support for a He is as unlike True as any h baat he vee Fs gah Lo Germans in the trenches were firing straight up, hoping to wing leasly in that region hey claim |000,000 ordinary watches. permanent injunction granted by thing you can imagine. He wae ue dies i sy gla “ the flier or pierce his gasoline tank. RS no allegiance to the government of | —_ | the superior court on the grounds} never had a fist fight in ze vane “4 oe Fe meg Ae ae The. aviatur. a gol younasiat ng Ya Same prnlestin 6 the United States. So why should er wee that the commission was seeking| life. He is quiet, even timid. ‘ } ere ascend the last few feet of its maximum height, It stoppe He THe NORTHWEST an poe Tateode of Ebale he | ~ STAR WANT ADS ||to apply funds for the belt line That's how he came to in that he is thinking about what ‘f still for the smallest fraction of a second. The aviator reached iy Hverett True would do to you |} quickly, grabbed the bullet and put it in bis pocket, (Continued on page 7) hanged to a beam pole out|) BEST FOR RESULTS | construction which were voted b | vent Everett True, the le @\the people for other purposes vigorous, bold. Hverett

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