The Seattle Star Newspaper, August 11, 1917, Page 2

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Your Milk Supply Guarded United States are com bv es to anaure the purity the milk we sell, The health of your family, so far ik affects it, is secure if you us Broadway Dairy Perfectly Pasteurized Products Our milk is pasteurized and clarified with scientific curacy by experts—under abso sanitary conditions is zealously 4 until it reaches your home wateohfulne and } © care he fine of as 1 It guard Call up East 242 RIGHT NOW and order our wagon to tall at your house every day Watch for announcement of formal opening of our new dairy 1620 Broadway East 242. WE MAKE REAL ESTATE LOANS AT VERY LOW COST 500 $10.25 Our charge for For a $1,000 Loan is $7.75 On a $2,000 This small charge includes making a Loan it Loan it is $15.25 Attorney's Fees, Appraisal Fee and Record ing Fee. It does not include cost of bringing abstract down to date prior to examination, and remember—you pay no commission. 810 Second Ave. Washington Sav.ngs and Loan Association | STRIKEBREAKERS STONED BY K. 6. CAR STRIKERS | United Press Leased Wire KANSAS CITY, Aug, 11 The! first bloodshed in the strike of 200 street ¢ conduct By ar motormen and tors cat today sympathizers attacked three street car loads of imported strikebroak | ers ng taken to the car They were be barns from tt Union «tation, Bricks and stones smashed the car windows, and the strikebreakers fled Harvey Rai nt busine agent of the union, was shot a str er, decording to reports trouble started Fink” threw an fron pipe crowd when a into the Nine coac “Finks” at noon from Chicago. When E. J, Stroup, tried to board a car after he had been warned away, the riot started arrived Assets $6,300,000 Established 28 Years Stroup was shot thru the abdomen yy a atrikebr ker cone tor who thought Stroup was a striker eer - ene Quickly a large crowd gathered . . 5 " “4 Cu The crowd grew to one of 5.000 with MUs ND D. NC MINN e Careful) ™ ice" Poe: ee to offices of the street car the stomach well, the} "Refined atmosphere—menu con: pany sistent with your pocketbook Ad Just then another car dashed thru al vertisement. the crowd. A battle followed. Chas and helpt of ———— Morrison, 43, striking motorman FCHAM'S = Stove Repair & Plambing Co was shot thru the right hip and ab domen. Pireback linings ™ ond topetrs Yorait| i#onard Short, 27, striker, was kinde of stoves, | shot near the heart. An unidentified | } nges and fur-istrikebreaker’s nose was cut off and j eee and “corte ne suffered a severed artery when } put in and con. he Was thrown thru a window. Clar Rected. ence Downhour, 32, striking con-| ductor, waa slightly wounded | icing in the World om PIKE °F: | The mob built a fire under the bones, 10c., 286. | is cars. The fire department extin-| guishe flames and dispersed the crowd with several streams of aT EMERGENCIES— he means of bettering hims by aking advantage of opportunities [he emergencies of li those ntimely occurrences that change he course of affairs in an instant Minatia os are met confidently by the man Home of who SAVES ‘The Seandina Ameri: gee Bask. Make your savings safe | ng them in the Largest Sa Institution in the Pacific Ne west—The Scandinavian Americar Bank Capital and Surplus $1,000,000.00 Resources Over $13,500,000.00 {he Scandinavian American Bank Alaska Building, Seattle, Second and Cherry. Use Our Ballard Branch if More Convenient. Ask the Next Beggar who solicits “a little spare change,” if he ever had a savings account. If he says he had, ask him what kind of a promise induced him to speculate with his fund. Perhaps it will he}p you to sense the safety and value of your savings account here—and spur you with added ambition. DEXTER HORTON TRUST SAVINGS BANK SECOND AT CHERRY SEATTLE, WASH. Bank 22.79 Combined Resources of the Dexter Horton National and Dexter Horton Trust and Savings Bank, $21,263,2: Are You Ready for Them? The person with a savings count is building up a tund tor the future, preparing for its « rf tunities and emergencies—pos y for its actual necessities No one can foresee what the next year, or ten years, will bring »him. A savings accot is insu nee against worry “Opportpnity knocks at a man’s r but once.” The man_ with mey drawing interest for him has water. Threat to tie up all w dustries tn the city if strikebreak ers imported from cago and New York t was made by agents of Trades council this t cars. Labor the afternoon We will call out 6,000 men if the cars are operated by strikebreak ers,” was the ultimatum of organ ized labor. A, HENDERSON HAS RESIGNED FROM CABINET : By United Prese Leased Wire LONDON, Aug. 11.—Arthur Henderson, without portfolio and labor member of minister the war council, has resigned, it was officially announced to: day Henderson's immediate! resignation accepted has was to nch socialists as in the internation al socialists’ conference in Stock holm next month He defended his action ing that he had met French socialists as the the labor a cabi British Henderson since he confer to participatin been under went to Paris recently F with by stat with the leader of arty in England, not as ister or official of the rmment Pay Brought on Uproar His presence, however, garded as giving the that British offictaldom was taking part in the discussion, and brought on a great uproar. Henderson came into the posi tion from which he has resigned with the last reconstruction of the cabinet by Lloyd George was re German Gladly Sends Son to Fight for U.S. A prominent German has kept local board No. 4 busy for the past week, arranging the time of examination for thi son, who is in the mountains, 65 miles from habitation. Tele grams have whizzed back and forth. Friday he appeared and said: “I have had four boys. | have only this one left. Five years ago we traveled thru Germany, and he met all his relatives He has 13 cousins in the German army. But I'm sending him to fight for his country because he is needed, and | am glad.” TOLEDO, O., Aug. 11—Harry J Howard, managing editor of the To: ledo News-Fee, died at his home here Death followed a gen eral ners breakdown. BULL BROS. Just Printers 1918 THIRD MAIN 1043 today ous NAVY MILITIA CAMP SPRINGS UP Echo Zahl Visits Boys i | when strikers and) blacksmith, | uonized in-| impression | STAR—SATURDAY, AUG. 11, 1917. PAGE Golf Chub Course n Training on University | a section of naval militia training camp being built at and below, Miss Echo Zahl of The Star the man whose genius of | Above, | University golf course talking to Commander Miller Freeman organization is making such rapid progress ponsible, * * * * * * are drilling now, but routine will By Echo June Zahl come in earnest when the full “On July Sth men and wom quota arrives en were playing golf on this spot,” said Commander Miller Freeman, of the Washington militia, as we stood in | Little Boy, Shot at naval A ° the midst of the new naval Play, Dies of Wound | militia training camp, the Dwight Trafton, 13, 7709 14th first of its kind in the country ave. N. W., died Friday night from There are naval training camps a bullet wound he sustained last @ on board ships, but there Saturday, while he was playing sol never before has been a camp established on land for the training of recruits. And so the tent-covered bill and }new buildings that have cropped out on the University of Washing ton campus in the last month ° the nucleus of an exy ment which will bear its fruit of fighting m in the following woeks | Persons across Lake wondered at the sudden ier with a companion. He was ao eidentally shot in the abdomen AMUSEMENTS, METROPOLITAN THEATRE ONLY MONDAY, SIX NIGHTS NNING Wedn. HENRY ™ Union have opping up of white canvas by day d the city of Nghts by night. They have Ti TON marveled at the external sudden And the New one nese—and the queer notion of de ne tg empany termination and stubbornness that [in A. FE as ty each white sign conveys--but to day Tam wondering at the inside “Come Out of the Kitchen” machinery, the internal eeriousness LEING that I gleaned from my trip thru oped 4 camp yesterday Men Gaze at Buildings 1 Wed Ae afternoon sunshine. * Last year or maybe these bu As I came into the enmp I saw a mc bunch of clear it fellows —#e in w uni others still tn thelr i the bank—looking across the way where th tall sildings of the Un * sity of V ashington caught the Free Ral lay a the year be nes meant Science Anyone who their portals knows the el” when lessons are “un learnt” or class was eut the day befor Life has an ominous re when the prof challenge ) awful threats fore jor Botany of Er has pi di th “ je them no delighted. yefore | ' 4 the prices) And when we mi your college cronies | Face Stern Duty Now l. But that’s all shoved far behind || those men who w on the || bank. The greens, where the happy || May fete was always held——wh | the May Pole dance was the acme of an afternoon's toil-—{t Is a fancy sitting Dur buyer has been gone som 4 buying through the & nifty style of the past —it is no longer real The mentn come in Inside of the ¢ Pp, hew men A will nave mu streaming in steadily —men who a ay WT, COAT, b perhaps have never slept on any FLORENCE UPsTAins thing harder than an Ostermoor ne and have never known a more ND AND UNION, strentious day than a track meet |— - ) file into their little tent-home and get acquainted with their cot and| their new “bunkie.” Tomatoes Lure Echo In the mess house everything shone with cleanliness. The toma-| |toes held a strange lure that they never had for me at my usual] eating joint. Great rolls of white) dough stood on clean boards ready | for baking into bread See Dr. Edwin J. Brown D. D. Ss. HIMSELF for $16.00 jude | rows of | An we passed along the tents, the orderlies called “atten tion,” and out of the tent openings jumped manifold figures, the m: ity being men who had not receiv their uniforms yet They were “geen” and they |knew it, but soberly, awkwardly | | their hands went to their foreheads | |in ralute to their commander—and| they learned their first lesson in}4 t milita regime. ii ON IMPROVED | | 500 New in Camp I |) REAL ESTATE | ‘ Almost 500 mgn have reached ; WE CHARGE x the camp and the full quota of 900 NO al will be attained about Wednesday | \ of next week. More tents will be| : iM SOM MISA Nol put up to accommodate the new H ( ss nenacal ] men, and another building will bel) a | constructed immediately. The sani-|/§ PUGET SOUND | tary conditions are especially cared SAVIXGS be for. The camp has city light, water and sewerage. “The camp will be under strictest military discipline,” said Commander Freeman, “The men will be whipped into shape as soon as possible and will be sent away & LOAN ASSOCIATION THIRD AND PIKE the 1) Mra wIFTH AT PIKE —— CONTINUOUS 11 TO 11. GOT A PIANO? U.S.ISTAKING | HAND IT OVER MERCHANTSHIPS | By United Press Leased Wire TO RED CROSS 7, || MARGUERITE || CLAR The diminutive a of the screen in a rollicking romance of girls—adapted from the stage suc- cess, THE AMAZONS Wanted: Rugs, fancy work, furniture, a pia ino, jewelry, andirons, fruit, jelly, some dogs, china, Hote 1706, Seattle's books, few pictures. store, 708 Third ave. R ant App iques and a ly Red Cross Phone E! and there is a ch citizens who wi Red Cross war fund to do contributing merchandise in 1 0 according to Mrs. G. A ple of Arctic Club Aux ty Red Cross, wt charge of the Red Cross store “We have sold about everyth ing that has been bronght to us,” said Mrs, Sample this morn and we have @ great many | ord: t 5 soon as We can gi one lady another wants ¢ given us We can sell verware, can ge The entire proceeds of sold go to th rs all the rugs and 1 Red © who have me buy a dog jelly, sil that fruit inens we ross YEAST CAKES ARE UNDER SUSPICION By Un RAKER authorities yeast cakes thrnout the feared the germs of sheriff published a request Oo; re, Au today whict rity. by cakes potson Prees Leased Wire « li are County ar were § pedd might Hundreds contain of housewives sent in cakes when the for a few samples of the cakes in local papers, REV. CLEELAND WILL GO WITH ENGINEERS Re rl Cleeland, Andrew's and St pal churches, has t chaplain in the Unite and will leave with neers. pastor of the Tames’ F een appoin ed States army, the 18th engi “OLB GLORY” GIVES GIRL CADETS FLAG “Old sented a Wednesday first honorary m Helen Taylor flag who to th She w mb in civil life ts ) years old, pre Girl Cadets ma the, er of the corps The cadeta have been reorganized, under Leppe | gun patches, dish towels and * for the conscript army, ‘TRUCK HITS WOMAN Severe scalp wounds fort kits” a nd are the command of Mme. Louisa busy making and loss of where the government needs them, SEATTLE, Jeonsiderable hair w sustained They are coming in steadily, By iiby Mrs, P. W. Jochimsen, 2818 ery unit knows when it in due to Thirteenth ave when she was jarrive, Th is no uncertainty. | struck and dragged by the automo | Everything has been pianned, ac-| 4 Bi bie driven by G. A. Gardne 45 to schedule. Next drill will begin, week, ‘The men cording regular | California a and Mill st, +» ut Friday Railroad afternoon, all goods! lv | and cargo lners jover by the government shipping | board, It was officially learned to: day. The board turned the ships over to the r p 'TOO WEAK | nae h b Haarlem O11 Capsules guaranteed b sitioning of vealth-sly “A Clever Dummy,” our Keystone comedy, is a two-reel Sennett syncopation of smiles, snickers, laughter and levity. ADMISSION 15¢-——— CHILDREN Ge WASHINGTON, Aug. 11.—Requi- American merchant estels has begun. Seven private! owned passenger ave been taken war department, which to transport mat for great er ng works be- 1 the Sammies in Europe. more cargo carriers are need. i, either for the war or navy de. artments, or for commercial pur. the shipping board will take » the to that friend wi skin troub If you have a friend suffering with eczema or other itching, burning eruption, what greater kindness could you do him than A “ Why don't you try Resinol ? I know you have experimented with a dozen treatments, but I believe Resinol is different. It does not claim to be a ‘cure-all’ mply a soothing, healing ointment, free from all harsh drugs, that ph ians prescribe widely in just such cases aS yours, ! De get a jar today! Resinol Ointment is sold by all drogeists, TO FIGHT }OLD MEDAL sles, the Nat and, will do stomach de ents that American orig niported, ie For sale and the Owl Drug Co. Round Trip Summer Excursion Fares Eas via the Great Northern Railway On sale every Friday and Saturday during August and September. Final return Im months from date of , not to exceed Octob 1, Stope wed in both directions. Divers routes returning Boston $119.20 St. Paul Buffalo . 99.50 Minneapolis Chicago 80,00 Duluth etroit 91.00 Sioux City Montreal Council Bluffs New York 118.20 Omaha rl St. Louis 78.70 Lincoin —... hington, D. C.. 116,00 Kansas City - Proportionate) lo f * to othe Dy splendid electric lighted trains Bast dally. PONC® —-THFSO “THE ORIENTAL LIMITED” “THE GLACIER PARK LIMITED” “THE SOUTHEAST EXPRESS” PR en yo heeee on Oe pana National Park, on main lMne, For further tnformation, tickets, ete. apply CITY TICKET OFFICE Columbia and Second Ave Tv. J. Me ©. W. Meldrum, OP a A Asst. Gen'l Pass. Apt Phene Elliott seu0

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