The Seattle Star Newspaper, May 9, 1919, Page 23

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LR itl si ii Wan), Marines Call for Motor Mechanics} The marine corps has issued qj} SAN FRANCISCO, May » The call for 800 motor mechanics im.|United States Shipping board tely for aviation service, They | steamer West Arvado was Y uees Will be transferred to Mare Island, | for more than an hour in steaming Cal, for preliminary recruit train.|for New York yesterday because the and after completing such | crew refused to proceed to sea with take about 12/out the ship's mascots, While the y will be (ransferred to | vessel was loading a cat the marine flying field, Miami, Fla. | had been taken ashore to be treated for aviation duty, Here they will re. | fer iliness, Just as the anchor was mechanical training to fit | being weighed tho sailors discovered them for the required duty, and, if | that the pets were not on board, and they pass the requirements, their the mudhook was dropped and the Pay will be increased 50 per cent, | vessel remained at anchor until one "And they will be assigned to aviation |of the small boats had been rowed | uty, according to local recruiting | ashore and a special messenger went! Officers, 101 Yesler way. {s . LONGSHOREMEN MAY JOIN IN STRIKE Lengshoremen in every Pacific city, from Prince Rupert to Diego, may strike in sympathy the local Longshoremen’s union g the ballot which is to be taken by » workers resulta far |i" Taam’ uy, fe West ont ‘This was determined at ; m.; Bt afternoon session of the Pacific m. Passing ini ae Longshoremen’s convention he, fering ae ¥, and is the direct result of | Light rain: wind southwest, 12 ao trouble between the I. L. A. offi hour, Passed in: Ss Wilmington, at § p and L. C. Gilman, district rail: |. 2 Bom Berinkog: wine ee jor. Says Wedding | Was Awful Mistake world war veteran, wounded Gited for bravery, George Wi of Seattle, has filed suit for , alleging that he would go thru the battle of the agsin than end his days with it spouse. met his wife, a trained im a New York dance hal! 2, 1917, married her April 4, gt for France April 11, he fought in the Marne. Cha- and other batties. He ‘severely wounded. In a hos where he received several let- from his wife, his suspicions roused as to her sincerity. says he realized that he had & terrible mistake. Bruns is in New York. EN OBTAIN BIG | LOAN SUBSCRIPTIONS thousand dollars’ worth of bonds were subscribed for by by Cat and Polly cde ee nS VESSEL MOVEMENTS DEEP SEA VESSELS Sighted a “the Cape (Prout Weather Bureau) TATOOSHM IBLAND, May 9.4 & m. a barometer: cloudy; light. west tt the south wes! ing out! ports and Vancouver, B. « . from’ Siow 10:10 pom. Mex! coma, at 10°30 p. m.; bull s Marber, b moa Salled From Seattle May %—Ss President, for fan Diego, via Victoria, H.C. and ports, at 11 « m.; Edgemoor, for trial cruise, at 9 = ». aa Kobe, at 3B motor schr Brisk, for Falmouth, for re, at 2 p. m.; se Redwood, for Aine kan ports, at 1:15 p.m. May tHe Mex kong, via ports, at Alaska Vessels KRTCHIKAN-—Sailed. May 3: fe miral Farragut, northbound, a! City of Bea! southbound, at He mi Jefferson, northbound, at 19:30 a m. Other Porte SAN PRDRO—Satied. May Se Gov. ernor, for Seattle, vie Ban Francisco, st Tomatons Mexican. wna tee arqoses || noon. BAN FRANCISCO—Sailed, May Atias, for Point Wells, at 10 a*m. Ar- raves: v. S comune Beth. tram Beattio, via Puget Sound navy yard, at 4 BUREKA—@alled, May §: Be ‘Ste ports, mu. VICTORIA, B. C.—Pased out, May % |Steamer Held Up lt nd parrot | after the bird and tabby. | t nf Ww V1.0 ) a - ies Sad 0 6} KON x Friday's cool wea’ day in poultry Seattle's and dairy Quotations, all lines. car of was scheduled for reach here learned amount | that time not was amall un! of The poultry ter lof butter ts altho the amount will not be much practi | Artichokes: Asparagus Hunnyeide Kennewick Cal, dow Danish Bal New © Per 1b | Lettuce—Sarramento Wot house, per crate | tee Angeles, crate Onions. hov Florin Saturday's There was a the berries still left on the market very quiet for the past week and ¢ge are ate stored J Local Markets | ther fruit producta’ ver, to arrive business til Monday Lon atreet has dy ally this more than ———@| per cent of last season's supply. VEGETABLES Local, per ™ mr ‘rico | Morseradich Test Local, Cal. Austraiian brown. .... Oregon Yellow Danvers | | Off arades . Onion sets, perf Rolling ontens, per ‘en D. “aii: Per a: Petaters—Per ton— | Florida, per | Gat. New | Se Ceylon Maru, for Oriental porta, at | Balled, May 4: #8 Arabia Mara, for Seattle, at 4:15 p. El Labo, for West quest port Fisagua, ete, at 10 COMOX, T. C—Ratied &: fe Cey- | Jon Maru, for Hongkong, via ports. VANCOUVER, B. Called. May $: Se) mt Lene, Sor Sinaue oad porta DUNG! in, May 9 at 5:20 p NGHAM—Arrived, May tor sehr Sierra, from Han Pedro, am PORT TOWNSEND—Passed to. May 9 fa Banta Ana, for Beattie, at 8:50 a. m. Passed in, May 8: Se Governor Forbes, for Beattie, at 3 p. m.; hull Abilia, in tow of tug Tyee, for Beattie, at 3:45 p. me. Asrived: Be Arabia Marv, from Ori- ental ports, at and proceeded for | pee Paseed Sat Ae Penang Mary, at | Baxter, from Eagle Harbor, at mm. | PORT GAMDLE—Galled, ‘May §" Sw by Pauleen, for Han Francisco, at § m. PORT LUDLOW—Arrived, May Sinaloa, from Beattie, at 1 from San Franciace, via ttle. BELLINGHAM—Salled, May $: Sehr | Methe Nelson, for Bristol Bay, tn tow of | % tug Feartess. COMOX, B. C.—Satled, May $: Bs Pro- and Mexico Maru, for Beat! Wireless Reports Canedian Government abeam olson, in Milbank ‘Bound, morthbound, at VU, 8. Naval Communication 0 “Jefferson, leaving Kasnan, in Unimak, Kodiak. ‘8a Protestiaus, U, #. 8. Burnside. rnor Forbes, Witml ton, motor schr Apex pa Pier &—Sehr Fanny Dutard Plor 7-—Power scht Bender Bros., Chas, R. Wilson. igen al Pier 6—He Arabia Marv Pier 2—Gs Redondo. Alaska Pier BU. & C. G, Bear, Pacific Engineering worke— Borworth. se Fete Faw Toka, Wayucan, Elden I i E jen—fe Fonduco, Cinyraa. Duthio yards—Ss West Hematite, Wert | Hembrie. | | ‘ i 3 3 ght, Gaffney, Trolitind, U. 8. &. Gw: n. Puget Hound Bridge and Dredging if i i i 3s fernan docks—fis Adway, Alf Z cham & Habeock— Sa y Or aga ‘attorson & MeDonald— piratte nald—Ba Berringa, Heattle Flonr mitie—se Oxette pd vg oe elevators Edgemont. Tt brown terminal—se aisan Maru. ' — Seattle North Pacific yards—te lok, leonium, Ossaqumaick. heoon (‘ake Union—Se Rush, Brookde Harrison, Allonhurst, Fort Jackson, Ad- dison, Boulton, Bowesmont, Bo ighton, oineongg od . W. H. Smith, Abmik ‘ort Union, Anthon, Che: 4 wala, Clncaeen, aterfieid, , Fort cumulate a million dollars than it is | Corn- Layest, pyeee bis 1 Flim, se Prints, 26 for others to accumulate ,debts Amounting to half that much. and finds you in, you'll be in. | grade | Wineeapa « j | x | Grape Fret— | Black Diamond ... | Florida, 6 | Spinach—tocal per box . =| turnige—Yakima, per sock per dor bunches. . California, =. fancy Fancy Black Twig, local, fancy C grade and larger Florida, 40 and emailer Sean amber Lemens— Per box— Faney . Choice .. ‘Wisconsin er Limbureer, is Limburger, 20 Todd yards—te Western Knight, De- | Cows--Country, dressed | Vest ley. Rolled Greena Clipped Oate—Locai Minnesota. Minnesota roiled . tegen 007.001 If a friend comes to your office to Seinen, “Wash. No. 1. ..36. Heed —No. tb. materially dampened busines prospects for the| | produce. mar were atrawberries will very Angeles been But Storing completed year THE SEATTLE STAR—FRIDAY, MAY 9, 1919. i ‘New York Market Report — | 8 P New York Stock Report | | | NEW TO ket opened in rt) it} 13s Central Leather at 85, up| UP ei Sinclair 68%, | wp ih 80 Heat | it 10; fair to to fair $20.26 20.60; s20@ 30, 25; rough hei Hib cO@ 18.78; head; marke é H4e@1s: fair Jive tarmbe, S19@15.00; yearlings, # Wethers, S9G1!) ewes, $6@ 10.00 . Pri ™ dium mixed, ait bulls, ony er 9. —Cattle— Necetpte, nr y. Moers, $12.80 cows and heifers, $8.50@12.60; fenders, S10G14; calves, : market H9.60@ SAN FRANCISCO, May 9.—Hutter— the years BY RICHARD SPILLANE Staff Writer on Economics and FI- nance Topics for The Star Some persons saw, or thourht they saw, signs of a great religious awakening a# a consequence of the war. They thought the depths of the oul of man had been sounded by the horrors and the agonien of of unparalleled tragedy The’ only reflection of such 4 feeling in evidence today is voiced in the poems of men like Ki Seeger, McCrea and a few oth who, on the eve of making the supreme sacrifice, wrote lines that will live so long as man remains on earth. Nothing of the spirit breathed thra ‘The Spires of Oxford,"’ “A Tree," “In Flanders Field," and “! Have a Rendezvous With Death,"’ stirs the world today, In- stead there in a riot of waste, care- leas living, extravagance and hectic friveling. Germany, on the brink of an abyss of debt and privation, which means, perhaps, a century of tribu- lation and tribite, dances, While statemmen study what it is ponsible for Germany to pay, we hear of! German gambling in the streets at! day and prancing about the floors) of beer halls at night, despite riot and civil warfare in many German cities by day and by night. Walter Runciman, long the pres- ident of the British board of trade, and member of several cabinets, declares Great Britain is not far from bankruptcy. To the tremen- dous costa of the war he adds the present disorganization of British industry, Today there are more than 1,000,000 persona idle in the British Isles. In the two districts) of Lancashire and Cheshire there! INDIANS WOULD | GOVERN AFRICA "|Want to Control Former | German Province } to—-Market unchanged. »—____________-» Chicago Market Report CHICAGO, May 9.—-Graia futur @pecial to The Star by N. FA) MOMBASA, May 9.—There's some reason in the desire of the men of | India to administer $i n MyoE Africa, It's Indian immigrants who | do most of the work in the colony. | prices dropped on the Chicago Board of porta of goed weather good specuiators, who figured the pre for still higher prices Good. Provisions were irregularity lower, May corn opened late at $1.48, down . fising to $1.69% In Inter trading July opened down to / and in oudsequent enh gained No; Septem- ber opened at $1.57, down 2, end Cropped to $1.6 May oa 4 down Ye, 0 advanced Nq July opened at €8%o, off 46, and iated fost Ke; Reptember opened down Ke, at 65Ko, and lost %e more. eo | Public Markets | —— , mitk, and soap stall, Carnation '# milk, Ite can; large Ivory, 100 bar, ite bar: Peet 2 ae ide at cans Federal milk, 2 cane 2 ta rolled sate, iSe; cans Federal milk, 356, Eliott Fish eo. tho 1, tall 2, se ‘ben. Royal Grocery, Royal baking powder, Olympte pancake flour, 2% stant Postum, 200. Stal Livers tomate eases, 380; 180 can Camp- belt cane pork and beans, ioe Master Blend cotta, ftes, 3 Thi 2%-1. can Royal baking powder, s Stall 29, peanut butter, 17e M.; Marigold margarine, 200 M. WRASTLAKE Sugar stall, 49-™. sack Weetinke Spe- cial flour, $2.95; 49-M, sack Gold Bond flour, $8.60; & Be. cane eugar, 4ko, Btall . 100; 3 The, pink . 1 ean pork and beans, 3 cakes Paim Olive soap, be; Sw pack tomatoes, potatoes, 3 tha. for 26e, | Stall 137, brick cheese, 260 T. id, strong Wisconsin Stall 185, raspberry Kristoferson’s cottage { fresh pimento cheese, made ham loaf, 400 1. 2 tall cans best mitk, 24¢; pure cane » car, 770, Stall 14, ling cod, ie tb. 2 Tha. Sho; binck cod, 2 Tha. 266. Stalls 18-25, 4 Tha. all wheat macaroni, 2 cans pork and beans, 180; potted #, bo can; 2 Ibe. pilot bres aged !amall way. The few white foiks| ‘The Indian always has an ambition | to be in business for himself, so in | time he Becoms a merchant in a patroniae him and he sends most of the money home. The natives have little idea of the value of the little they raise, and a native woman will walk 60 miles with 60 pounds of meal on her head and trade it for a yard and a half of cotton cloth. But the climate ts deadly to white folks, | and the British East Africans will | hardly help in development of the re-) gion taken from Germany. So India is likely to have its chance to send | more of its excess population to; what was Gorman East Africa and | develop it under British rule. Dutter, ¢fe T.; best focal ranch S| bec don; American cheese, mild or Mazola oll, 360, ‘te, shattt ov noodies, 200. Stalls eugar, The; 2 dell Chocolate, Bie; 3 cans good pun, aha * 386,748.86 | 4,615,304.46 | 749,648.57 | | ‘The druggist who has conscien- tious scruples should also possess conscientious ounces and pounds. [oe ee | think of The Star. World is oy in Era of Hectic Frivoling Now On | Life is a series of reactions. ia as much unemployment ea in) the whole United States The industrial prostration Ene land knew at the time of our civil war owing to being cut off| from much of America’s raw ma- | terial, was trivial to what England knows today, yet London never was #0 gay superficially, As in Berlin, there is @ craze for dancing. In the great town houses it has become the custom to have dano- ing parties night after night with | & supper or breakfast at 5 a. m. to mark the And yet in_ India, the largest de- pendency of the British Empire, there rages one of the greatest faminés in history, and there is rebellion in E¢ypt and nearly re- bellion constant in Ireland, In America there is extravagance unprecedented. The trade in jewelry in the four months of De- cember, January, February and March in sald to exceed any 12 months on record. There ia a bar- | barie demand for diamonds, rubies, pearls and such things. 80, too, with fine furs. There is a world-wide craze for splurging. To many persons this ing of festivities.4 METROPOLITAN Coming SUNDAY, May 11 AND HARRIS OVER 60 IN THE COMPANY—AUGMENTED ORCHESTRA, FRESH FROM NEARLY TWO YEARS IN NEW YORK 7 CHORUS OF YOUTHFUL BEAUTIE: Erin ti EATS) $1.00 D. Bet SH. NOW ee ae SELLING =o bged Indge Gilliam's court Priday the action that led up to the @ar- chewing. Montgomery is on Ural, | for attacking Egan Egan said Montgomery leaped ap on him, bore him to the floor and nibbled and gnawed at his left ear— all because he asked if Montgormery had been cutting prices. He Tells How His Ear Was Chewed Up) Exhibiting a mutilated left ear aa) evidence of the damage he alleg the teeth of W. 8. Montgomery, a barber, performed, Tom Egan, Bar bers’ union delegate, described in 8u- may seem abnormal. It is not! unumal, [t follows every war. It) in man’s unconscious effort to even | the distribution of joys, or what pasa for joys, with the vena? ‘This is only a temporary, a| transitory manifestation. ‘The! world will sober a bit later. The | world always balances itself some- Despite the present manifesta- tions of waste, carelens living, ex- travagance and hectic frivoling, th world has been enriched by the war and the soul of man has been stirred to better things. ‘ List Shows Local Man Dies in Action WASHINGTON, May 9% —To- day's A. ©. F. casualty list showed Private G. W. Krause, 7618 Aurora ave. Seattle, Was! killed in action. SAYS SORROW DROVE HIM TO MAKE BOOZE Declaring the 400 gallons of dis- tilled and fermented grape Maquor which federal agents confiscated in @ raid on his farmhouse in Duwa mish on January were used just to | drown his sorrows after his wife and three children deserted him, Guisep- pe Pinasco pleaded not guilty before Judge Cushman to achargeof oper- ating an illicit liquor still ‘ LOTS OF FREE FOOD BUT MANY MILES OFF DAVI8, Cal, May 9—Daily bar. becue luncheons, discunsion of mar- | keting California cattle and stock in | foreign lands and a livestock show opened a two-day seasion here today. H. A. Gastro, marketing expert of the American National Livestock as- sociation, will explain national mar- keting conditions, and H. T. Watter of Honolulu will tell of the market- ing system in Hawall. FAIL TO RAISE BAIL T. Sumada and Jimmy Sato, Jap- anese arrested in connection with the federal and dry squaq raid on an illegal still in South Park on Tuesday, will be brought before United States Commissioner McClel- land May 13 for hearing. At &@ preliminary hearing held Thursday afternoon, they were un- able to produce bail of $2,000 each. WAYNESBORO, Pa, May 9— Private Robert I. Ingels, with his war dog’ “Sport,” who followed him all thru the battles of the Western front in France, is home from Camp Dix, honorably discharged. The two divided the honors in’ the home- welcoming. Both were gassed and went to hospital, and both had a touch of influenza, the attack de- veloping into pneumonia for the ARE | ) Stell 66, Sarnation milk, Stall 36, large Columbia river shad, King aaimon, 2 1% trout, 260 each yure peanut butter, 170 Tha, fancy head rice, 400 43, plekled pork, liver, 12%o T.; be beet, 170 Tb. GANITARY Marigold margarin ‘or Nut Ol peanut 2 atrawberrt and 200 t.; ne 1b, Stall 21, Stalls 20-22, th.; Troco, Gem N | WAKE UP, —AND— LAST DAYS OF THE LOAN master, TODAY and =| TOMORROW THE SEATTLE Two Important Duties Confront You Today Seattle must go over the top on the Victory” Liberty Loan. Your first duty is to see that she does this. Your second duty is to attend to your teeth. We will attend to that for you. Come to this office today or tomorrow without fail. | Phone for Appointment—Main 2736 Dental nurses always in attendance Increased and Improved | Sleeping Car Service Seattle and San Francisco Commencing Monday, May 12, 1919 Through cars to San Francisco will be carried on trains leaving Seattle as follows: King Street Station ....2.202 sence sacccacberccecese 1230 BD mm King Street Station . 330 pm Oregon-Waghington Station .ceocecsecccccccccwovesee: "11:15 DP. mL *Sleepers on this train open at 9:30 p. m. Service on incoming trains from the South equally improved. For reservations and more complete information, call or inquire at the Consolidated City Ticket Office of the United States Railroad 714 Second Avenue THE HARTFORD EASTERN RAILWAY CO. Offers its patrons Unexcelled Sunday Outing and Fishing Trips In the CASCADE MOUNTAINS, on the Stillaguamish River EFFECTIVE MAY 11, 1919 Leave SEATTLE via Everett Interurban.. 6:30 a.m. 9:30 a, m. Leave HARTFORD ....see.seee++ - 8:20am, 1145 a mh Arrive Silverton .......seeee8 +. 1005 a.m, 135 p.m | Leave SILVERTON 4. Arrive Everett ...... 2:10 p. m. 445 ps m. SERENE RNI I HEE

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