Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘ THE Levels. STAR—MONDAY, MAY 19, 1919. =——i'HAWKER STARTS(” ‘ON SEA FLIGHT | Daring Australian Surprises Crowd in Hop-Off Your Credit 55R ars service to J @F the homefurnisher! SERVICE-SATISFACTION— —the supremacy of this great home furnishing store in the Northwest i *Continued | From Page One » is un- able opportunity to stake all for the TRADE big flight and the London Datly | Mati's $50,000 prize \ 20 Hours Limit | ” |thing goes wrong, they ex reach the coast of Ireland in | hours. | It was sot the intention of the at but when they saw) | Martinsyde make the | tempt yesterday Hawker drop | head into th wea, they prep thing was in read The rough surf and the heavy lon th |ship was rendered a i crew to his under gear and] northeast for the open | 4 to follow, Byvery:| one. i] 6 of the runway in the ship com. | ear axle, and the 4 pile of wreck , with the flyers jammed in their NV) i iii bined to smash Hawker's expectation is to arrive | over Ireland at about 1:55 p. m., Greenwich time, Monday (955 a. m. |New York), and he in flying in a| [straight course, Fegardiess of ship: | | ping lanes and the beaten paths Keen for Record after it rocked and ‘ds, and then te p, Hawker's Australian at the ight beyond the hills, Start made not without reallzation@f the grave dangers on the part of the pilot and his navigat or, but it was led to go after the record of the The which Hawker and Grieve are flying waa determin ed upon Satur night and Sun day, and its r object is to “head off” the Americana. | Hawker's last remark, and the dropping of bin landing gear, were taken by spectators to mean a chal lenge to Raynham. “How about old ‘tinsides’?” Haw ker asked, “Tell him I'l) see him| at Brooklands, Engiand.” | With five hours of sunlight Sun day and the prospect of the moon and #tars as aids to navigation at night, the little plane in expected to meet the sun again Monday morn ing about midway across the At lant Short Radio Length Equipped with a radio met capable of receiving for long distances, the fliers are expected to derive great benefit in finding their positions by mensages from ships at sea. Their sending apparatus has a radius of fonly about 250 miles, and once be yond the Atlantic shipping travel, it in doubtful if their 8, O, 8, would be | picked up. | ‘They carried concentrated food | and 240 gallons of gasoline. Both | [men admitted that they would suf fer mental and physical strain thru/ | being unable to “spell” one another or change their positions | The short route from Newfound | land to Ireland i* 1,800 miles, but the one Hawker proposed to follow in| can in ctemfortable and strong reed rock: 5 Six minutes bumnigye a th plane, in with wwe the |atick, wan out of wan course over $1.15, reg. price $1.50 Pyralin ivory hale box to match tly like pleture; opens steel ee deaten special for STANDARD FURNITURE CoO. Ave. and Pine St. ELD & SONS 01 to 111 So. Eleventh St., Tacoma rops Are All Same, But LIBERTY LEGION ERICKSON WILL _Landings Are Different) WILL CONVENE, OPPOSE PROBE 22:2 2:se from an sede pry 4,200 Body the (sce Ag thyyr sc2 saponin serqgied Lath Convention Session on/ Not in Favor of of Appropria- one motor nd one propeller, and Monday Night tion Expenditure ies ie th inoue 40 tm landing in the lake, as before, he ye if it Gencended to the su: surface, oo | VICTORIA PLANE. ARRIVES HERE , over Spanaway lake, near T. Stagg, Star reporter, his leap of two weeks in Spine But y Live for Trial| Fisher, alleged bootlegger | whisky manufacturer, Black shot in the spine during a_ It took almost half an hour to| {disentangle the harness and chute| Returned service men of Seattie,| Councilman T. Erickson jand get Stagg to the ground. Pe | membera of the American Legion of S> nounced Monday morning that he cullar air conditions, with a cross will oppose the @pending of money wind blowing at 4,000 feet at crest | Liberty. will meet at the Boldiers| investigate Diablo canygn and| angles to the ground wind, and of “"4 Sailors’ club Monday night to| Ruby Creek power development sites very rare atmosphere, caused the| ‘discuss two matters of great im- until after teat borings at G chute to hang up on the tree top.| portance to the service men of the Creek of the Skagit project have Stagg was uninjured. been concluded Councilman Erick Oliver > dd on a still by Deputy Sheriff Ted | | city. ‘ | gach, of Kitsap county, Friday| The chute is of the same design) rhe moeting ix expected to decide |*0% Acting Mayor W. D. Lane and) Alights at Golf bolf Links at 5:50! fat. is improving at Providence |#* ‘hat used to drop a crate Of! whether the local organization will|* Party Of engineers have Just § Monday. Fisher was shot |°8#% *afely to the ground over At-| affiliate with the American Legion ‘Urned from a week's trip of in P. M. Sunday | he attempted to escape during (antic City. W. D. Watkins of Se|formed at St. Louia by a caucus of *spection of the proposed hydroelec | tric power sites on the Skagit The city council at Monday's sex | ‘The first airplane light from Brit-| sion was scheduled to consider &/jsh Columbia to Washington was | bill appropriating $20,000 for inves | eeotiated Sunday afternoon when the ponnibilitt Diab |” tigation .6f the possinitities of a Curtiss biplane, piloted by Lieut. | jo and Ruby as sites for the great Robert Rideout, of the Royal Flying storage dam which miust be built to retain the water which will op corps, and Lieut. W. B Brown land te Seattle's power plant ‘faid made about six miles south | atte is ite inventor, Port Orchard. Anton Sonyu, captured in the same id, in in the Kitsap county jail. delegates called Lieut. Col ‘Theodore Roosevelt. It will also se ‘eet delegates to attend a state con vention of the American Legion of | Liberty to be held Tuesday in Se attle. Representatives from the Legion |of Liberty billet# in Everett, Ta by HORSESHOER SENDS GOOD LUCK TO FOCH MARTINSBURG, Pa. May 19.— Charles Gorsuch, a local horseshoer, | wrought “good luck” horseshoes dur- coma, Bellingham, Bremerton, Ana-|** ed on the municipal golf links after jing the progress of the world war Cortes, Kent. Auburn, Olympia, Key I do not believe we should spend hopping off at Victoria. Eddie re ‘ee on ae onageg allied BeM)| Hort and towns where billets have @"Y Mpney on these sites until we tHupbard of the Boeing Airplane | rae one eeemen not been formed will attend the state | have determined whether or not the \company, heretofore has covered Now he has in his possession the! convention to be held tomorrow at @am can be built at Gorge creek.” the same route in a hydroairplane eas. blag Gee mh od had | the Soldiers and Sailors’ club, oe — og Bit Sue are put the flight of the British airmen 4 blag sa that a new ledge has been discov marks the firet made by a plane} Resdiotienént There will be five delegates from is . rv | ana , F | nowlcdgment came the other day.| 1) hiner Any udditional delepeten (ted at Gorge creek, ard if this not designed. to alight on water. | being the last. Mr. Gorsuch consid- ers it his “prize autograph,” had it framed. is found to be sufficient foundation | it would be of no use investigations at the The Britishers brought with them an invitation from the mayor of Victoria to Acting Mayor W. D. Lane, urging his attendance at the yietory pageant to @ held in the Canadian city on May 24. The air.| men left Victoria at 11 o'clock Sun day morning but, encountering heavy head winds over Port Towns end, landed at Coupville for ofl and gasoline. Resuming their flight at 440 o'clock in the afternoon the aviators covered the distance be: tween Coupville, about 60 miles, in one hour and ten minutes, landing on the golf course at 5:50 o'clock. nddie when will not be permitted to represent | more than 100 members from their "Ke Jorganization. The convention is held for the purpose of forming a NEW YORK, May 19--A_ five-|state organization of returned so} year-old boy thru adoption in White | diers, sailors and marines Plains became @ brother to his own| fuss Simonton and grandfather, an uncle to his own! delegates from the state mother, as well as a great uncle to| ington to the national his half brother. He was adopted by | held in St. Louis May 810, are ex- (" his great-grandmother, Mrs. Johanna| pected to apeak befobe the meeting |** Diablo | Freitag of Mt. Vernon. He is Irving|to be held Tuesday and before a|,,1" the party making the trip were Tucker, son of Mrs. Mabel Hauser. | maas meeting of ex-service mets at |Counciiman Erickson, Acting Mayor ‘The boy's father died when the lad! the Soldiers and Sailors’ club Mon-|V: PD. Lane, Water Commissioner was born and he has lived with his|day night at § o'clock. Every sol-|l* B. Youngs, City Engineer A, H greatgrandmother since, His|dier, sailor and marine is urged to|Dimock, Asst. Engineer Carver, State Highway Engineer George Hubbard scared: alot mother has remarried. attend tonight's meeting. s . se Pee Bs! vA | Cotterill, and U. 8. Forest Engineer |the Britishers were sighted and ex. MAIN Dater of Portland. jtended greetings from the height of om ja mile. ZZ and has| for the dam, carrying on other points. “We went over the whole aren! under consideration from Diablo to five miles beyond Ruby, looked Jack Suuvan:lover the borings t have been Podth bry Py at Gorge k and the |eround suggested for further teats th If an employe never pretends to be busy when he has nothing to do he| When you lose money and gain }is trustworthy. money by it, your loss is your gain | — — NIGHTS 8 Me 18 iH Launching a Concrete Gondola | & IRBUCKL “ATTY TH COR” ADDED ATTRACTION MLE Baoees “CARL OF MY DREAMS’ Ff A first-run, 5-reel pic- ture that takes this dainty girl from overalls | to silks. It’s got “pep,” too. Matinees, 10c. Except Sundays and Holidays. MATS, 10¢, 25¢, 500 TAYLOR GRANVILLE and LAURA PIERPONT In the Big Patriotic Melodrama ‘An American Ace’”’ 11 THRILLING SCENES—30 PEOPL! <= <== DIERO HERSCHEL Master of Piano Accordion HENELERE Bickeserrss> g “Pianoflage” ‘JOSEPH BERNARD | In “Who Is She?” | NORA KELLY == ~ AERIAL SHAWS Gensational Acrialists ‘Travel Weekly Somehow they mixed up coal cars with the name of the graceful boats that ply about Venice, and now they've gone and built one of cond@ete and launched it just like any ship, with a pretty woman presiding at the chris tening and flags at the prow. Here's the picture of the launching at the Strauss plant in Chicago, Mrs. Blizabeth Delling breaking a bottle of cham- pagr® over ita sid The car carries 100,000 pounds and will outlast a and costs less The Dublin Girl Kinograms Concert Orchestra WINNIPEG MAY | attempted | lea at the termina |eaused some difficulty, | two Brazil President | to Get on the Job | oe} EPITACTO PESSOA> iow that the peace congress has rly finished its work, President elect Pessoa of Brazil, ie preparing to return home and assume the reins of office. Penson has been at the head of the Brazilian delegation to the peace congress. He is a booster for the United States, END TROUBLES City Officials Will Submit Agreement to Unionists WINNIPEG, May 19.—(United . Press)—City officials and em ployers were understood today to have reached an agreement to submit to unionists here in an ef- fort to break the general strike binding the city since Thursday. ‘The agreement was intended to pave the way for further adjust- ments after work had been re- sumed. Prior to submission of the proposal | strikers refused to may what their at | Utude will be. The strike began when demands of metal and building trades unions for higher wages and better working conditions were not met Employers in some lines said they would quit business before meeting the demands. Freight houses and yards are clogged with, shipments which can! not be moved. Mail delivery waa not} Hundreds of pouches are | meld at Brandon and other way sta | s because they can not be hao Little foodstuff has been delivered since Thursdsy. The shortage has Strikers per. mitted deliveries only to hospitals and homes of the sick Fommunication linen were blocked except for intermittent use of private Wires and a few couriers. WINNIPEG, May 19.—(United Press.\—The strike situation at IL o'clock today was unchanged. ‘The city is quiet. This morning there was no disorder, The general strike continues unabated. Officials were in con- ference hourty with union repre sentatives. Apparently labor headquarters has complete con trol of the situation. Rottled milk was delivered to all homes in the city today, Bread de pota have been established in var fous sections by permission of the unionists. Automobiles were used today to take telegrams to the American boundary for transmission from bor. der towns The local branch of the Order of Railway Trainmen voted yesterday to join the strike, but leaders de clared it would take the vote of the | whole organization.to make the de cision official. Returned soldiers were reported to have been commissioned to form companies of 20 men each, to be used in case of serious disorders Apparently no help is to come from the Canadian government, the minister of labor having wired to- day that he will not interfere unless life was in danger. Thomas Deacon Manitoba Iron Works, companies w refused un equivocally to recognize the Metal Workers’ union, has closed his plant and Gone to California, PAY FINES FOR SKIMPING HEAT Two Landlords Fined and Three Forfeit Bail Two apartment house land. lords were fined $20 each by Po lice Justice John B, Gorden Mon- day morning, for failing to pro- vide adequate heat for tenants. Three other landlords arrested on the same charge forfeited their bail, These were tho first cases to come before Judge Gor- don as a result of the campaign inaugurated last week by Dr. Hiram Read, city health commis- sioner, to enforce the ordinance requiring landlords to keep apartments and rooms heated to a minimum of 65 degrees. Mrs, Honora Ornstein, Rosemont | apartments, 214 18th ave. 'N., arrest ed on complaint of C. R. Frasch, who testified he found all the radiators in her house cold and no fire In the fur: nace, paid $20 fine president of the) one of the) A. Koiwla, Abraham apartments, 2624 Western ave., said he gave his Janitor orders to build a smali fire each night, but Frasch, who, as as- sistant health engineer, investigated the place, said Kolwia had ordered the janitor never to build any fires. Koiwia pald $20, M. Yamanobe, Antlers hotel, Fourth ave, and Union st., sent his night clerk to represent him in court. His $25 bail was forfeited because he failed to appear in person, | H, Oaki, Sherman hotel, 1200°First | Ave., also forfeited $25 bail by failing | TEETH! One of your most pre- cious possessions. Are you giving them the care and at- tention that they de serve? Most certainly you are not if you haven't had them examined by a first-class dentist recently. Most people have some teeth that need attention, Our business is to take care of them and do it RIGHT. Look over these points about this of- fice and see if we don’t just about meet your requirements of what a dental office ought to be. Ist. GRADUATE REGISTERED DEN- TISTS. Every oper- ator is a graduate, registered man and has his certificate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair. T OF EQUIPMENT. We have one of the largest and best equipped dental offices in the country. We have the best men to be had and we give them the very best tools with which to work. 3rd. LOWEST PRICES. Made possible by the large volume of business that we do. We can and do figure to make just a small profit on the individual patient. 4th. BEST OF MATERIALS ONLY USED. We have found by experience that the best is the cheapest in the long run. We use highest grade materials of all kinds. 5th. IRONCLAD GUARANTEE. All work that leaves this office carries with it our guarantee in writ- ing, signed both by the operator who did the work and by L. R. Clark, D. D. S., owner and manager of this of- fice, who is thoroughly responsible. 6th. STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE. This is a pars ticular hobby with us. We have spent a great deal of money and infinite patience to assure our patients of the utmost that science has devised in sanitation. All operators and attendants are garbed in spotless white at all times. FREE EXAMINATION We invite you to call and have one of our expert den-, tists give your teeth a thorough examination and con- sult with you as to what ought to be done to put them into perfect condition. This examination is offered you freely and gladly and does not put you under the slight- est obligation to have any work done unless you want it. But we desire to suggest to you that the question” of good or bad teeth is one of the most important of things to you and if you think you have teeth that need: attention our advice to you is DON'T PUT IT OFF ANOTHER DAY Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager N. W. Corner Third and Unies In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists Diagonally Across the Street from the Postoffice. Be Sure te Get to the Right Place LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES to appear. | tences will be handed out.” N. Lisie, Hollywood apartments,! The minimum heat is 65 degrees 118 John St, failed to appear, and Fahrenheit, according to the ordb his bail was declared forfeited. | mance, and must be kept up the yeas Judge Gordon Monday morning | ‘round announced the $20 fine was for first | 1405 Third Avenue 4 1 Site ders. Second 4 | pitendens. Second offenders will Be) srattord Lembke, Seattle sculptor, Dr. Hiram A. Head, health com. received the first prize at an ex missioner, has declared bitter war | hibition of carved ivory and metal Against landlords who are too con-|medailions in Cleveland, ©. re servative with their fuel. cently, according to word received by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John “There is no need for Hooverizing Lembke of Mercer island Sunday on coal now,” he said. “Complaints of tenants will be investigated, and | afternoon, the heating ordinance enforced to| Lembke returned from France in the limit. We are going rather easy |FFebruary, having seen service as on first offenders, but I will try to!a sergeant in the 40th engineers on get limit sentences for the second|the St. Mihiel, Verdun and Argonne offenses, If it is kept up, jail sen- fronts. FINANCIAL STATEMENT Washington Mutual Savings Bank 1919) (At the close of business May 13, ASSETS First mortgages on Improved city and farm property. .$6,846,938.90 Federal, state, municipal and other high grade bonds and warrants + $1,957, 00 Cash on hand and in banks 656, 2,613,432.26 24,749.94 98, pe 63 Real estate owned i... Roal estate sold under contract Furniture and fixtures . Total .. LIABILITIES Deposits . Incompleted joans ..« Guaranty fund . Undivided profits . Total .. + 149,868.03 806,170.60 State of Washington, County of King, ss. I, Willis 8, Darrow, Secretary of the above named Bank, ao solemnly swear that the above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief. WILLIS 8, DARROW, Secretary. Subscribed and sworn to before me er 15th day of May, 1919. ROLL NFORD, Notary Public in and for the State of Washington, residing at Seattle, Correct—Attest: F. W. WEST, WM. THAANUM. OFFICERS RAYMOND R. FRAZIER, President WILLIAM THAANUM, Vice Pres, ROLLIN SANFORD, Vice Pres, WILLIS S. DARRQW, Secretary, WALTER J. WAR® Asst. Secretary, HARRY SHELTON, Asst, Secretary, TRUSTEES F. K. STRUVE WILLIAM THAANUM rE, Youn an « ‘ONDON F. B. FINLEY RAYMOND R. FRAZIER C. B, VILAS S ve DAVID WILLIAM A. PETERS BUGEKs Ay AURIS JAMES SHANNON