The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 16, 1919, Page 2

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—we have helped blish JUNE irrtsende BRIDE ftom let us help you! —these “Ready Files” are for VICTOR or other kind of dise records; can easily be fitted into any cabinet style talk- ing machine; it is the most practical way to keep your records for ready reference. PLAYERPHONE|CHENEY outfit $91.80 | outfit $140.10 J SPLaYErPnone Twking Me | —cHENEY Talking Machine No. chime, A-l style, 43 inches bigh, 2 Sheraton Cabinet Settee: cok or mahogany. 6 Soudlefaced Vietor records, p 8 double dise Victor records, 16 12 selections of your own. of your own. talking machine outfits with READY FILES— | THE SEATTLE STAR—-MONDAY, JUNE 16, 1919. 3 Ready Files containing full | ~ pte Files containing full Pe $91.80] sc"... $140.10 regular price $1250 MOMMERL OT good grade of ply 2 Bleck rubber hose> 50-foot length; regular —wnagtect” nonktnkable black rubber hose, a best you can buy; 50-foot length; regular Bente: soestet foc O°... $12.45 « shipment of 500 pal able extension roller wheels, ball bearing, stee. trucks and steel clamps rubber cuahior leath: } ) } ) ) : 1 —minaton style settee; —aplendid style settee, exact! pictured, fea- Shae wing ‘back effect, upholstered ta of Ing design, oll-tempered hel)- i spring construction: § ft long frame: | } Craftaaan Inather mad v ractical room . finished legs remviar price $29 — } $48.56; epectal for th special for this sale GAMO oe ceeseeeesesee Established 1864 DRAGGED FIFTY | FEET; UNHURT Women Thrown From Car in Crash Sunday the au with crash with another machine driven | by F. H. Garner, 1722 Nob Hill ave. | James D. Potts, 258 Crockett at.| treasurer of the Marine Supply Co, ‘was carried 60 feet beneath the ma-| chine, but emerged with only a bruised arm. ‘The accident occurred at Second) ave. N, and Blaine st, at 11 p. m. corps Sunday. Potta, in an effort to avoid | striking the Garner machine, crashed into the other's side. Mra. Potts and Mra. Harriet Patterwon, wife of Dep- uty Proscutor Patterson, were {thrown clear of the car, but Potta, caught by the steering wheel, was Gragged beneath it. Run down at Second pital. neer, from ave. and! shot FREE DOCTOR Geo to the RIGHT DRUG CO. 169 Washington St. and 1111 First Ave And/the Dector will give you a carrful examination and prescribe fer you FREER. If you are sick you cannot do bet- than take advantage of this offer. seve you money and give the best possible treatment. CASH FOR YOUR CAR Or we will sell your automobile for you at YOUR price without commission or storage Jobn Dans 4th at Pike ] Afternoons Loci * === Exeepted tary learn. and {i to dw extension model, regular pric special for the week, pair. . quartered oak frame, fumed or golden; paneled back and paneled arms; seat upholstered in or tapestry; car was driven by Thorp. n his automobile capatred in a| Were pat Into a parsing machine and | PIAN goes a long way toward pre-| brought to the Seattle General bos- Seattle how quickly simple witchhazel, cam. phor, hydrnstis, ete, as mixed tn | Lavoptik eye wash, Cherry st. by an autotst who falled| young lady who had eye | to stop, Sunday morning, V. Delon-/and very unsightly dark rings was! roads s+ By EDWIN J. BROWN Seattle's by experience My system of bridgework tee! os '$2.45 a price $18.50 exactly like picture; 6-ft. regular price $33.75 | ie TACOMA 1, Bchoenfeld & fone 1OL-LIL Sewth 11th Rainier valley street car crashed into utomobile of E. T. McIntyre, of the Waldorf hotel Seventh ave. and) The Plumb Pike st., at 12:30 @ m., near 38th ave. 8, and Genesee st, according to Mc-| racy by giving representation of the Intyro's report. bruised shoulder Their machine golng over an em-/| bankment tx miles east of Auburn|the general fear that government | Pf Sunday, John Montgomery, 1711 32nd | ownership would make the railroads | ak ae wae 4|the playthings of politios, but sev-|stands in striking contrast beside! The | eral trade union officials with whom | th Both men|1 have talked feel that the Plumb| was first made. He escaped with a minor cuts and bruises. MAJOR REEVES IS HOME Major Carl H. Reeves, Seattle engi 722 ot 4 Latona ave., Washington, D is back Cc. where he secured hin discharge after 23 months of service in the engineers’ reserve |Simple Wash Removes Rings Under Eyes People will be surprised relieves blood eyes and dark rings One nd leading druggist Modem Bridge Work For. T wenty-Five Years Ideas for | BY BASIL, M. MANLY | Jotnt Chairman, Notional War Labor Board. | (Copyright, 1919, by the Newspaper Knterprise Asnoclation) ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., June 16.—The American Federation of Labor conven- tion now being | held here is ex pected to linc up solidly against the re turn of the railroads te private owner ship. ‘The first Indica tion that the A. I of L. might take this radical action came when It was learned that the executive council of the federation, composed of its more conservative leaders, had tn | vited Glenn KB. Plumb, attorney for the four railroad brotherhoods, to ‘explain to the convention just how he and his brotherhoods propome that the gallroads should be operated un. der government ownership The “Plumb lan” Plumb, @ Chicago attorney, is the author he plan by which the railroads, after being acquired by the government thru the issuance of bonda to the amount of money actual ly invested, are to be operated by « corporation whose board of directors will be made up one-third of repre sentatives of the employes, one-third representatives of the raitroad man agement and one-third representa tives of the public. If the Plumb plan of valuation is adopted the government, it tx estt mated, would pay for the roads ny | the 19 billions which represents their Present total capitalization, but in. stead about 10 billion, which it ts calculated representa the TOTAL AMOUNT OF MONEY ACTUALLY INVESTED tn the roads by stock holders and bondholders, It ix the mont radical plan that has yet been proposed for the solution of the rail road problem. Prumb says that the plan has the support not only of the railroad brotherhoods, with their 600,000 mem bers, but also of the organizations jot shop crafts and other employes, numbering, it le sald, over ene mil- ion. ‘The raftroad brotherhoots are not members of the American Federation of Labor, but the other railroad or ganizations are, and thelr support will Inmure a solid block of powerful unions in the American Federation of Labor when a vote is taken on the resolution to approve the Plumb | plan. | To Provent Bureaucracy Superficial observers are amazed that so radical a plan should have any chance of adoption by the Am- lerican Federation of Labor, which has consistently opposed all social | istic proposals, They overlook the |fact that the Amertean Federation of Labor, In common with othér jlabor organizations, has always looked with favor on government ownership of public utilities, much as railroads, telegraphs and telephones, |and that the opposition of the trade | untons to sociatiem haa been due tn large measure to a fear of bureau cratic tyranny Get Equal Voice rn has been devined with the idea of preventing bureauc workers an equal voice In the man Jagement of the railroads. ‘The trade unions also have shared venting that danger | Along with these theoretical con niderations goes the practical fear of the trade unionists that if the rallroy re turned back to private ownership there will be a general | reduction of wages, which would cre |ate a compelling precedent for wage cutting in all industries. Just now the American labor movement has two slogans: “No wage reductions [until prices are cut,” and, second, |"A voles for labor in the manage | ment of industry.” The Plumb plan |fits in with both of these slogans and henes port from the rank | ganized labor | There are many indications, also, in sure to command sup. and file of or trouble} that if the Plumb plan for the rail-| tary ures the approval of the | ardo, 6279 Duwamish ave., was taken | relieved by a single week's use of|convention the movement will not to the city hospital with a wrenched|tavoptik. We guarantee a «ma I] stop there, but may sweep on to back and bruises. bottle to help ANY CASE weak,| cover other industries. The Commer Smashing his machine to bits, ®/ strained or inflamed eyen. Alum.|cial Telegraphers’ union and the Ip )| lina eye cup FREE. Swift's Drug|ternational Brotherhood of Mlectri Co, a cal Workers, which are now con FIND CLOTHES IN Fishing Party Believed to Be, Drowned in Storm } Leading Dentist 108 Columbia Street I have been studying crown and bridgework for a quarter of a cen tury, and have worked faithfully t9 1» be |x master a nyetem that Is ante. and satisfactory. aanb Other den j tists can do st if they wil work and i Skill and genius dre acquired and arduous labor. is simple Inexpensive, made with a view rability and utility . P | A toothbrush will easily reach erally removes pimples, @™ charges. |and cleanse every surface of my ‘eczema and ring- sanitary bridgework; it is cleaner than the skin clear ae aclean, penetrating, ns nothing. It is easil trifle for eac! dependable, Auto Bargain Market 701 E. Pine St. E. 340 mand’ makes mo is to a the average natnral tooth No charge for conmultation, and ™memk My work is guaranteed. I do not operate on people’a pock etbooks, I have elevated dentistry profemional business standard EDWIN J. BROWN 106 Columbia Strees v SPOKANE, June 16.—Four Spe kane business men and one re nt of Priest Lake, Idaho, are t day when their overturned was found in Priest lak ‘ of clothing were also found float ing in the Peter do Feyster, electrical con tractor; H. P. Engdahi, vice presi of the Spokane ny; ¢ A president a hardware company pury Merritt, attorney, all of kane, and Robert Car of st Lake, are the men believed oat The four Spokane men, on a fishing trip, were met at. Pric Lake by Carey. The five then at tempted to cross the lake in the rowboat with a motor attachment |The Inke was very rough. SCOUT MEMBERSHIP | CAMPAIGN STILL ON| The Boy Seout drive for 4,000 now | # will continue this P | the quota hag not been reache tate Is one of the least organized the country from point parly | money as is | i n Scout stand ex as much will be ex d here the state, Manly Explains New “LAKE, 5 MISSING U. S. Control \ ducting a strike of telegraph and teb . are only waiting| | convention reacts | toward the Plumb plan for the raik| roads. If the convention in favor-| fable they are ready to urge its! doption as & solution of the tele graph and telephone problem The United Mine Workers, which | has half a million members and holds | the baler wer in t mer jean Wederation of La has de |clared for nationalization of mines, | Frank J. Haynes, president of the| United Mine Workers, has just re turned from a trip to Hurope, oster- | nibly to investigate foreign markets for American coal, but in reality, I am informed, to confer with the DISEASED TEETH! If you are ill you consult a physician. Bad teeth may do you more real harm than a Diritiah labor leaders regarding their plans for the nationalization of! mines and the tactios adopted by | the great “triple alliance” of mine, raflread and transport workers, | which threatens to control the en-| tire industrial and economle life of | Great Piritain. Geompers, who has Always been able to defeat or sidetrack afl ten dencies toward socialiam in the pro gram of the American Iederation of Labor, has not committed himself with regard to the Plumb plan, | which attempts to meet rome of the] arguments with which Gompers han | | hitherto been able to defeat proposals for government ownership, but the| general opinion i» that he will op | pose it and marshal his forces to defeat all such resolutions. | | ‘The fight over the various reso | | tations for nationalization of rafl | roads, telegrapha, telephones and | mines, therefore, promines to be one of the most bitter in the history of | | the American Federation of Labor, | 'NEW TANLAC PLANT | HAS DAILY CAPACITY: _ OF 36,000 BOTTLES | Magnificent New Laboratory Occupies 60,000 Square | | Feet of Floor Space | What is mid to be one of the) largest pharmaceutical laboratories | in the United States bas been com | pleted at Dayton, Ohio, for the manufacture of Tantac, the well known medicine, which according to recent reports, is now having the largest wale of any medicine of its kind in the world. growth of the bustnems, as the older plant was found to be wholly tnade quate to supply the ever-increasing demand which at the present rate of sale will amount to more than five milion bottles for the present year alone. | manufacturers of Taniac are giving | to the world Just one more evidence of the remarkable growth and ex pansion of thelr business, and of [thelr absolute confidence tn its fu ture. | ‘This annowneement wil be read | with interest not only by the many thousands of Tanke agents scat tered throughout every state of the | Union and throughout Canada, but to the millions who have used it beneficialty as well. The new bullding oceupler 60,000 square feet of floor apace. It is six |#tories in height, practically fire Proof throughout, and t& of striking jarchitectural design. It also has fvate railway facilities, | Dy the erection of this plant the| very serious illness. Therefore, if you have bad teeth consult a dentist—and be sure you consult a good one. Uncounted thousands of people have suf- fered tortures from that most painful and insidious of diseases, RHEUMATISM, and have taken oceans and oceans of medicines of various kinds seeking relief. In many cases they have not found relief, for the sim- ple reason that they were entirely overlook- ing the real seat of the disease. Many of these cases came right from abscessed teeth and nothing else. No medicine can cure this condition. That tooth must be treated and treated heroically. Often it must be removed altogether. Tiny pus sacs form around the roots of the diseased tooth. These sacs are continually pouring their stream of poison into the system where they progress along till they find the spot of least resistance. Having made their attack, swelling, inflam- mation and a diseased vondition are the cer- tain result. And the dangerous part of the | whole thing is that the tooth which is really at the bottom of the whole dis- turbance may appear perfectly inno- cent itself. It may not pain nor in- convenience you in the least and on | the outside may look like a perfectly healthy and normal tooth. You should have your teeth looked over by an expert dentist every so often. That is the only way to be sure. What We Can Offer You in Dental Service Every operator is a graduate reg- istered dentist. Every operator has | his certificate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair in plain DR. L .R. CLARK an office which does only one-half or one-third of the volume that we do can possibly afford to take. We guarantee all work. Your satisfaction is our first considera- tion, but to make assurance doubly sure for you, we give you a written guarantee signed both by the oper- ator who did the work and also by L. R. Clark, D.D.S., owner and manager of this office, who is thor- oughly reliable. FREE EXAMINATION We invite you to call and let one of our expert dentists give your teeth a thorough examination. He will tell you at once whether or not yom ad work com you do, he will tell you just what is necessary sight of all. — just what it will cost to No bunglers or students are em-| ave, your teeth put into oct ployed at this office. _ | eondition. - We use the very best of materials. |__ This examination and ate ‘ won’t cost you a cent nor you Our prices are the very lowest.| under any obligation to have work This is made ible by the very ~~ AB, done ag ap See want it. This volume o: iness we do, | service is offered you freely and which enables us to take a smaller - - gladly. For your own sake we urge profit on the individual patient than | you to take advantage of it at once. ‘This beautiful new structure now older bullding where Taniac Visitors strongly to the laboratories are tmpremeed with the ex jtremely modern character of the lequipment. Everything is provided |and splendidly arranged to promote |wyetematic and | The very intest machinery and de vices known to Invention and phar |Mmaceutionl science are here used. | The interior throughout ts fin |ished in spotless white, and all of jt large force of employees wear white uniforme, which they are re |auired to change daily. The main{ offices on the first Moor aré all fin |iehed in Carara marble and mahog any. The entire process of manufacture | |is conducted under absolutely mant re the bottle! made expressly to conta Taniac are rapid production. | ‘Schumann-Heink Says Love Regal Dental Offices DR. L. R. CLARK, Manager N. W. Corner Third and Union In Every Respect Seattle's Leading Dentists. Diagomally Across the Street From the Posteffica, Be Sure to Get to the Right Place, LADY ATTENDANTS ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES 1405 Third Avenue Greased beginning Wednesday, June 18, by Dr. Lincoln Wirt of the Amer- ican committee for Armenian and Syrian relief. warhed and sterilized ¢ the ultra violet ray are then filled by automatic ma hinery and the finished product ia] therefore never touched by hands process humaa | When Tanine was Introd Canada ed into if, and ch had been created history repeated ted States was quickly in the Dominion Prov-| Au @ result, it waa recently] found necessary stablish another Taniac Laboratory at Windsor, Can. ada, which is on a somewhat smal scale than the plant at Dayton, but ts no less moderniy equipped. These new fac ive a daily capacity 24,000 bottles, but as Tantac idly being introduced! into foreis intries it is probably only a q n of a few years be fore even larger facilities will be-| hile manufacturers are nee for capacity pro y working Juction, it is a fundamental rule of the Tanlac Laboratories that the quality of the medicine shall never be sacrificed to secure quantity out. put | Uniform quality is guaranteed by | a series Of ¢areful inepections by | expert chemists, from the time the| herb, and barks are re ceived in thelr rough state from all! parte of the globe until their medic inal properties have been extr da by the most approved * The finished medicine is then bot tled, labeled, and shipped out to the tens of thousands of druggists) throughout the United States and/ Canada, to supply a demand never| before Ned for this or any oth er medicine The executive sales offices are located in Atlanta, Georgia, and oc | cupy almost an entire floor of the Fourth National Bank Building of that city | Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartell | Drug Stores under the personal ai | archist, pended in organization work thruout | rection of a special Tanlac represen: | suffragist | tative-—Advertisement, W World’s Unrest | what our brave men have fought for. | HE IS MAJOR AT 25; Star Staff Correspondent Bee love your great weit.” She COMMANDS FT. CASEY BELLINGHAM, June 16.—Labor pie ogy alegre T love to Grin}, ctving in Now York tides ees delegates gather for convention, dis |7@F clean, free atr. seas, Capt. James L. Hayden, son of puting and theorizing; economists “Like a Chil” | Col. John L, Hayden, has been com- scratch their delve into figures and Slee tt, Was Wonderful, there in the nen com! heads; politicians and state Stadium to sing to your thousands. the world for an answer to the prob-/ Te was go easy to sing. The voice Jem of social and industrial unrest. | seemed to enrry and echo on every Yesterday I put it up to Mme.) want without any effort. I shail Schumann-Heink, a singer Of SON€S, | never forget it.” to give me her answer to the biggest! gchumann-Heink, enjoying her question, She gave it in an instant.|sgey birthday yesterday, was like a It was imple answer, in one word: | onfid, | “Lov Tonight she will sing “Refore the The lobby of the Leopold hotel was | Grucifix” to hundreds of union men | missioned major and assigned to com- }mand Fort Casey, one of the three artillery posts in the Puget Sound | district. News of the appointment was received by Col. Hayden by tele gram. Major Hayden is 25 years old packed With union labor men ~ and women workers with the en- o Mme. Sehumann-Helnk — stepped | thusiasm of a girl, She knows the| J seal from the elevator, She had arrived | secret of youth ami gladness. o_ me te mak. on the eve of the most momentous | 1 jove everybody,” she cried. come labor convention in the atate’s de history. It was her 68th birthday. HOLD MASS MEETINGS She just re celved a bouche oe ‘iihaiaiaiain Gad eveihtie Hala ckeks Dr. roses. ier dark, youthful eyes were |ines at the First Methodist church, flashing. Fifth ave. and Marion st., will be ad “Tomorrow night I sing ‘Before the Crucifix'—ah, it is a beautiful song—" she paused to reckll how she sang the song in the open air to the thousands in the Tacoma Stadium Saturday. Then, as if she had had 4 sudden inspiration, she turned quickly toward me, her dark eyes brilliant— Entitled to Respect “phere is the answer,” she said “It ig what our dear boys fought If the Blood Is Kept Pure Almost Every Human Ail- ment Is Due to Blood | |'s torturing pains; Catarrh, often a forerunner of dread consumption; iti | : Impurities | Bozoma, Tetter, Erysipelas and other and gave thelr lives for in France, | YoU can not overestimate the im: disfiguring skin diseases; Malaria, It Is what Jesus Christ died for— | Portance of keeping the blood free of | which makes the strongest men help. low quickly we forget! Fven the |!mpurities, When you realize that] less, and many other diseases are the preachers forget the heart is constantly pumping this | direct result of impure blood. “We forget that it is love, demo- | Vital Muid to all parts of the body,| You can easily avoid all of these pt. for every man | You can easily see that any impurity | diseases, and rid the system of them. that will put an end to strikes and | {in the blood will cause serious com-|by the use of 8. S. 8., the wonderful anarchy and revolution. We should | plications. blood remedy that has been in con respect the working man. He is en:| Any slight disorder or impurity|stant use for more than 60 years that creeps into the blood is a source |S. S. 8. cnost serious are Rheumatism, with and respect titled to our respect. Does he not cleanses the blood theroly provide our means of existence? 1t/of danger, for every vital organ of /and routs every vestige of impurity ix not money he is seeking most of | the body depends upon the blood sup | It is sold by druggists everywhere.” all; It is respect to properly perform ‘T am not @ socialist, nor an an. nor a revolutionist—nor Indeed, no, 1 believe in love for everybody— ply its func-| For valuable literature and medical tions. |Advice absolutely free, write today to Many painful and dangerous dis-|the Medical Department, Swift ‘Spe. eases are the direct result of a bad | etfto Company, 256 Swift condition of the blood, Among the! Auanta, Ga nf democracy, DANGER LURKS IN |) .

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