Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
STARTING SUNDAY YANKEES WIN IN SHOT-PUT WAGES WILL STAY HIGH, SAYS WILSON | Frenich Capture Marathon) yy skcrerary w. B. WILSON ql CAPTURED BY CANNIBALS The Final Chapter of MARTIN JOHNSON’S CANNIBALS — OF THE _ SOUTH SEAS | Picturing the Wild Natives of the South Pacific ‘ in a State of Savagery transfer of land. “Then Hamshaw ERED PRAYER; came next day and I sold him the GETS FARM FOR BUCK) tarm for $1 and some shares of . 8, July &—"One night 1| *t°ck fn a tractor company.” Mrs. Mawson says she now knows ‘God to wend a buyer for the) iat “God didn't send Hamshaw” “ays Mrs. Dorothy Ann/ and asks that the land be returned |more than once, and who was the| | taurateurs tonight declared a culin- | signed on the menus of many din- | pre-war sauerkraut and hamburger. | Run in Inter-Allied Games PERSHING STADIUM, Paris, | July 6.—(United Press.}—Americans | von all three places in the finals of | he shot-put yesterday, and second nd third places in the §00-meter | un, Over 60,000 spectators packed be stadium, Frenchmen laces in the he other events were 800-meter run-—Won New Zealand; Earl Eby, Chicago, econd; T, M, Spink, Chicago, third. Time, 1:55 2-6, | Shot-put——Won by Reg Caughey, | Tkiah, Cal; H. Liversedge, Oakland, | tal, second; Wallace Maxfield, Bloomfield, N. J., third, Distance, 13.776 meters. SAYS N. Y. SHOW GIRL KIDNAPED HUSBAND, SAN FRANCISCO, July 4--| Thornton A. Sullivan filed a sult £or | divorce against Grace Notes Sulll-| van, New York show girl, who, he says, took advantage of his being in toxicated on the night of December | 21, 1915, and smuggled him into the | presence of a New York “marrying parson.” Sullivan says he woke up next day to find he was married to @ woman who had been married captured all three! marathon, mother of a child she had led him to believe was her sister. | PEACE BRINGS GERMAN NAMES BACK ON MENUS| CHICAGO, July 5.-—Chicago res: | It was ary peace with Germany. ings rooms and particularly on those | Results in | ; by Mason, |" Of the Department of Labor. (Written for The Star) The process of reconstruction will be greatly facilitated and the return to industrial and commereial activity will be greatly speeded by the exer cise of confidence on the part of al our people. With a world-wide demand coming for our products there will be greater demand fot labor than we have ever 1 in the past. That fs the belief of almost everyone with whom I have talked on this subject, employers and men of lagge business. 1 do not believe there will be any material wage reductions. I believe only a short-sighted employer would seek to bring about lower wages, It is almost certain that wage-earners will resist any attempt to reduce their pay, and because of the higher wages they have enjoyed during the last few years they are now in posi tion to engage in a struggle against wage reduction which would be pro longed and costly, From the employers’ side, tremen- dous loss would be occasioned thru strikes by the disruption of his or ganization, leaving him at great dis advantage in competing for business when the period of intense industrial activity sets in, Signs for Confidence The wage-earner and the salaried employe, no less than the manufac turer and business man, should face the future and bend to the tasks of the present with resolute courage. This confidence, so needed at this time, can be shown in a most substantial way by the workers In exercising determination to own their homes. for home-owning should commend thoughtful person. The nation-wide movement mow under way Itself to every Its first effect in the Rathskellers and other grills | win be to provide » powerful impetus that prior to the war made a spe cialty of German cooking. It was exit Liberty cabbage and Liberty steak and enter plain, unadulterated | The menus flaunted the whole gamut of German dishes under their true colors. Sauerbrauten is now| sauerbrauten, and no longer beef a la Amerique. American fried have gone in favor of German fried pota- toes; And so on down the list. Another Cache of Liquor Is Seized Oné more booze cache was uncov: | ered on a ship arriving from Califor- | nia, when dry squad officers seized | 25 quarts and 14 pints of whisky on | the steamer Saginaw Friday. After it had been seized, no one claimed | the liquor. | FIND DESERTED AUTO A new Lexington auto, license plates wrenched off, was found near | Falls City Friday. No one claimed | the car and deputy sheriffs are in- vestigating to determine if the car had been stolen, sh tee Shs onesies } NEW PASTOR HERE Dr. Guy Livingston Brown of Wichita, Kan., will occupy the pul- who undertakes advantage comes. her suit here against F./to her. She claims the tractor stock and to set aside} is valueless. Aword that is imbedding itself in our language. Soon to appear in all + good dictionaries: pit of the First Baptist church here during July. What Wobstor's will say about it: RT ATT B-E-V-O, (n.) [<OF. beveve. <L. bibo, drink.) Adeliciousn purity, nutritive qual: <bevee, drinking. on-alcoholic bev to industry, giving employment to building trades and to mill and mate rial workers, and contribating stimu- tus to all lines of business. But it is to the individual himself the purchase or building of a home that the greatest Aside from the sentimental value in owning a home, there is a sense of security in a deed to a piece of real estate that no other possession can give. The home owner has a stake in the community in which he lives. Reward of Thrift It may call for the exercise of fru gality, industry and even so-ne self- sacrifice, but the reward is worthy of the efforts put forth. Before undertaking the building or purchase of a home the worker is interested in knowing with as great a degree of certainty as possible the prospects of steady and remunerative employment. Some facts in our re- cent history bearing upon the labor market may prove instructive. In nearly all lines of industry and commerce thére has been a depletion of stocks. The shelves are empty, and they have to be filled to their normal business weight. The supply of labor is not as ample as might be thought on offhand examination of the question. Before the European war came, the taggareesstarm ayy , mY Cae | =| when the war broke out, He was \C FE w)'24 e <bevre, drink. ge, noted for its 8, sparkling golden color and. richness of natural flavor of the ingredients from which it is manufactured. Beceme nationally popular, with all classes, in a single season. Created by Anheuser-Eusch, St. Louis, and manufactured in great quantities in the most modern, sanitary and perfect bever- age plant in the world. Synonyms: None. Antonym: in bottles similar to the Bevo packa About 200 imitations put nearly like Bevo as the law will permit. Derivative> Beooer—one who constantly enjoys the best of soft drinks. BEG US PAT OFF THE BEVERAGE Schwabacher Bros. & Co. Inc., SEATTLE, WASH. , and bearing names as :|ly signed up for service in Siberia =|on his way out there now. :|old grade of sergeant, but he didn't | ANNOUNCE LECTURES :| department of Spanish at the Univer- =| Pacific and the Peru-Chile Dispute,” 3|day, July 9, 4 p. m., Meany hall audi. : |department of psychology and educa United States was admitting from all nations of the world approximately 1,200,000 aliens annually, who were used in the development of our in- dustrial enterprises. Of these 400,000 jreturned, leaving us a net gain of | 800,000 aliens, That makes 10,000 lof a shortage up to the p ent tine, |due to the fact that since the com- ling of the war those who have gone jout have equa those who have leome in. Where Labor Has Gone The development of our shipbulld ing industry has taken from other | employment nearly 500,000 workers. | We took 4,000,000 from peace-time | pursuits and sent them into the/| trenches and the training camps. The | best that we can hope for is that | 3,000,000 of them may be demobilized at the end of the calendar year, Thus there will be more than 4,000,000 workers less than the usual supply under normal conditions, but there | is also the possibility, indeed, almost the certainty, of an increase in the demand, for the reasons I have out lined in the beginning of this article. | Here, then, is the prospect which | the worker who is scanning the| future with a view to determining upon owning his home may reason- ably count upon: A shortage of 4,000,000 workers in the usual supply under normal con. ditions; an awakening of commerce and industry thru development of world trade that challenges our best efforts, and @ rising demand for labor as American business extends its connections to the markets of the world. These conditions carry assurance of steady and remunerative employ. | ment. THE SUPREME NEED NOW | 18 CONFIDENCE; THE WILL TO; D DO. GO AHEAD A DRAWS ALIMONY PAY FROM BOOT IN COURT SAN FRANCISCO, July 4.—Rath- er than go to jail William Perkins, | an employe of the Schaw-Batcher | shipyards, in South San Francisco, | dug up $20 out of his boot with which to pay his divorced wife, Mrs. Lena Perkins, back alimony. When summoned into Judge E. P, Mogan’s court to show cause| why he had not patd $60 alimony due under the terms of the court | Jorder and also why he had not im- pounded an automobile in compli- ance with the court's instructions, Perkins asserted that he had never been properly served with the court order. When this objection was overruled, Perkins stated that he had only $30. “Well, you can either find the rest or go to jail,” the judge said. “Please let me have five min- utes,” Perkins requested, and step- ping out into the hall, he pulled a roll of bills from his shoe and took the $30 from it. H From to India's strand” mean anything out ef the ordinary to Alva D, Btutler, He's making jump that's just as drastic, as a ma! ter of every-day routine—and, what's more, the change in scene is accom- panied by his transition from a cap- tain to a buck private. * Stutler was a sergeant in the reg- ular army, stationed at Honolulu, commissioned a first lMeutenant, then promoted to captain, and dis: charged shortly after the armistice. He tried civil life for a while, but {t wasn't long before the wander- lust began to stir in his blood—and started him toward the army re cruiting station here. He looked over the various offerings, and final- with the 27th infantry, And he is He could have gotten back to his want it. He said he'd been a cap: tain so long that he wanted to see how it felt to be a buck private again. ON VARSITY CAMPUS Prof. Charles Munro Strong of the sity will speak on “The War of the Monday, July 7, 8 p. m., room 320, Denny hall. Prof. Edwin J. Saunders, depart ment of geology, speaks on “Strat- egy and Topography in the European War,” Tuesday, July 8, 8 p. m., room 108, Science hall. Mrs. Louise Van Ogle, department of music, will lecture and sing on “Goyescas,” by Granados, Wednes- torium. Prof. Daniel Phillips, head of the tion, University of Denver, talks on “Essentials of Success Not Found in Books,” Wednesday, July 9, 8 p. m., room 320, Denny hall, GOES 1,000 MILES; NO WHISKY;:GAN’T TALK SAN FRANCISCO, July 5— Ernest Drury, Manager of the Belle- vue hotel, was halted by a well- dressed and voiceless stranger yes- terday in the lobby of that hostelry, Drury instinctively stuck out his hand. The stranger to him ignored the welcome grip and beckoned to the desk. “Got a mute here,” said Drury, The stranger shook his head, When he reached the desk, wrote rapidly as follows: “Traveled 1,000 miles to get here jin time for whisky throat wash, Got | laryngitis. Doctor says I can't swal- low. He didn’t have to tell me that; I know it myself. ys I'll be this way two or three Leave it to you, ain't it fierce Drury nodded yes, he. TWO ARRESTED FOR FIGHTING Charged with assaulting Charles Sutherland, A, Lindholm, 53, and George Bohannon, 32, were arrested at Youngstown Friday by Patrol- men Mike Buckley and C. W. Bell. Sutherland says the men beat him up after accusing him of stealing harness from the barn of the Puget Mill company, where all three are employed. He denied taking the harness, The men are at liberty on $100 bail, STARTING WITH A CONTINUOUS |PERFORMANCE SUNDAY AT 2:30 P. M. THE BIG BRAND NEW AND SPECTACULAR MUSICAL OFFERING HONOLULU 100’ STARRING NIFTY COSTUMES, BEAUTIFUL SETTINGS, THAT FAMOUS HEBREW COMEDIAN LEW WHITE | PLENTY OF FU) IN WHOLESALE LOTS BY TWO OF THE CLEVEREST COMEDIANS IN THE WEST—AND, OH, BOY! THAT LARGE AND PRETTY BIG EXTRA ADDED ATTRACTION BEAUTY CHORUS “THE AMES SHIPYARD FOUR” LAUNCHING TONS OF HARMONY LAST EPISODE OF MARIE WALCAMP’S “THE BED GLOVE” THE HANDOUFF KING, IN STARTING UNDAY “THE MASTER MYSTERY” THIRD — AND — MADISON. RPHEUM a | | IL MT Science has been made to serve art in the selection of beauties for this year’s new “Follies.” Ziegfeld wanted the heads of his 1919 chorus to conform as nearly as possible to that of Jessic Reed, the “key” beauty for the) chorus, The “profilometer,” invented by the English scientist, Prof. Huxley, was brought into play. composed of sliding rods, adjustable to the contours of the face, ind with it may be transferred to p This4s \ profile of a living person. Every girl who applied for a job this year in the “Follies” had her profile taken. If it coincided, with but fractional differences, with that of Miss Reed, the girl was engaged, Ziegfeld believes he has found the 75 most perfectly profiled girls in the United States. Tho profile of Jessie Reed, and the manner f in which it is registered by the machine are here showm, ¥