The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 10, 1919, Page 10

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THE SEATTLE STAR—THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1919. NOMINATE OFFICERS | c FOR LABOR COUNCIL The Contral Labor council Wednesday night indorsed the Irish republic, nominated officers for the coming year, adopted a Jution demanding the release political prisoners,” de- cided to investigate the failure of Mooney strike in Seattle, and ested against the appoint ef Vietor Zednick on the | vy board. | officers will not| July 2%, and nom-| | inations be closed until that | |time, but dnesday night wit-| nessed the opening of the fight for the different offices: | million dollar temple will be built C. M. Dallagher, J. C. Mundy and| The new wage scale of the street Frank Rust were the three candi-| Car men was indorsed dates nominated for president of the} The committee in charge of the council. For vice president, Morrie | forming of the new labor party an Welsfield, Phit Pearl, Forrest Hud-| 0unced that a meeting will be held nd Vincent Brown were nom.| Thursday night to make initial plans James Duncan was the only | for the forming of the party nominees for secretary. Charley . ¥ metas Doyle, for business agent, and Jack Little, for reading clerk, also “| THATCHER MAY no opponents, Blanche Johnson, as woman organ izer, and she waa the only nominee | | for that office, Six were nominated | on the finance committee, Tom Egan, | yrange’ Jack Hardy, Robert Hesketh, Allee) Jackson, Friend of Lister, Lord, Fred Nelson and Minnie Ault. | : Resigns Office 4 p The Trish dixcussion opened when =. Hate under @ guarantee of ae . * © communication from the Meta ee atone, ae eer : . . : Trades council was re sking che body: colle with the meee that the Central Labor council send | Phosphoric . food elements, @ b-ssage to Premier Clemenceau, demanding recognition of the Irish Crack Shots, Every One of Them NERVOUS, TRY PHOSPHATE Nething Like riam Bitre-Phosphate te Put om Firm, Heatthy Flesh | amd to Increase Strength, | Viger and Nerve Force. Judging from the countless prep- and treatments which aro ly being advertised for the of making thin people fleshy, ing arms, neck and bust, and ugly hollows and angles oft curved lines of hea: uty, there ‘are evidently nds of men and women who a ‘ ly feel their excessive thinness. " i : : inness and weakness are often to starved nerves. Our bodies more phosphate than is con tn modern foods. Physician: there is nothing that will aup- this deficiency so well as the Phosphate known among an ie phere: which i | letter protesting against the appoint |ment. J. Von Carnoy, William An drus and Charley Doyle comprise the | committee. Letters from Hulet Wells and Eu gene Debs were read, telling of how | they were spending their time in | prison, and greetings will be sent to them. Vote on Labor Site i The secretary was ordered to have 50,000 ballots, stating the merits of each of the four sites for the new labor temple, printed and sent out Upon the referendum of the union men will depend where the new take plice until INCORPORATED “RULL” Durham cigarettes; you roll them yourself from genuine “ Bull” Durham tobacco; fifty from one bag. Fifty-thrifty cigarettes that cost you least, and please you most. No machine can even dupli- cate your “own” rolled from genuine “Bull” Dyrham tobacco. Good old reliable “Bull’.” Always genuine; since 1865 he’s been everyone’s friend. CENUINE “BULE DURHAM | pipe smokers; mix a little “BULL” DURHAM with yeur faver- ite tobacco. It's like suger in your coffee. OLYMPIA, Jul Thatcher, of Seattle, county assessor, confer with Gov. 10.—John M. former King was scheduled to Louis F. Hart to- day and may be appointed to suc: ceed Clark FR. Jackson, state tar commissioner, whore resignation, ef fective July 12, was handed to the governor yesterday, Commissioner Jackson ix the first of Governor Lister's appointees to leave office since Gov. Hart succeeded to the litical prisoners and the repeal of| governor's chair. Jackson served war-time laws under which they! notice June 28 he would resign after | were arrested, was -made in @ com-| his return from the national tax con LONDON, July 10.-Since women! munication from Carpenters’ local, | ference in Chicago. have given up high collars,and are| No. 131. Rules were suspended and| Clark Jackson was Gov. Lister's | the communication was unanimously | campaign manager in 1912, and one | indorsed. , | Of the late governor's closest friends At the request of the Piledrivers'| during the six years that followed union, @ committee of three was ap-| his appointment to the tax com pointed td investigate the failure of | mission. the Mooney strike in Seattle, The ackson first attracted’ attention ee ag theree thete Brains pro verly | Commit © consists of J, Von Car | by his attempt to have the state a y M. ; ue ? * | man. tion law to force the big state steam | boat cpmpanies to pay taxes on | Puget Sound. ves#els on the same | basis as other property. He collect jed data showing the companies | | No opposition was vyolced to Request Mensage hosphate should produce @ transformation in the ap- increase in weight ‘These boyd are the three best shots in the American Expeditionary Force to take part in the rifle and pistol meet held at Le Mans, France. Sergeant J. F. Waters, at the left, won second 1 In the center is Corporal L. K. Peyton, who scored first. At the right is Corporal Delmar ipper, third prize winner. I on and Ripp are of the Fifth Marines, | and Waters belongs to the 13th Marines. eived a gold medal | Above is General Pershing watching the shooting WOMEN DESIGNING SHIPS FOR ENGLAND LONDON, July 40.—-Women will admitted to membership in the Institute of Naval Architects. Str | wearing garments which give com- Alfred Yarrow said are|DPlete freedom to @he neck they eminently adapted the | have become sweeter tempered, ac cording to Dr. Leonard Willams, graceful lines of a ship and that| cnysician to the French hospital the lines of a attaining @/He said people with tight collars The Irish are seokitig a free re public not home rule,” Andy Mulligan asserted, in closing the de te. “It is the working man in Ire who is seeking the freedom and not the capitalist.” A demand for the release of all po- pationts 23 and 27 pounds, respectivee | SAYS LOOSE COLLARS MAKE NICE TEMPER women to settle ship SRR ee 5: Be kor SO sf . : | Protest Appointment Doctor Says Heat and Glare of Suan\ ster vrorest rad reen voices to Weaken and Injure the Eyes |. mmr! ine uate mosica a ean, member of the state medical aid board, of Victor Zednick to a séere a./ Fells How to Strengthen the Eyes and Protect Them tary's job on the board, a committee | of three was named to see the execu Dr. Smith, a well known eye spe-|let in a fourth of a glass of water | cialist, says that exposure to heat,|&nd vse two to four times a day | tive board of the Washington State deration of Labor and present a Your eyes will clear up noticeably bd moke, dust or wind often | py ‘ht from the start. Inflammation he eyes and causes eye|will quickly disappear, along with |ASK YOUR NEIGHBOR in and wrinkles due to squint-|your tendency to squint. “If your It has been said that there is ing. He tells how to # nid this and| eyes are bothering you even a little,| now hardly a city, town or village [strengthen the Many whose |take steps to save them now before |in this country wherein some wom- eyes were ratefully say Many hopelessly blin a s ¥ excessive thinness, |{hat they. bh 5 ie ee eh it they had |22 does not reside who has found mony e@ stored by the simple process he ad- in time. health in that good, old-fashioned to brighten and pale cheeks \;,, One man says: “I was almost prominent remedy, Lydia BE. Pinkham's Vege- with the bloom of Berfect | wind: could not see $e. peed. et eil | « a te a sneee : table Compound. Therefore, if you Now I can read everything without | submitted, sal ‘e#, Bon-Opto is izing it# my glasses’ and my eyes do not|very. remarkable remedy. Its con-|8T¢ suffering from some ailment, placel the value of their craft at from $200,00 Oto $500,000 with the public service commission, and these values were used for rate making, while for taxation purposes the boats were valued at from one-tenth to one-fifth of their ratemaking values He proposed the legislature place the assessment of all ships in the hands of the tax commissioner. He declared this would add several mil lion dollars to the tax rolls. The steamboat lobby defeated the bill in two sessions of the legisiature, In the 1919 legislature, the steam boat tax bill passed the house after the steamboat lobby, championed by h pati " as strong past 12 years. in weight also carries | improvement in the sness, sleeplessness of energy, which tlearly not felt it Is too late. | might have been » soon cared ‘OT: are use in ie rpmente. “SERATHOL 1S FINE strength and nerve force enrich the blood. D. Harrigan, former visit- alist to North Eastern Dis- Ty, says: “Let those who are thin, nervous, anaemic, oF take natural, unadul- substance such as bi’ hate and you will soon # Lig jing results = the A of nerve energy, strength of and mind and power of en- ‘Phosphate is made entirely organic phosphate compound to in the National Standard | rhs tory as being @ preparation hich has recently acquired consid- le reputation in the treatment asthenia. The standard ce, atrei question, for tablet is man- jet accordance with Pharmacopoeia test re- jubstance is wery Bitro-Pr: factured in « therefore not @ patent medicine and Should not be confused with any secret nostrums, so-called tonica idely advertised “cure-alls.” UTION—While .Pitro-Phosphate for the relief o! general debility, ete, taking it who do not desire to it on flesh should use extra care in SAYS DR. PARRISH _Sinee the publication of Dr. Ed- ard Parrish's recommendation of ordinary serathoi for indigestion, | es, acidity and dyspepsia. it has mm instant favor with scores of yspeptics all over the country. \ { Owing to the great variety of Stomach ailments and the hundred @nd one “specifics” for their treat- Ment, it would indeed be a mere ‘chance if the average layman se- Mected a remedy for his own case ‘that would give substantial and last- fing benefits; even granting that the essed real merit for a specific It is therefore not sur- At night they! stituent ingredients are well known afully; now they|to eminent eye specialists and feel fine all the time It was like aj widely prescribed by them. mt is mi "A lady who used it|/one of the very few preparations | says: “The atmosphere seemed hazy | feel should be kept on hand for reg- th or without glasses, but after 1 ular use in every famil. Bon-Opto thing seemed clear.jis'not a patent medicine or secret d fine print without | remedy.—The formula is printed on ¢ ory age. The manufacturers jolor refund the money. It is sold to any drugstore and get a bottle of | under guarantee by all druggists.— Dissolve one tab-| Advertisement. yp yaranteed it to strengthen eyesight | and hardly know what to do for lit, and have tried other remedies without help, ask your neighbor if jshe has ever used Lydia E. Pink | ham's Vegetable Compound. If she |herself has never had the need for) |it, undoubtedly she knows others who were just in your condition and who have been restored to health by ita use. - Washington’s Leading Dentist I have failed to meet the dentist in Seattle who is not subject to mis- takes. I am wil fact, I insist upon doing so. Seattle Appreciates # Go The Demand of the Day Is Sanitation. : more busin proving my service to my patients daily. I have a cl with the very best office equipment money can buy; th led in this state, has given me an experience which is of unpar- years of succes alleled advantage to you. It is naturally to my advan fied patients, and I make every effort to see that my work is right at the start. BEST CROWNS $5.00 and IT have been successful, doing ing first one “ci ‘@ vain endeavor to obtain relief. Hecent investigations of the treat- t of a large number of cases of idigestio: i ifling three to five minutes each day in is body bending exetcise that the muscles of the abd: and at night before retiring em Vitel highly satisfactory results follow. the sufferer from buying and then another dyspepsia, gastriti ising from hyper. in the ents than or- which can be ob- from any good druggist at cost. Ask your high-priced ethical dentist to name the bi find we are using it. As for workmanship and pleased to match up with him. BEST | PLATES nd cid- omach prove that thére more effective atment of these all inary serathol, pearance. o- Obey that ever-insistent im urified toxiol, perma- Drink avoid strong pur, that this rift L romly A of ives | have a constipating Lady Attendants. Opposite Colman Bldg. Phone Elliott 1833 810, FIRST AVENUE Some say it cannot be done, but there is no law against it. If I want to satis- fy a patient I call it good business. As long as dentis- try is done by human hands, it is subject to mistakes. | | ling to correct mine; in od Service ess each month and im- lean and up-to-date office coupled with my 12 | tage to not have dissatis- est material and you will lasting satisfaction, we are $10.00 Guaranteed to fit and satisfy. Made to meet the best of competition, Natural in ap- Ise and visit Dr. Wilson to day, DR. J. T. WILSON HOURS 8:30 A. M. to 8 P, M, Sunday, A, M, |deeply into the subject, and once a |the pupfls put into practice all of Rep. Mark Reed, of Mason county, @ steamboat owner and lumberman, had fought it. The bill went to Sen- ator Rockwell, of King county, chair. man of the senate taxation commit tee, and he carried it in his pocket, failing to bring it to the floor of the senate, until the session closed. JAPS WOULD REVISE - IMMIGRATION LAWS N. KE. A. Special to The Star TOKIO, July 10.—Revision of Ja Pan's immigration laws is going to be urged in the next session of the diet. “While there is now in force in It- aly a regulation by which the govern- ment encourages, directs and pro- tects immigrants, in Japan the law pertaining to emigrants was made 26 years ago, so it is no wonder that it is contradictory to the present state of progress of our country,” says Mr. Kanzaki, chief secretary of the Jap anese association of San Francisco, who has come home to work “for the reform. “Thru the entire text the words ‘do not’ or ‘shall be fined’ are found in profusion, but the rules are all con. trary to present-day civilization. My second mission is to promote Amer. fcoJapanese friendship. Since the racial equality clause was introduced at the Paris conference, anti-Jap- anese feeling in California seems to have become accentuated, and not only do the Americans feel unfriendly toward the Japanese laborers, but they are now inclined to look upon the Japanese in general as a danger ous people. In these circumstances new steps must be taken for depriv ing them”of this prejudice.” BROOKLYN GIRLS TO STUDY REAL MANNERS NEW YORK, July 10.—A course in manners, public and private, has been added to the curriculum of the girls’ high school in Brooklyn. Ac cording to Principal William Felter, the action was necessary because the girls failed to observe the eivili tles of life according to Anglo-Saxon traditions Placards have been posted about the halls of the school with simple lessons in deportment lectures are given which delve more month a day is set aside in which the rules of conduct preseribed by the teachers, AND RAPIDLY RUIN WHEAT LONDON, July 10.—Brown rats are increasing #0 rapidly in rural England that they have become a plague and the board of agriculture is preparing for a campaign against the rapacious rodent. Immense lose! of wheat has been caused by the rats, In some districts unthreshed atneks fiave been riddled with rat runs and are almost falling in, It takes nino men to hold down a full-grown tiger, but five men could subdue a lion, HAS FIFTH WIPE CHARLESTOWN, W. Va., July 10.—The “marry-parson,” the Rev. H. J. Hill, who has married more than 2,000 couples, has taken an- other wife for himself, the fifth. 1 aaa S clear Re: inol Soap Does a pimply, unattractive skin shat you off from admiration and pleasant associations ? Fach time you cleanse your face with Resinol Soap you give ita “‘beanty treatment’’ with the soothing, healing Resinol medi- cation. If aided, insevere cases, by alittle Resinol Ointment, this usually leaves the c naturally clear and fresh. AN drugeists sel! Resino! Soap and Otat- ment. For sample of each, free, write to Dept. 1S, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. There is one remedy that seldom fails to stop itching torture and relieve skin irritation and that makes the skin soft, clear and healthy. Any druggist can supply you with Zemo, which generally overcomes all skin diseases. Eczema, itch, pimples, | tashes, blackheads in most eases give way to Zemo. Frequently, minor blem- ishes disappear over night. Itching us- ually stops instantly. Zemo is a safe, antiseptic liquid, clean, easy to use and lependable. It costs only 35c; an ex- tra large bottle, $1.00. It will not stain, is not greasy or sticky and is positively | safe for tender, sensitive skins, ™ The E. W. Rose Co., Cleveland, 3 ADVANTAGES TO , THE BUYER The trade acceptance helps the buyer: 1. By deterring him from overextension. 2. By putting him on a basis of merit rather than dependence. 8. By tending to establish his . credit wherever his commercial paper circulates, FIRST NATIONAL BANK FIRST AVENUE AT JAMES ST, Established 1882 Canadian Pacific Railway British Columbia Coast Steamships Steamship Service From Seattle to Victoria and Vancouver, B. C. Leave SEATTLE 9 A. M. DAILY Connections made at Vancouver, B. C., for CANADIAN PACIFIC MOUNTAIN RESORTS “BANFF THE BEAUTIFUL” * “LOVELY LAKE LOUISE” CANADA WELCOMES You For full information, tickets and reservations, apply to E. F. L. STURDEE General Agent, Passenger Dept., 608 Second Ave., Seattle Phone Main 6588

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