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a years yet tothe hometuinishes new Victor records for October on sale now! MAIL ORDERS FILLED ORDER BY NUMBER POPULAR SONGS 18397 Sweet ¥ Dreamy Alabama The Music of Wed « ain Werking for Me Now Billy Murrey au That Alw Arthur Fields (from “Ziegfeld Follies, 1810") s 1se04 I've Oh! What a Pal Was Mary DANCE RECORDS Joseph ©, Smith's Orchestra rehestra Jokn Steel 18001 Coo Coo—Fex Trot w ta e Trie All Star Trie Merle Aleeck 81.00 Merle Alenek 18607 Genera Pershing —March Ba 1, Albenta_ $1.00 MISCHA BLMAN, Yioliniat (Pianoforte by Josef Bonime) . Albents-Elman $1.00 1821 Tange AMELITA GALLI-CURCT, Soprano in, Italian ©4820 La ‘Traviate—Sempre libera (I'll Fulfill the Round of Pleasure) Verdi $1.00 ALMA GLUCK, | Soy no—EBFREM { ZiMBALIST, Violiniat ‘Swedioh Craaie’s $1.50 Profiteering Not Cause of High Prices, Says Committee High prices in Seattle at, the pres-|cific complaint has been made, Ap ent time are not due to profiteering | parently the general public has but rather to a combination of|reached the same conclusion as tte credit inflation and underproduction | Fair Price committee; namely; and a world demand for American| “That the present unfortunate goods, according to a statement is-| high price levels are a result of eco sued by the Seattle Fair Price com-| nomic conditions, a combination of | mittee. | credit inflation and underproduction | ‘The statement defining the stand| 8nd a world demand for American | taken by the committee was issued | €00ds, and is not due to any general by Field Secretary H. E. Smith as|‘#king of unwarranted profits follows: “The Fair Price committee plans | “Public hearings have been beld | to continue the study of the existing by this committee which brought forth a very limited number of com plaints of high prices. “Besides the investigation of these to time will make public findings which may be of general interest.” complaints the committee has an Don't pay any attention to the alyzed certain phases of retailing ' disagreeable things people say about no spe- are not true. and distribution on which you—if they Constipated Children Gladly Take “California Syrup of Figs” For the Liver and Bowels Tell your druggist you want genuine “California Syrup of Figs.’? Full directions and dose for babies and children of all ages who .are constipated, bilious, feverish, tongue- coated, or full of cold, are plainly printed on the bottle. Look for the name “C lifornia’’ and accept no other ‘‘Fig Syrup.’’—Beware! | economic conditions and from time | GARY REFUSES [Denies to Senators Brutality in Steel Zone By RAYMOND CLAPPER TVnited Press Oorrespondent » deal with miedo te tne compte Jaber committee today by Judge B. H. jary, head of the United States teel corporation In face of repeated question ing, the Industrial feader stood without bulging on his contention that to deal with v leaders would result in ¢ thing w Whe decks al” to the ed nt Industrial prosperity. NGTON, D.C, Oct United States streated t a ves Judge Elbert H Gary, head of the corporation, declared today before the senate mittee ‘as the flest witness rep resenting the employers to be heard by the committee investi gating the steel strike. “It has been well known for the last few years that the labor unions have been attempting to organize in their own way the employes of the United States Steel corporation sub sidiaries,” Gary gaid. There is no basic country or In the world which has |paid higher wages to “ite employes than the steel corporation or has treated them with greater respect or consideration than the steel corpora tion Gary offered the committee figures which he said would prove the truth of his statements “No Truth To It” TOMEET LAgOR industry in this |) Aeattle's gas servic te pone |ovived an average of 20 lottery w day | President Is Feeling Rather'| from Beagon Hill to Queen euch of which beara 4 real complaint) Hill and from Ballard to Wiliott against the poor service furnished Jaded Today Hay, aroeveing to Fleet Assist | by the gas company ant Corporation Counsel Thomas | Kennedy plans to place a number ar } ss Hennesiy, of reprenentative residents of Beatt WASHINGT Oot, 1—United And patrong of the Seattle Light: |on the witness stand to establish the| Pressb"The president had a rest ing Co, will be called before the puby|clty's complaint that the Seattle! leas night and consequently in feel He service commission next Friday | Lighting company ia giving Seattle! ing somewhat jaded today,” sald | morning when it meets in the rooms) ‘deficient and unsatisfactory serv | bulletin iseved at 2 p.m. by Dr of the Chamber of Commerce and | loe * a ‘ % 7 ™ Onry T Cirayeon, the president's |Commereial club to give their exper The hearing next Friday morning physictan jence with the gas company will begin at 10 o'clock and will be ri According to Kennedy he has re ‘open ta the public Grayson said the president's eon dition was not to be considered in ° co. he described as improv efugees at Omsk Live in The p Jent slept during the ear! hou f the morning and in Double- Deck Barracks =e ie wif oti ably take ) automobile ride during VLADIVOSTOK Oct living bottomeside and another on | th da ayeon wald, a y jan refugees in the Omek re on | top. In addition to their family Kk thru the White House gre ve ur r nditions unfit for ani the have their miscellaneous lug — aad ma Lar families are crowded | gage thelr filthy bedding, and a eight feet in barracks unfit for | #tc in the aisle ome of the « . habitatlor more pr perou ones have a few at € ) this graphic 4 nd 1 saw one two with smal! r J hand se wing r hines 1 th na wihabite ar live © anima The platforms o wide |are all balf sick and seven-eighths stretching de length of the |atarved, Practically all of them|,.. ir ne rs ‘ barracks with narrow » bes have had typhus and have never Was in Serious Condition and tween and another platform tfen well again. Half ha the Lost 25 Pounds—Tanlac head rvy, and some of these are #0 : . The refugees each curtain off) saturated in their aye Built Her Up about six feet with old rags and tems that if J ur finger “I can truthfully say I don't b © in thia small space family nak & hole. |Meve I would ever hi x or elght someti s t a ut every third has tubercu it hadn't been for Tanlac” *pac by & If they have an ur isn, and ymbination statement mad the other y large family metimes | of thene ¢ *. And of course Mra, J. J. Jones of 9216 Fi the have platforr abov r we * ring fror mal t Southwest, Seattle w but as a rule u have one family’ nutrit in sor form or other.” Hed at Bartell’s Drug Store to r fourth bottle of the medic , ‘On day | was eating in a ree Kruger’s Gold, $3,000,000 taurant down town,” continued Mrs 9 Ds ’ ’ Jones, “and 1 was taken severely il Sought by Loot Hunters i STAM NNEDY TO FIGHT POOR GAS SERVICE WEDNE , OUTOMMR 1 ‘WILSON PASSES RESTLESS NIGHT with ptomaine poison. I was so sick It has been charged that during! I hadt aken to my bed at once the existing strike some of our sub LONDON. 1.—More than Zululand by a deep wea-nalvage ex-|! Kot worse rapidly an@ in just jaidiaries have been guilty of attack-| $2,000,000 in gold, part of the for- | pedition short time I lost twenty-five pounds ing and mistreating the strikers,” |tune of the late Oom Paul Kruger gold was shipped by Kruger, |'2 Weight. My appetite left me, and [Gary conunued, “That is without|is to be sought off the coast of |once pre of the Transvaal, "early everything I ate caused me lfoundation. There isn’t a vestige of prior to 1904 on the bark Dorothea, | ®* suffering by giving me terrible }truth fn it,” g ne of eight treasure ships sunk oft | PAin# In my - ste ch 1 couldn't | Gary denied that Mra, Fannie Don t Ne lect the African coast. She w sleep at all and at times | lay awake Snelling was killed by any one con-| the Jagged rock { Tenedos for hours and houre. I tried every nected with the steel corporation or A nyndicate to recover | Kind of medicine I knew but nothing Hite subsidiaries. He sald she was! Your Breakfast the treasure seemed to do me any good. I was KYled at Brackenridge, Pa., and that | machinery dev growing weaker and getting worse This company has no works or em-| encourages th mpt and worse each day ployes there |The Fear of Indigestion Often, The other vessels sunk off the| “Finally I was advised to get Gary said some investigation had| Prompts ¢ Start the Day | African coast which will be sought “mething that would a up my been made. “Our orders are abso-| Wrong. Eat What You Like, ei rystem, and I immediately thought lutely against anything of that kind, Take a Stuart's Dyspepsia The Grosvenor on the Pandoland |°f Tarlac for I had noticed about it anywhere, any time,” he added Tablet And You're const, $8,750,000; Araston, Marcus |!” paper. And, Oh, I'll never He said that employes around the Safe bay, $4,000,000; Birkenhead Reet, |{°T®* the vety firet bottle helped coal mines were defending them $2,900,000; At Bast Condh $3,- |)? Wonderfully snd I've been im |selvee from attacks of strikers. Hireakfast offers many of the most 300, 000 Dorothea, Tenedos island proving rap y ever ince. I've savory dishes of all the things we J taken three bottles now, and it's the | “You know how they do thingy,”| eat. And yet more people than oth. |eel, $3.260,000; Thunderbolt reefs, | “ron ‘truth. 1 never felt wetter f Gary said. “Throwing brickbats and/¢rwire go w me at breakfast seve 9 $2,750,000 Abercombie, ck psa sod gained thirtese pened | that kind of thing uP eee Tan rg Bee ghd Rocka, $900,000, and Morestein, Jut- eat Anything 1 want and I fee) better Gary, who arrived early, sweat at one end of the committee jtable with his assistants, statist! clans and reports banked around him, heavily loaded with documents and |papers. Gary's own stenographer |took the testimony Accompanying Gary Lindabury, general counsel of the United States Steel corporation; C. L. Close, manager of safety, sanita tion and welfare, and John Rets, vice president of the corporation, and other officials. Senators of the committee present were Chairman Kenyon (Iowa), Phipps (Colorado), Page (Vermont), McKellar (Tennessee), Wolcott (Dela ware), Walsh (Massachusetts), ling (South Dakota), Smith (Georgia), |Jones (New Mexico) and Gore (Okla homa). Kenyon gave Judge Gary an op portunity to make a full statement as the genesis of the atrike and the |iswues involved before questioned. | Gary described himself as chair man of the board of directors of the | United States Steel corporation, its finance committee and the chief ex- Jecutive in charge of the strike ar rangements Discuss Woman's Death Replying to Senator Wolcott, Gary said he thought the slaying of Mrs. ling occurred before the strike. Senator Phipps read a certified copy of the verdict of the coroner's} jury, stating that she came to her death, “during an attack on the sher- iff's deputies,” and that this wae “jus tiflable and in self-defense” and com mending the sheriff. ary eaid were acting as deputies at that ti |but that he did not know whether any are serving now |. “As a rule they are not appointed udde Some of them may h n under * of circumstance |before the police force was ade quate.” Answering another charge of cru y said a son of Jefferson Pierce denied his father’s ath was caused by an employe of }the United States were Rh V a ad was caused by an I. W nber. said his concern had never slightest connection" with ndard Wire Ind., where several recently killed panies were in no with the trouble," he added. “This strike (the present |ntrike) has been conducted like any | other only in of ita features,’ Gary continued Says Strike Unpopular “The large majority of our work men were not desirous of striking. | but ins’ Ww Gary Jhad ‘th the 8' | mond, | were company, “Our com way connected worse some they were not members of any Junion and had declined to become | auch, year after yeo When the United Sts a gteel cor poration was furnishing about half |the steel wu 1 during the w the workmen were loyal, Gary aid, ‘There was never any interrup: |tion of any extent during the war,’ he declared, ‘While there is A radical element mong the men, it is only doing justice t aay hat |the majority of the foreigners are | food citizen: loyal to this country and loyal to thelr employer Gary could not give the pereen jtage of foreigners employed | He offered to submit exhibits | which e entirely antagonistic to} the they ar dinsat jet or) unwilling workers.’’ | Kenyon questioned Gary closely about the foreigners employed, ‘The strike was inaururated by union jleaders, not by the men The men have not been seeking the ns |aistance of some one to organize | them | Stags ore bred in China for their | horns, the horns being cut while soft each year and wed in the manufac ture of medicine) none of his employes} took bis| Ster-| eel corporation, | Ham-| strikers | steel | | | t buck wheat go to it, and Dyspepsia Tal but on the contrary, to ma hardsh _ for the next meal. and Canada. Stat or saurage for! i the epectitn, 62 munch | fry on till lunch | t ‘Am empty stomach under these conditions 1¢ not storing up energy, | suscepti influences that may work | It ts ativisable fo eat three good | If the /tween strikers and workers irug stores throughout the United Jon island, $700,000. Chicago District Mills Increasing | CHICAGO, Oct. 1.—Steet mits in | |the Chicago district were reported jand stronger in every way. Those awful pains I used to have in my | stomach have entirely gone. |wound at night and get up every morning feeling fine. I live quite a distance from the shopping district, and today when I left to come in town and shop, my husband said | working at 50 per cent capacity and | ‘Don't forget your fine medicine,’ and jsteadily increasing today. | the first thing I @id was to come At Waukegan, where clashes te-|here and get it. My blood has been have |purified and I feel like another the ratione [been frequent, quiet wns reported. | woman. Tunlac is the most wonder ry © good break-| When the request of ely officials ful thing of its kind in the worl, low it with Stuart's Dys-|tor state troops was refused, {00 /and I tell all my friends and neigh Sy gt As ¥-- local business ‘men organized a bors that It saved me.” natural tendency, not an acau! ted militia company Tanlac is sold in Seattle by Bartel) one. You will find Stuart's Dyapep-| Mills at Joliet were making steel | Drug Stores under the personal di |today for the first time since the|rection of a special Tanlac represen [strike started. tative —Advertisement I sleep | You Must Be Satisfied: — Nothing Else Will Do in This Office tak me Lee tea ee To make this motto absolutely binding we back it up with a written guarantee on every piece of work that leaves this office, which protects you from every angle and means that you are bound in writing to be perfectly satisfied. What more can we do? We have been in Seattle for years and our reputation is at stake if we cannot satisfy you. We have one price and that you will find cannot be duplicated for the same class of work. You get the best materials money can’ buy. Your work is done painlessly. Your work is done by den- tists who have made Dentistry their life’s work. NOW, WHY PUT OFF ANY LONGER HAVING YOUR TEETH TAKEN CARE OF? Come in today—We will gladly give you the bene- fit of our expert advice. It will cost you nothing—we are here to assist you in keeping the natural health that is yours by right, but which you can so easily undermine through neglect. Boston Dental Company “The Hands That Make It Painless” 1420 Second Avenue (Opposite Bon Marche) 25e 20¢ lie 25¢ 20¢ 35e Men’s Sox . Arm Bands Garters Shoes, all sizes, cut to. . Shoes cut to welted soles, cut to. $4.00 and §. Ss, broken $4.00 and School Shoes cut to $1.50 Men's Work Shirts ... $1.50 © hildren's * Rubbers $2.00 Boys’ Suits 50 Drews” Shirts Wash Arrow Collars Handkerchiefs .. Dress Ties .... DOUGLAS SHOES Entire Stock Sacrificed $5.00 Men’s Heavy Work $2.48 $9.00 Men’s Wet Weather $4.85. $7.00 Ladies’ Dress Shoes, 5.00 Men’s Dress "$1.98 $5.00 Girls’ $1.95 $60,000 stock. This great sale ends is being 20c Canvas Gloves, knit wrist, cut to. 9c Men’s Dress Shirts, Ar- row and others, 89c 2.00, cut to $8.00 Boys’ cut to .... $15.00 Boys’ All-wool Blue Serge Suits, sizes $3.00 Wool Underwear, Mh often $6.95 sua $1.65 MEN’S HATS Worth to $5.00; colors of black, brown and Shirts, 69c Men’s Flannel worth to $2.00, all es, cut to ATTEND THIS SALE Pe THURSDAY ITIVELY CLOS g 1601-1603 FIRST AVE. - Corner First Ave. and Pine St. Thursday and Friday Only A two-day wind-up to close out this great Store closed all day Saturday. Come to this sale tomorrow—come while this great $60,000 stock PAY CHECKS CASHE AND FRIDAY. SD ALL DAY SATURDAY. Red Front Clothing Co. $1.00 Dress Shirts i5e Suspenders... 85e Work Shirts. . $1.00 Men's Under- wear $1.00 Wool ox es $1.25 Children’s MEN’S SUITS Hart, Schaffner & Marx, Kuppenheimer, Collegian ‘if Society Brands all in- cluded, and go at a fraction of their real value. Friday night. Overcoats and $30.00, Men’s Heav Raincoats, values to § Men's $4.00 Khaki Pants, es to 44, * $1 .65 cut to $4.00 Men’s Heavy Union cat $1.98 cut to $30.00 and $35.00 Men’s uit Collegian, Hirsch- Wickwire and others, cut $6.00 Men $4.00 Men’s Heavy Work Pants cut to $ 1 85 os 3098 and $40.00 Men's Hart, Schaffner & and Kuppenheimer $17.65 $30.00 Men’s Suits, J. Capp & Son and Alco makes, to. $14.85 to Union-made $1.25 UNION STORE STORE 5 Mgn’s Ov rails cut to Marx make: cut to $1.50 Children’s Play Suits $2.00 Men's Wool Underwear ......+ $2.00 Khaki Pants $1.50 Men's Union Suits $2.00 Men's wr Coats . t ad = 2