The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 2, 1919, Page 17

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

REDS WIN THE SECOND GAME i Continued From Page One ~ x @.& one-handed catch struck out, He looked at th Which curved on the ou Of the plate. The crowd howled Mth glee. Weaver took third on a ba! Rallee slipped while delivering ball to Felech and pped his OW, Felech fied to Rous: No ins, One hit, no errors. Rousch made a magnificent catch Oat Against the dista fence. He raced with Jack last side center the ball, « Vessels in Port at Seattle Today Pier 2 Northw fag down what seemed an eal | ra oasible chance | CINCINNAT! —Rousch got a walk Miama was wild agin and seemed h At his inability to locate the ite. He kicked the dirt around th Duncan merificed, Williams Mt. Pat mac & perfect bur mm the first base line and Will te work fast Kopf fouled out Wer, who backed up far from Gi base to get the ball, Neale sin 40 left, scoring Rousch. It was clean drive. Neale was out steal Bohalk to Risberg. One run, nO erro! Airplane flew over the feld be innings and heaved a dummy field. The game was delayed oMficers rescued It Seventh Inning \GO—Gandil out. Who covered first base; Ris singled to left. Which Duncan stopped fn bril style. Schalk singled to right, Risberg to third and both when Neale’s throw got awe Groh, Williams struck out. He hard at the last one. J. Col flied to Rousch. Two runs, two ‘one error. 7 he “third base line. Salleo flied to who made a nice catch on | Daubert to| It was a hard | TI—Rariden fouled to! Tt was a high pop-up down) it fie foul line after a lone No} ‘went to second when wild to Salles at first. "| pert, into a double play, Rath opt to Daubert; Schalk singled enter. McMullin batted for Wil ‘and was out, Rath to Daubert. two hits, no errors, eee PROVIDES SONS IN DANCING Castles. ) will ultimately include to 1,800 girls. “Marks and crows can fly as 6,000 feet, altho birds do not go higher than 000 to repay your loan | with us. We give you every protection and charge reasonable rates for the ac- commodation. ‘We loan money on diamonds, furs and yours, worth at ti same o Second Av. and Madison St. Rerwehe anf aat4 John E. Price & Co. Southweat Cor. 2nd ‘Telephone M: aventent entral SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES 4 to 930 Per Year. Title Trust. Co. Columbia © stairs to étimb and ocatlo Al) sizen, Str Derring U8 t. MT. Bwitt- Puget Sound Prides and Dredging Co— Str Brook wood Yarde—Str West Ira, tr Roosevelt, Cath t Neffernan . Bough- le, Allen Union, Blestra, » Areademia, & Wolf, Birk 4, Agron, An- tiarrison, Port Cardia, Cangacan, Costan, Cieyras, Dione, Lootl, Kiten, Sno qvalmie, schr Analea, motor sehr Libby Maine, bee Corus, soht Henry Wilson, bee Dashing Wave, bk Ort ental, str San Juan, sche Salvator Patterson @ MeDonald—str Raleutta, Commercial Boiler work Motor echr Kirketind. Meacham @ Mabcock—8tr Chalets Elliott Bay Shipbullding company—Senr Bianca Hanford st. terminal riwa, str Chepadoa, ane st, terminal uthie yards Ahmik, Fort } rfield, Abiiia, A Abyde Cinena, ate Str Clio, str Bir. Str Ketebikan Str Dewey, str Devel, October 2—Str Celle from San Fran- cisco at T a. mi tr Northwestern from Tacoma at 4:20 5. m. October 1—Str sie tern via Souths m; str Curacao aka at 5:30 p.m trial trip at 4 p.m. jupert from Prince Rupert, , Via porte at 3 p.m; str Western Glen from Bverett at 11:20 & m. Departures October 1—Str Governor for Sam Diego vin Ban Francisco and Ban Padre at 9 p. m.; schr Mary B. Foster for Rellingha tow of tug Richard Holyoke at 12:20) Pm: way from South- str Prince Rupert for Prince Ru- B.C, via porte at midnight; o Chapadoa for trial trip at 10 a m. ae” AT UI 5 Bk OR |, Received by Wi reless | <inalfeaee October I—#tr Phyitie, Redondo tor | coon 30 mies teem Sesemie.of 8 p. m.; str Fassett for Havana, miles south of Columbia River iieniani at sp m: Se fort, me fan Francisco for Aeattia, 368 miles from Seattle at § p. m.; str Catherine D. | .|at Rome iniet at & p.m; str Norwood, | Gambier Bay for Hoonah, off Point Gard- ner at Sp. m. FIGHT IN COURT = FOR LITTLE GIRL Man and Wife Accuse Each Other of Radicalism Both willing to be* divorced, but |fighting bitterly over the custody of Laurine, thelr little 3-year-old daughter, Mrs. Ellen Howard and her husband, Anery Howard, staged a legal battle King Dykeman’s court Thursday in which charges flew thick and| fast. | “She's an I. W. W. and a believ- er in the doctrine of free love,” Howard snapped out. | “And he signs himself “ worker” declared his wife “He taught me to love him with brass knuckles and two loaded re- volvers,” she told the court, “and when I wantel to leave he said, ‘If you attempt to leave they'll carry us both out.” He made other threats to kill and she lived in constant fear of her life, she said. Gatherings |frequent at the Howard house, both charge, altho neither admi that they believe in direct action. “Do you believe in dynamite, and the overthrow of the govern ment?” she was asked on cross- examination, She declared she was a supporter the govern- ment, but that it not run to suit her. “You taught the child to sing Bolshevik songs, aid you not?” was |the next question put by Howard's | lawyer, “Oh, song: of L W. Ws were of was no, just a few little like ‘Hold the Fort.’ Under —crows-examination, said+ she objected to the visible government.” A co-respondent, Joe Miller, named in cross-complaint filed by Howard, The Howards Eighth ave. 8. W. Woman ihites $37 Stolen From Home | Mra, E. E. Perry, 1317 Seventh {ave., reported the theft of $37 from her home Thursday, | She told ¢he police she suspected | | a boy who lived near her home. The lad, she said, had not been werking for some time. The police investi gated, union she “in- Mved at 7621 WANT ALL FUNDS Unions were instructed to axk their membership to place all their savings in the Trades Union Savings & Loan Association, at the Central Labor council Wednesday night, after charges had beem made that bankers, by withholding capital, were preventing contractors from re suming operations under the new wage scale demanded by striking building tradesmen CARL REEVES IS BACK Carl H. Reeves has returned trom service in the United States army and has resumed private practice as a consulting civil engineer at 1107 1 American Bank building. Stanwix, | Lah LC Ee Seattle Arrivals oa | | in Superior Judge | tw ellow | i on ade nme ee OCTOBER 2, 1919. Sane ’PEACK SEASON ALMOST OVER Rainy Weather Makes Dull Trading in Market t Wednesday the rain of the housewife ading on We owing past t in reluc home aa she bas of weather and this mediately reflected by he peach over D> rtas Unue to arrive a ta per box. Cling peaches from Wenatchee made oir Appearance on the street Wednesday and were sold at $5 cents, A later variety, the Solway, is expected to wind up the peach season Local commission men continue to receive reports of the by frost east of the im ing the ea part of There has been pract plant: arriv from the past four days and which a week ago was sel! per crate is now priced at $2.15 Cantaloupe and melon markets are dull, This weather is not conducive to heavy buying of these commodi. tien, Eastern Washington cantaloupe growers are heavy sufferers as the result of the frost The potato marke ern Washington Netted Gems selling at $45 to $47 per ton locals at $37 to $38 per ton potato prices remain unc hanged. | Tomatoes continue scarce. Quota-| tions are $1.26 to $1.60 per box | The street was bare of Italian prunes. The east of the mountain frost has cut short the crop, which | was unusually emall this year at the| best. ur to feeling the ret is practically lots « 85 to im ailors season amall 1 sell at in on damag antaina ¢ w no exe Sunnyside for stuff at $1 this ally Fant are with t is steady The firm tone of butter and exes | 5 thruout the country continues checked. There were no changes in the local market densaries of the state have an nounced that the price of raw milk i for the next two weeks will be un: changed. Receipts at the local stock yards Wednesday were cattle and 433 hogs. The livestock market is >> Sag ae in all divisions | Local M Markets | - [LAO | | f= Paid Wholese } fee Vegetabiee an 1 un price ok | Cabbage Denier” wait, Nea Local, outdoor, 1% The Pickling. ratps Al e cookers. small Detlciows, iste Warh B. Wash | fo ands do tds | 2 Wash, Gavensteina. B._ Wash, Jonathans Bulk, 20 Te. . E. Wash. King Davide BW Winter Bananas Local Apple Cider—Per gal Ran Guatemala, Blackberri4e— Local ce Tokays, per crate Grape Feult--Cal.. per Honey—Comb, case 2 Strained ¢ 4 Dark amber Honey Dews Per case | 75@1 urre Mardy 2 D'Angos, box Fall butter Pineapples—Hawallan, pe 1008 don. 4.6006 o 1 5008.8 per box rer box Dry bulls or wta Dry wait nia . Dry calfsking, 6 the. and under, Noy do No 2 | Hornenidon, wreon or mnited, oa. 4.0008 do dry, each clean ranch, fail grown Salted or areen kip # do No. 2 Bheep pelts, lone w do medium w: 0 short w do shearing . do dint ary wool pelts. Tallow, No 40 No. 3. i iicnivvinniiutinciasinidiiateniti |, Portland Market Status P Status of the New Yor Stock Exchange k 4 Oct. 2.—Practioally alt higher at the day, United up %i Bald jo Mtwel at 241 at 106%, off 105%, up We Amertoan T NEW YOR he leading leant week ombined in the era tuenees on the Chicago Hoard of Trade Provisions droppe * Frisco Market ‘Status “| | tar FRANCIACO, Oct Nutter-—mx The per dow: extra dos; undersized pulle California Mate, fancy, 270 per ite PORTLAND, 114 head: mark: ore, 18 2508.25 Ost, 8— Jood to holes fair to good common to fair je per dos, tle per Ib: brofiers, 26@2¢0 —Ihe per te ip . | | %) | New York Coffee and tions ..|Continue F; ight on Indictments! +Twelve defendants in the county boone theft ease continued. their fight before Judge H. M. Ralston in an effort to grand jury in dictments quashed Thursday. The morning arguments centered around technicalities connected with th signatures on the indictments. The} 12 defendants are; Judge Clay Allen; four eons sheriffs, Matt Starwich, Fred A.| Brown, Roy Murdock and Stewart! Campbell; W. W. Connor, Charles G. Heitner, Dr. J. H. Lyons, Dr, F. G. Nichols, Oscar Springer, George} o Gau and 8 A. Martin. la Barley — Rolled Ground 36.00 -124@ 120.00 36.00@38.00 75.00 80.00 Aifalte Meal Serateh Food 17.60 18,50 16,004 17.00 16.00 16.00 + 16,00@ 16,60 Rough heavy . + £00@ 7.60 + 12094660 Cows—Country, dressed Hoge—llock Choice heavy Veal— Fancy DAIRY PRODUCTS Prices Paid to Shippers + 530 4 + 860 27 Batter tees } Fags —Locai, atrictly freak Milk—Per owt DAIRY PRODUCTS Prices Pald Wholesale Dealers ” oe Looal country ort creamery, Cheese-—New Winconsin triph and Wash, tri a Limbsrger ck Swine Fonay wheel wh _| predicted tn *| California Has Large 1918 Crop SACRAMENTO, Oct. 2.—Figures showing the volume of business done in dustries of California giver today controll certain main 1918 John during were out here by Chambe r Tota) production of minerals dur- ing the year was‘ $37,686,0 $ 459,221; lumber, $29,000,000, an agriculture, $546,161,011 The crop values were: Fruit, in cluding grapes, $171,626,000; field and truck crops, $25,400,000; marketable farm animals, $67,696,966; dairy prod ucts, $64,428,056. The total area of California, Con troller Chambers stated, ts 99,617,280 acres, The lands in farms amount to 28,828,961 acres; improved lands, 11 968,837 acres; fruit lands, 1,000,000, jand public lands, 860,000 acren The rice industry of the |mento valley, nonexintent seven years ago, he pointed out, will yield thin year worth approximately ng grown on about 1,000 acres in Yolo county alone Predict 50 Sacks Rice Per Acre MARYSVILLE, Cal, Oct. 2.-—Rice growers of Yuba and Butter coun- | ties are turning the thelr crops preparatgry to harvest- ing Within the next week some fields will be harvested and it predicted the yield this year will be in f last year's crop. From sacks per acre is several places and the average is expected to be better than 45 sacks, per h@ndred are the rule, firm tm said to have signed a co water from excess 35 to tract for 6 cents for an early vi riety provided pounds date. by the crop of 40,000 is delivered by a certain! The harvest will be general | October 6 Ask Northwest Man for U. S. Job Recommendations that a North- Weat man be appointed to the ship- ping board position vacated by Henry M, Robinson of Los Angeles were forwarded to President Wilson and Jobn Barton Pyne, chairman of | the shipping board by the Chamber | of Commerce Wednesday. The premier ponition of the Northwest as a shipbuilding center and as a j handler of foreign trade were the | Feasons given for th S. S. Santa Alicia Is Due October 10th The steamship Santa Alicia will) artive here about October 10 to enter the Weat Coast service of W. R. Grace & Co, again. Since here she has been navigating in European waters, e appointment. | Public Markets | PIKE PLACE tall #¢, tall ean Oar o | Sacra is! or TACOMA, WASHIN The Western Rubber Co. iTON A Capital Stock Offering of $300,000 By. the Western Underwriting Company 302-304 Lyon Bldg. Seattle, Wash. Phone Elliott 3218 First Unit of Western Rubber Company’s Factory There is being hurried to whieh it well-financed, construction of this plant the machinery already will be und is hoped will furnish well-managed concert ordered, operation by January tor the under and promised Int, mn rubber factory 1 tires and you tea after with your Western Rubber Compan und will be complet for November Ist de we way South Tacoma, Ws inner tube of Tacom 1 and read ushington, made locally by @ Washington. The for installation of It is hoped the factory A Rubber Industry of Great Promise for the Pacific Coast This ia the first of a num sion of the Western Rubber Company: first unit wil! have a capacity purc 4 has room for additional u r of units contemplated in th Each » tire its of 04 ot 7 and inner tuber comp unit will be @ complete pe wcity when cor hensive plan of plant exter factory in and of itself. The r day (three shifts). The: site tructed. A Large Rubber Industry to Be Developed on the Coast For a number of years the company has been operating @ small plant in Tacoma, and a num- bey lishirfe a large plant in South quality share of the trade tires and tubes. T rubber used in the both ways. thereby saving this expensive Financing the Western On @ bond issue $300,000 was raised which provided thé Western Rubber the means to purchase the struct the building and pay ery. This is an Elmer Dover, president comes from Akron, Ohio, of the United States. Experienced men advise a relatively that the Western ot Rubber dealers throughout the this working capital you are ribe under most favorable terms, Contracts for $6.50; but one) of foremost men of that city of its goods (cord tires being featured as Between $50,000,000 and $60,000,000 is sent out from is in a p United st tured and returned to the Coast for the machin. accomplished the rubber center in the rubber business large working capital, Company may place its goods on consignment with the tire territory t ma, interested in building up which it is hoped in the specialty), the Pacific enomenal condition, since by # passed through Pact The price you pay waste of freight both Rubber Co. ways, Company with new site, con- fact. Mr. the company, Gentlemen Without obi NAME It ts to ipyites to sub- onditions and ADDRESS . | | [Deserts . Bride, hia os a New Name and Marries Young Girl * Claude L, Stewart, whose honey- |moon with his bride of three days; from Chehalis, was abruptly inter- rupted here Wednesday, when he was arrested as an alleged bigamist, is not Claude L, Stewart at all, but an impostor, according to Mra, Laura! | J. Stewart, of 4003 Elghth ave. S., Georgetown. Mrs, Stewart, a pretty telephone operator at the Elliott exchange, and wife « Claude L. Stewart, Thursday her husband is no nearer | Seattle than Madison, Ala. . She is positive, she says, that the Claude Stewart arrested here is a |man named Henry Ruel, to whom she was introduced last April, when she ‘resided at 711 W. 734 st. | Ruel, according to Mrs. Stewart, knew she and ber husband were es- jtranged and living apart, and usurped the name of Claude lL. Stew art to throw detectives off his trail | here. | Used Name of Long | Mra. Stewart says Ruel married a % girl here two weeks ago, using the| name of C. A. Long. The innocent | young bride, who believes ber name | in Mra, Long, is now residing at the | Sather hotel, on Pike st, ignorant of the fgct that her husband married Miss TI th Bishop, of Chehalis, . | last Saturday, Mrs. Stuart says. tail trout Norway ‘herring. pail, bulk hone: salmon trout, trout ™ i m 21, home 1 6 made naine, 600 T.; home made beet 166 ment Stalls liver ary 20 lie 200 cheese. cana 2T¢ mon. amei green olive » 135, : | order | “The only reason I can see for his jusing the name of my husband,” | tacts of his first marriage.” | “Stewart,” or “Long,” or “Ruel,” 2 OF whoever he is, ‘was arrested by De PROTEST JAP said | sald Mra. Stewart, “in to conceal the | tectives Jack Landis and James Byrne, and held for Sheriff J. F. Berry, of Chehalis, who has taken him back to Chehalis to face a charge of forgery. | With him, when ne was arrested, was Miss Elizabeth Bishop, who be- | Heved herself to be his wife. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Owen Bishop, who reside on a farm 20 miles from Chehalis, Left Young Bride Mrs, Stewart's sister have been visiting “Mrs. Long,” real wife of the supposed impostor, when “Long” returned to his wife's apart- ment at the Sather Tuesda | The sister says “Long” told his |wife he was leaving hurriedly for California on account of his health, He took his picture and departed, leaving his young bride in tears and bewilderment. “He seerned nervous and excited |about something,” | Bia right then I suspected things weren't as people thought they were.” At the time of the arrest, the Che-| halls brid® was wearing a diamond |ring which the groom is said to have forged a check to buy a few days be- | fore the wedding. “That fellow is certainty a fast worker,” commented Mrs, Stewart “He marries a girl in Seattle, spoons GABLE POLICY {Chamber Sends Telegram to Senator Jones | | Th an effort to have revoked an recently issued by Japanese jeable companies, under which it is stated no responsibility for the transmission of cablegrams will be jassumed by the converns, the for- elgn trade bureau of the Seattle Chamber of Commerce has wire Senator Wesley M, Jones urging that the matter be taken up with the state department | The telegram sent Jones reads: , to Senator -| “Telegraph companies are issuing Monthly Meeting Will Be Held on Friday Evening, October 3, at the Fine Arts Auditorium, 1213 Fourth Avenue Musical program: Mr. Tom Price, baritone; Mr. Barney Hagan, David Burnam, violin- therine Beasley, L. Mohrman, ac: compan iat ADMISSION FREE bulletins to the effect that messages! ‘/to Japan are accepted at sender's jrisk, as ‘Japan accepts no responst bility on account of any telegram to from that country or handled thru the Japanese s¥etem.’ “Since it customary for tele srdph companies to assume re. sponsibility for correct transmission of messages in this country and « Atlantic cables, may we suggest jthat state department #egotiate with Japanese government in effort jto have some practice adopted in trans-Pacifie cable service. Other | wise difficulties doing business by jeable on Pacific are greatly in Jereased when there can be lance on accuracy of transmission. or AT THE.HEAD OF CLASS “A” That's where Seattle's harbor stands in the opinion of the United States Shipping Board, United States seaboard it as the best on the head of the list of class “ which designates at the “those A” harbors, that is, deep enough for ships of any draft.” Our wonderful harbor is one of our great advan- tages for fc benefit of it? formation elgn trade, I Consult our and suggestions your business getting the Foreign Department for in concerning foreign trade and the financing of exports and imports, FIRST NATIONAL BANK FIRST AVENUE AT JAMES ST. Established 1882 It your gums are sore, sloughing and bleeding, you have Pyorrhea, so-called Riggs’ Dis ease, which is a menace to good health, We are the only Dentists in the Northwest who specialize in thie dreaded disease. Exami- nation and estimate free. Special taken of children's teeth. to Union care Reasonable discount men and their families, Dentists 608 Third Ane Cor. James St. Phone Elliott 3633 Hours: 8:30 a, m. to 6 p. m. Sundays, 9 to 12. no erli will is said to} the sister said, | the rubber industry and estab- future, by the excellency and command an everincreasing coast states east annually for far the greater part of the plantation coast ports, is sent east and manufac for your tire includes the freight charges It is proposed to manufacture the tires and tubes here and distribute them locally, COUPON NO. 3 The Western Underwriting Company, 8. T. Claridge, President, 326-328 Lyon Building, Seattle, Wash. igating myself to purchase, you ane, may mail one of your pamphlets concerning the Western Rubber Company to: CITY OR TOWN with her @ few days, rushes Chehalis and marries another within two weeks. Alabama, is 25. in 30, she says. seems to be over in Mason County, according to D. C. Nevitt, who is the propri- etor of the “Bay Side Inn,” at Allyn. y Take stage from Bremer | Diner 5 Ti \ METROPOLITAN Twice Daily: 2:15—8:1! | Pamize Mat Fuses \Y Precaste THE END OF THE ROAD A Picture for Every Mother Se SALE TOMORROW, FRIDAY, OCT. 3RD LIGHT DELIVERIES AND ONE-TON TRUCKS FROM $100.00 UP 1000 Pike St. COR. TERRY AVE. 3RD FLOOR PHONE ELLIOTT 277

Other pages from this issue: