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STEEL WORKERS | FACE HOSTILITY ‘Tighe Says Officials Tried Our Tailors Not on Strike “Strictly Union” LAST CHANCE—SATURDAY ONLY—FINAL OFFER MEN’S SUITS 240 Niade to Order With Extra Please do not expect to Cloth may be, Monday. ments taken later, Let's get busy and PRODUCE. That’s the or ing. And let’s divide the results of production f Are laborer is worth y way to lower the ly. That old Bibli of his hire,” still holds good. tailors are busy and happy at their work. get the cut price on selected and measur¢- but order gust be placed with small deposit on Saturday. AN ASSEMBLAG AWAITS YOUR INSPECTION. We have E OF SUPERB WOOLENS YOU'LL DELIGHTED. a picked crew of the most skilled tailors ever brought together in one shop. These men are anxious to demonstrate that ior workmanship is best exem- plified under strict union conditions. They want to ve that the ent they submitted to their employers was for the best interests of show their appreci the trade, and they will iation of your order by the high” character of the workmanship they put in your clothes. UNION 70 TAILORS art Contest Is a . Still on to Kill Booze Indictments lei intricacies intro- : oe the, state and the de- hearings on the motions to the indictments returned by ty grand jury, which investi- the theft of a large quantity f August Hensgen’s liquor from the house June 4, continued before J. M Ralston of Clallam the indictments did not that the defendants were not is the latest reason of- by the defendants for the of the indictments. Clergy- &fe allowed to have @ certain int of liquor, The case may be d Saturday. f dog acts as if he might be nis ugliness. ETROPOLITAN Last Times Tomorrow: 2:15-8:15 ‘Andorsed by All Right-Think- img Men and Womes—Con- demneé by Prudes. 2Be-5Oc. feats Renerved. Nights 25¢-50¢-750 MAY ARBITRATE | BRITISH TIEUP Railway Men Ask to See Lloyd George BY ED L, KEEN (United Press Staff Correspondent) LONDON, Uct. 3—Another attempt to regpen negotiations between the government and striking railway men was made shortly after noon today when labor leaders visited Premier Lloyd George with the hope of resuming mediation. Conditions in traffic had improved. the statement said. ‘The move toward, a renewal of negotiations today came in the midst ot a feeling of general disappoint- ment over the breakdown of yester. ing. {| Officials of the National Union of Railwaymen announced that the gov. }ernment had refused to make any concessions beyond those contained in the first offer. The workers re- | fused to return without receiving a clearer idea of the terms of settle- ment, BARGE CAPTAIN, 92, PROUD DADDY NOW NEW YORK, N. Y., Oct. 3.—Mrs, Minnie Holloway, wife of an Vast | River barge captain, gave birth to a boy in Bellevue hospital, Her hus band, Ezra Holloway, is 92 years old |Mrs. Holloway, who is 41 years ola. |#ald she was married to the barge lcaptain last December. | She is his third wife and this ig |her second venture in matrimony. | Holloway is the father of 15 chil |dren by his twovother wives LONDON, O¢ 3--When 10. 000 tons of granite and rubble fell into @ quarry at St, Sampson's, Guernsey, Mrs. William Martin, 84, was buried beneath the rock. FREE TROUSERS ————— day’s efforts to reach an understand. | Our working agreement high cost of liv- cal saying, “The While the tailors in most of the Seattle shops are striking for a living wage our with the tailors’ union is splendid, All we need to puta lot more tailors to work at fine wages is more orders. That’s why we are making an extra special offer for Saturday. All Made © In Our Own Strictly Union Shop When you examine the woolens offered we are sure you will agree that these Suits are worth $65. Extra pair trousers is worth $12 to $18. Think what you save when you get both for $40! (INGORPORATED) 4 FIRST AVE. 22 ARE KILLED | Five Whites and 17 Negroes Are Slain | HELENA, Ark., Oct. 2—~The death toll in two days of race war at Elaine, Ark., near here, today stood at 22. Five were whites and the remainder negroes. One of the dead whites is a soldier from Camp Pike. He was killed when negroes fired on him from am- | bush. Quiet prevatied early today with Camp Pike soldiers patrolling the |streets of Blaine. Five hundred sol |diers are on guard here and |Elaine, augmented by 1,000 former soldiers, deputy sheriffs and armed guard: 0. C. Bratton, former assistant Postmaster at Little Rock, Ark., is under arrest here, charged with first degree murder. He is accused of be- ing an instigator of the riots, Brat ton declares he was in Blaine on |legal business and had no cofnection with the uprising. Gov. Brough, who has been inves. |tigating the riots, today returned to | Helena. Foreigners Leave Steel Strike Zone | PITTSBURG, Pa., Cet, %—Ranka of striking steel workers were being rapidly depleted of forelgners today, |In the face of the apparent dead. lock, hundreds of foreigners were |renorted departing for Europe while many more were seeking employ jment in mines and on contract work Unionists and operators main | tained their lines were holding sol lidly An American fi | that one million Ar England and I billions of dc ert spend four next year. — INRACE RIOTS in| IN A STOCK AS BIG AS OURS YOU CAN’T HELP FINDING SOME PATTERN TO SUIT YOU, Perfect fit and isfaction guaranteed or your money cheerfully OVERCOATS $40 JUST NORTH OF CHERRY ST. Made to Order at Sale Price Saturday Only |Indians Married in | Justice Court Here With Chief Henry G. Nelson as witness, Leo Daniela of Enumclaw, and Lillian Young, of Auburn, both }full blooded Indians, were jby Justice of the Peace Reah M | Whitehead Friday morning. Both the bride and groom are woll edu leated and speak the best of Eng. lish ‘Here Is a Real Beautifier No Matter How Madly the Complex-~ fon Is Disfigured With Pi: | | The action | Wafers is w © direct to the ekin that iiss pimples, blackheads and such kinds of skin disappear. They simply Their red r will surely your or won't ne 60-cent take the place yt ma ayd lotions, and 4 your powder puff, ot a box of Stuart's Callum Wafers today at any drug store and join the ever-growing throng of American complexion beautics, married | of Stuarts Calcium | absolute sat- refunded. | Submit Bids for Steam Plant Unit Nine contractors submitted bids }to the board of public works Frid ment of the proposed 15,- tt unit of the municipal ant on Lake Union. id was under the estimated t of $588,160 which was set some ume ago by Superintendent Ross, of the lighting aystem, The exact figures of each bid will noe be available until worked out by the board of public works, The total estimated cost of the steam |plant, including ground, buildings and equipment, will reach $800,000, according to Superintendent Ross, Wild Dream Haunts Sleeper in Morgue Announcement of the opening |Monday of the army retail stor in the deputy z supply depot warehouse at acy st. and BE. Marginal way, was made Friday by Capt. J. J. Regan, superintendent of the store, Capt. Regan announced the stock included many articles of clothing, rubber boots, bedding, cooking uten sls and tools. Purchases may be made by mail by out-of-town buyers. The store will remain open daily jfrom' 9 a. m. until 6 p, m |Kidnaping Charge Dropped in Courts The charge of kidnaping against George E. Simpson, for taking away his two children to California while divorce action brought by his wife was pending, was dropped from the calendar in Justice Otis W. Brink jer’s court Friday morning w |Simpson paid all costs. Mabel Ella |Simpson was granted a divorce |from hi mearlier in the week FF COP Discovering thieves at Dewsbury, a constable was fastened with his own handcuffs to a hay chopping machine and his ankly 4 bound with his police belt. to Break Unions BY RAYMOND CLA) to break up orgar orkers have beer nited Staten Steel « was formed, President M Steel and the ivation of made wince rporation Tighe we kers labor epeated charges of union that the steel corporation opriated $20,000,000 In its early to suppren# labor denied thi as before the committee |want ads publi: }1909, offering and Kumaniar © of att the From 1909 on organize when he He read d in Pittsburg in Gary preferred tx to attemp there was a steady increase in the employment of for. eigners in the mills, Tighe asserted A moderate course by labor stee! compar disapproval among ers toward the met with workmen, Tighe said ‘They ld charged |with ‘shaking ha with the com pany and would have called us a mutual admiration society,” he de clare: Tighe gave the estimated number of strikers on October 1 as 363,000 3,000 B. C. SHIP ~ WORKERS OUT North Portland Workers Join. in Walkout | PORTLAND, Ore. Oct. 3.-—More than 3,000 shipyard workers of the Standifer company, at Vancouver, Wash., and North Portland struck today, upon orders of the Portland Metal Trades council About 300 men employed by the | Coast Shipbuilding Co, are striki and those who are not on the job at the contract shops of the city bring the total number of strikers in this | district to approximately 4,500, : rn . Police Guarding Oakland System OAKLAND, Cal, Oct, 3.—(United Preas.)—Police took precautions to- day to guard against violence as a re sult of the street car #trike here. When a large crowd gathered, last night, on the Southern Pacific bridge over the Key Route tracks, 40 policemen were sent to guard the! place, Hundreds of strike sympathizers formed today in front of the recruit- ing headquarters of etrikebreakera, and police wete sent there. Watchmen Return to Tacoma Yard TACOMA, Oct. 3.—Watchmen in} the Todd Steel Shipyards here went back to their jobs today under an agreement reached late yesterday, The men will take care of the prop- erty at the plant while it is idle at) the old scale of wages. Increased pay will be retroactive te October 1, In case the new scale is put into effect. REPORT WILSON VERY SICK MAN Dr. Grayson Remains at the White House Thru Night Continued From Page One| fi eee menntieectineeentiniecountinnameemnansinnmeenan consulted with Dr. Grayson late yes terday at the president's bedside. | They were Dr. F. X. Dercum, noted neurologist, of Philadelphia; Dr, E R. Stitt, chief of the naval medical school here, and Dr. Sterling Ruffin. Afterward Grayson issued the follow- jatement: © president fa a very sick man condition ts leas favorable today din bedsthruout today. After a consultation with Dr ¥, X, Dercum of Philadelphia, Drs Sterling Ruffin and E. R. Stitt of Washington, In which all agreed as }to his condition, it was determined that absolute rest is essential for! some time. } Attending the president are a trained nurse and Mrs. Wilson, who remains with him constantly and} personally ministers to him as much as she can No Work Allowed Secretary Tumulty said today, however important it may be consid-| . nothing will be brought to the! attention of the president, Yester day he was told of the vote on the Fall amendments and the ratification of th y the French} chamber Th es hax the { | | | | | | | | | | BLESLHLBSLLH things seemed to encourage | according to Tumulty, but noth: ing further will be presented to him, | since it ts desired to keep his mind completely away from administrative matters. The president was to have chosen some one to open the round table | industrial conference Monday, but it is now feared his condition will pre vent this. Previously he had discussed the conference with Tumulty, and if he is unable to do any work, Tumulty will go ahead and follow out the| Wishes previously expressed, Chief Justice White, of the su-| preme court, called at the White House to inquire about the president and express his sympathy, For the time being, it was learned, none of the administrative duties of the chief executive will be delegated to other officials, } Samuel Gompers, president of the Americah Federation of Labor, eall-! ed at the White House during the morning to ask Secretary ‘Tumulty about the president. Traveling teachers carry education to island children along the coast of Maine, remaining in each isolated district a brief time {4 TEE One of your most precious poss Are you giving them the care and attention that they deserve? Most certainly you are not if you haven't had them examined by a first-class dentist recently. have some teeth that need attention. ple Most peo- Our busi- ness is to take care of them and do it RIGHT. Look over these points about this office and see if we don’t just about meet your requirements of what a dental office ought to be. Ist. particular hobby with us. STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE. This is a We have spent a great deal of money and infinite patience to assure our pa- tients of the utmost that science has devised in sani- tation. spotless white at all times. 2nd. BEST OF EQUIPMENT. All operators and attendants are garbed in We have one of the largest and best equipped dental offices in the country. We have the best men to be had and we give them the very best tools with which to work. 3rd. LOWEST PRICES. large volume of business that we do. Made possible by the We can and do figure to make just a small profit on the individual patient. 4th. BEST OF MATERIALS ONLY USED. We have found by experience that the best is the cheap- est in the long run. We use highest grade materials of all kinds. 5th. IRONCLAD GUARANTEE. All work that leaves this office carries with it our guarantee in writing, and is absolutely binding in every way. In other words—you are protected from every angle. 6th. Every operator is a graduate, registered man, and has his certificate from the state dental board hanging right on the wall in front of his dental chair. We invite you to call and have one of our expert dentists give your teeth a thorough examination consult with you as to what ought to be done them into perfect condition. fered you freely and gladly and does not under the slightest obligation to have any unless you want it. But we desire to sug; that the question of good or bad teeth most important of things to you and if have teeth that need attention our advii ee R38 844 are FE : "84 is yo ice = “ & DON'T PUT IT OFF ANOTHER DAY Boston Dental Co. “The Hands That Make It Painless” 1420 Second Avenue (Opposite Bon Marche) Lady Attendant Always in Attendance Chihuahuas officials are considering | tate. An Okishoma woman enactment of a law prohibiting ali|from Central normal school ames of chance in that Mexican|three daughters, another with ‘8 [$4.00 $4.25 S man, 18-inch Can, four-brace Seams soldered No, 17 heavy galvan-. Hod. Spe- ing “MARINERS” Pura Linseed Oi! Paint. complete stock to select from. a Gallon ® For Colors a Gallon For Whites These are the prices at which we are sell- It'sh regular $4.75 and $5.00 material. A large and See our paint BASEMENT heavy galvanized Garbage to prevent Splint Wood Carrying Baskets, Special. .70¢ GUNS AMMUNITION SPORTSMEN’S SUPPLIES Fine Cutlery of All Kinds ) ~ TAMIR Sel IL? Corner of First and Madison, Phone Eltiott 933