The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 14, 1919, Page 10

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PAGE 10 This Is the Original No. 1 Company METROPOLITAN Until Saturday Night Now Playing THE TRANSCENDENT EVENT OF THE SHOW YEA Min A.B. MARCUS MAS THE MOOR $ INTRODUCING THE FAROUS MARCUS MUSICAL INCLUDING TIE ACE OF ALL COMEDIANS IN THE SMART RONE «LONG BARRAGE OF FUN zg Nights: 50¢ to $1.50, Mats, Wed.-Sat.: 50¢ to $1.00 Pius War Tax MIKE SACKS | te — | BY RALPH ¥F. COUCH |(United Prom Staff Correspondent) WASHINGTON, Oct, I~ The central committee of the In- dustrial conference today report 9 ed to the full conference, without recommendation, the resolution calling for the mediation of the steel strike, ‘The resolution waa offered by the labor group. Chairman Chadbourne, of the cen tral committee, In making the report Jannounced that the resolution been amended in ymmumittee to p | vide that the membership of the p: } posed mediation committees be com | posed of either members of the pres: ent conference or non members, Me said that a majority of twe |groups had voted againat recom. mending the adoption of the resolu tion. A majority of all the members of the committee, however, had vot ed to report the resolution without | recommendation The conference today adopted a |resolution expressing #ympathy with President Wilson in his tliness. ‘Tiflis waa the first measure on which the conference voted by groups, chair men of the three groups voting “Aye.” The resolution was intro duced by the employers’ group. A comprehensive industrial code to cover arbitration proceedings and al! | disputes between employers and em. | ployes waa being prepared today for | gubmission to the national industrial | conference. Vital Measure Dae With the stoet strike and the New York harbor strike tn full swing, and | | | | COMEDY COMPANY REVUE DE LUAE OH’ GRAIN-FED RATS AR SERVED AS FOOD NOW SURREY, England, Oct. 14.—Local @amekeepers recommend rural rate aa good cating. The animals are said to live on clean grain and water and are delicious when baked in a pie. in every cake from the delightful Boldt Bakeries and these addresses make it easy to pick one up on your way home. 913 Second Avenue MM Third Avenue Madison Market, Second and Madison Pacific Market, 310 Pine. Economy Market, First and Pike 5 ONLY SKIN DEEP a big coal strike threatened, this | code was considered one of the most vital measures for bringing about in dustrial peace, The conference dele fates met today for the first Ume since last Friday.. Leading members of the group of | delegates representing the public are THUNDER ENDS (Special to The Star by N. E. A) | central committee of 15 WUCHANG, China, Oct. 14.—A/ mittee includes representatives from soldier patient in a Hankow mission | each major group in the conference hospital slipped from his ward, cut /—-the public, labor and capital, or em the gatekeeper’s throat, stole some | ployers of hig money and escaped over the; The code ts being built upon a hospital wall | statement of general principles for After two hours the local Police | industrial peace, submitted by the arrived. employers’ group. and on another set While they were investigating/of principles offered by the Inbor there was « loud clap of thunder, | froup. The basis of the arbitration “The spirit of the murdered man | plan included in the code is that sub- said. “Doubtless the murderer was | tary of Labor Wilson killed by a thunderbolt.” | Separate Boards — that ended the investiga! he secretary's plan provider for the organization of separate media | tion boards for each of the big basic When a French lindustries, much as the railroads & rabbit for the table he wastes! metal trades, building trades, shoe nothing. Even the blood ts caught) manufacturing, clothing manufactur. in a cup and used for soup. ing, and #0 on. Another board would _o ——— |be organized to mediate disputes, Many & self-possessed girl would | cirjkou and lockouts In mlacellancour like to transfer her pomession to, AND PAINS SLOAN'S GETS “EN! | A Year to | Famoos pain and ache Liniment, kept handy, brings gratify. j ne re | your loan with us if necessary. HEUMATIC twinges ease up soon, So do stiff joints, lame . neuralgia, overtaxed muscles, those pains from weather expos} ure, too—they don't fight long against the counter-irritant Sloan's Liniment produces. Keep this old family friend handy for instant use-—a little penetrates | without » leaving no skin stains, muss or clogged pores. You ought to keep a bottle handy al) ways, | All. Gruggists. Three sizes—25c, 70c, $1.40. We loan on DIAMONDS JEWELRY FURS 1] ry tasty Aiment it handy A New is seeing that justice ta done,” they | mitted to the conference by Secre: | FSS sx rh for Will Go to Press OCTOBER 15, 191 Please arrange for any you may desire in present THE PACIFIC TELEP Telephone Directory SEATTLE, WASH. AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY 9 change listings or advertising as soon as possible and not later than above date HONE THE SEATTLE STAR—TUESDAY, OCTOBER 14, 19 STEEL STRIKE TRUCE PLAN NOW UPIN AIR trades for which no special board waa created When a board fatled to effect a settioment, the strike or lockout would be referred to an um pire, under the Wilson plan, or to a |#eneral council of all boards. As a last resort, the president would name arbiters, The code now being planned would make arbitration compulsory before a atrike ¢ out could go Into ef fect, The pulsion clause, hows jever, would not be extended to the luctar to atr Conference delegates backing the code contend that the force of public pinion would be strong enough to mpel either side to comply with | the award | The code ts regarded as a compro- mise between the demands of the em- |ployera and labor, Judge Gary, chairman of the United tSates Steel | corporation, ts one employer who ts | Understood to have not been con- | vinoed the pian ts workable. BAR OF ALIENS UP IN CONGRESS Measure Would Keep Flood of Radicals Out of U. S. WASHTINGTON, Oct. 14.—To keep thousands of radicals and other un- jesirable aliens out of the country the house foreign affairs committee today favorably re ted a resolu. tion extending for one year after the ratification of peace the war-time passport restrictions. © Of labor to give up the right The action was taken at the re quest of Secretary of State Lansing, who presented consular reports to the committee showing that foreign agitators and others already have congested at foreign porte to flock to the United States as soon as the wartime passport ban ts Lifted by the proclamation of peace. Congresmional plans are to frame permanent restrictive legisiation be- fore the end of the extended period of the wartime ban. |" She Was Decorated for Service in War | |» LONDON, Oct. | 14.—Among the many English women who have given their entire time dufing the past five years to war or relief jwork is Lady Ampthill, formerly Lady Margaret Lygon, daughter of the earl of Reauchamp. Lady Ampthill did yeomanry service during the war, confining her work for the most part to the entertainment and nursing of |Great Britain's Indian forces, For her service to the home folks she has been made a mem- ber of the newly created Order of the British Empire and for her work among the Indian fighters she has been decorated with the Order of the Crown of India, LONDON HAS ITS PHONE TROUBLES LONDON, Oct. 14-—Diagust at \the irritating delays in getting long ‘distance calls is expressed by many {London business firms. It is a com- mon experience to wait a whole day for a long distance call to mature, but this is not the limit. It took one subscriber two days to get his con- |nection, from London to Horsforth, jnear Leeds, Qncee he had to make the journey by train, after repeated attempts to get a call through had failed. A London motor firm with a branch in the country says it has |given up Jong distance calis as hope- }less, It sends a representative by ae WATCHES OVER DEAD CALF det. 14-—A Bedfordshire ¥, whose calf was knocked down lin the dark and killed by a vehicle, | remained all night in the road by the |earcass. ‘The owner found the ani {mal in the road in the morning, when he missed her from the barn | CROOKS SWI ) GAMBLERS CALCUTTA, 14.—London fsoprismen have been swindled to the Jextent of $500,000 by an issue of |counterfeit tickets on the Calcutta Turf club which were sold in con- nection with the English derby. The crooks have a long start, because the tickets were mailed to Indian banks to be cashed, ey HAS FQRTUNE IN FRUIT PITS CHICAGO, Oct. 14.~—A collection of carvings on fruit pits, made by W. T. 8. Cleary, who is known as “Lonely Mac,” is shown at the Art itute. The collection is valued at 000 and is said to rival the work panese artists. Cleary refuses ‘ll any of his carvings. The Red Cross was founded in Geneva, Switzerland, in 1864, Its | award because of the well-defined re | x *k * This Bank is Hoge Bldg. Branch at 19, UNION NATIONAL BANK | Bond Department doing upwards of $3,500,000 worth of Business It was only a few years ago that the farmers of the Puyallup and Valleys, under the leadership of W, }, Paulhamus, got together and organized the “Puyallup Association,” as it is now called by the trade. The Association undertook to market the fruits of the toil of the farmer members _holdj membership in the association—1,800 of them, no one of which is allowed ty hold more than $15 worth of stock—the total capital being $2,700. One of the early efforts of the Association was the building of Paul’s Kitchens in the beny fields. The Association sets the grades for the different classes of berries anj fruits grown by the farmer membern and packs them under Paul’s brand Now, from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and from Canada to the Gulf, Pauls Jams and Fruits are setting a new standard for quality and carrying for ward in unmistakable terms the good name of the Pacific Northwest for products that are unexcelled. The great national publications—The Saturday’ Evening Post and Good H —will carry the story of Paul’s Jams and Fruits this coming winter—which incidentally also helps the Pacific Northwest. More institutions of ne tional scope are one of the big needs of this 4 npasnnowm ats = SSS Sb Di tite Be: ZO: Za Ties zi BETAS: ae Successor to Union Savings & Trust Co empowered by Federal Reserve Charter to act as Trustee, Executor, Administrator and Registrar of Stocks and Bonds Trust Department Seattle Branch at Ballard Savings Department Second .foc. at Cherry St. Georgetown Savings Departments at Main Bank and Branches open Saturday evenings 6 to 8 o'clock HILO, Sleek, Black Rooster Stopped Volcano Flow Island of Hawall.— (By, tering ineffective. Finally, forgetting their Christian- ity for a time, they sent a party by |canoe to Honolulu to consult a few |rernaining priests of the days when |they all worshipped the strange | South Sea dieties. | “Throw a black rooster into the jlava flow," was the advice they away in its mile-wide bow! of | brought back. Let’s go buy Boldt’s try. Uptown, 1414 3d town, 913 2d Ave. POSLAM FORGE Mail.)—Owners of coal black game) burning, molten rock, with the level| The sleekest, shiniest cock on the cocks are keeping out an eye to see|of the flaming crimson sea of boiling | Stand of Hawall was picked for the that the chicken house door is locked | inva 900 feet from the top of the | *#crifice, and while the maidens securely every night. crater. | danced, the warriors cast the squawk- | And that's all because the volcano} Tho night that Secretary of the |!" bird into the base of the lava of Kilauea is now the most active it}Navy Daniéls and his party paid | ow: has been for 35 years. Kilauea a visit—the latter part of]. 19 an hour the flow had stopped. Six months ago Kilauea was sput-| August—the level of the seething | Madam Pele, the most feared goddess of the island, evidently had been sat- isfied with a chicken dinner. American residents of the Island believe that if there fs ever another big lava flow, coal black roosters will come into demand once more. Java was about crater's top. 8 ‘al overflows already have oo- curred. A cone which once jutted |500 feet above the crater’s top has melted away into the sea of fire. hwo hours after the secretary and his ty left the volcano, the rock wall setween the main crater and a sec- jond smailer one caved in, Joining the j craters. | And Kilauea still is going strong. | As to the connection of all this 50 feet below the 75,000 MOVE IN TWO DAYS NEW YORK, Oct. 13.--Approxt- mately 75,000 families in Manhattan and the Bronx alone moved to new homes on September 30 and Oc- tober 1. akes one lead, with energy woul; it ch the coveted goal, no limit to a man AILING SKI To be rid of an unsightl trouble is real physical and relief. If your suffering from zema’'s distress has been int ‘ are entitled to the great that Poslam can bring you It makes the work of heali and pleasant. A little goes & Way and does a great de: responds so eagerly. Itchi tion stops. Pimples and and, best of all, Posiam will not, harm. Sold everywhere. For free write to Emergency Labo 243 W. 47th st, New York Ci Poslam Soap’ is the tonic one kin, and will freshen and your complexio initintive” force and will; vet | with coal black game cocks? Oh, ff them are | ry simple. years ago, when the islands |first were becoming a white man's land, Kilauea became angry. It roared and hissed and sputtered, and the ground shook. Then the lava joverflowed and moyed slowly down the mountain side toward Hila, | ‘The native Hawaiians been Christians but a comparatively short |time. Their fright knew no bounds, for the island legends were full of the tales of what Kilauea did when Madam Pele, the goddess who lived |in Kilauea’s crater, became angry. So the Hawaiians prayed that the flow would stop, But it didn't. Then they danced, But that was rt right in and drill, have constructive n anve you more 1 SUIT, COAT, DRESS HAT, FLORENCE UPSTAIRS ‘OnK, a 0 Second “The Naughty Wile” Is Causing More the Petroleum Trade. glasses, and our low operating ex- | pense, enable us ||| to make better | Classes for less | ais mone | duplicated on “ghort notice at reduced prices. WILKES THEATRE This Week ‘Than Any Other Comedy in Years 34 PINE STREET Free Examination | Setoomaatar Orel Co, Sinclair Consolidated |) Comprehensive Description of the SINCLAIR MERGER Its position in the World’s Market and its relation to the transition now occurring in Circular H-6, with much new information, balance sheet, geologist’s report, double page map of oil properties, pipe lines, refineries, LAUGHS SCREAMS and etc., sent upon request. SHRIEKS as om of Meretment pevtanve tn thine at the and making LYMAN D. SMITH . COMPANY Members New York Stock Exchange BRANCH OFFICE: 527 FIFTH AVENUE NEW YORK

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