The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 11, 1919, Page 5

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PAGE 5 COAL TROUBLES | IN NEW ZEALAND Miners’ Organization There | Also Make Demands | BY MILTON BRONNER WASHINGTON, Nov 1 unrest and the demands for | pay }OODHOUSE-(yRUNBAUM FURNITURE CO,, Inc, OTTO 8S. GRUNBAUM 416-424 PIKE STREET Hours 8:30 to Jhe Rhodes Co. A Notable Special Purchase of Five Hundred Dainty Silk Blouses Choice $4.95 Upper Main Floor, VERY Woman who attends this + sale will buy at least one blouse. Some will buy two or more for the occasion is an uncommon one where blouses of such character, quality and assortment may be purchased at the price of $4.95. The outstand- ing characteristics of these are 45 Different Style Models Beaded Trimming Floss Embroidery Substantial Economy Dainty Crepe de Chine High Quality Georgette Sizes 36 to 46 On high and low neck models in plain colors as well as combinations, NET BLOUSES, $4.95 The vogue for these is at its height and a new shipment just placed in stock displays two very dainty styles with flesh colored camisoles that are held from shoulder with satin ribbon. The Three Watchers BY THORNTON W, BURGESS | r right, 1919%by T) W Ww" N Paddy the Beaver slappedyjhim, And another thing he didn't the water with hia broad tan, [know was that Paddy the Beaver had |making a noise ike a pistol shot out of bis house, and, swim Lightfoot the Deer understood that under water, had od a hid this was meant as a warning ofdan- | ine place on the opposite shore, from | *iinilar unrest which jger. He was on his feet instantly, | Which too, had seen the hunter | Prevalent among miners the world | with eyes, ears and nose soaking the | it down on the log jover, Not lo ago the powerful cause of Paddy's warning. After So the hunter watched for Light |miners’ organization of Great Brit | moment or two Lightfoot stole softly |feot, and Lightfoot and Paddy {ain linked up with the railway up to the top of a little ridge some | Watched the hunter, und the neamen in their demands for | distance back from Paddy's pond, but 4 | wages and working condi. | from the top of which he could see Visitors to Paddy's | Uons | | the whole of the pond. There he hid And now comes news from the fi | among close-growing young |off islands of New Zealand to the jhemlock trees, It wasn't long befere | effect that the British dominion in }he saw a hunter with a ible gun | having serious troubles, The | coal mine problem there is a double is on Genuine |°"*: 4% some of the mi Store Burgess) hig and fewer hours made by th American miners are simply part of | come min weoms to be | mer better Next story: Pond, ASPIKIN FUK HEADAOHE some come down to the shore of the pond SALE OF LIBRARY TABLES fo. s..°S.22°00°.00,25R2 | Name Bayer Four Handsome Styles Aspitin—say Bayer $15.00 $16.50 $17.25 $21.00 jsomething very wrong with hin ears | had he failed to hear it, “Confound The matter of contracts, hours, jthat Reaver,” muttered the hunter working conditions and wages “hese are all of elegant royal quartered imitation oak, hav: croasly, “If there was a Deer any |been under dispute for some time fag. large flaky grain and high polish. Every one of these gables is: worth much more than the sale price, but the factory making them is no longer able to supply us with continued where around this pond, he probably jana & recent conteres he ihe jig on his way now, I'll have Papen mort: steal gocks #0 we are closing out those we have on hand to make we can depend on getting regularly WE'LL TRUST YOU wlenn,”* The mine owners offered the men Our Credit System has been established for your conven- eh are owned by private corporations, while are owned by the state. Fail to Agree } others }Of course a loc dd to come cont increase res ed the made |! annum price up 75 Sizes 36 to 46 A Disposal of 200 House Dresses Special $1.95 Upper Main Floor A broken line of sizes, styles, patterns and colors from regu- lar stock — assembled especially for a quick cleanup — affords us this opportunity of presenting to our pa- trons the unusual in the bus in the hands of Superin tendent of Public Utilities Thomas | | ordinance had/ | several F. Murphine. been hanging months, Had the ordinance prevailed, the Jutney bus would have been so reg ulated as to ha definite routes i and fares eatablished for definite: % hours. Murphine estimated that a 5 ‘ revenue of $1,000 a day would revert ( to the city if the ordinance were | PLEADS GUILTY SAN FRANCISCO, Nov. 11.—Dan The fire for | Wash poisons and toxins from system before putting limpurities into the blood, causing {1 /that it would not feel justified in | ness, while the bowel pores do. | passing on the increased cost to the | For every ounce of food taken) public. One big thing the state was Into the stomach, nearly an ounce | prepared to do waa to give the me of waste material must be carried voice in the ma ment of t out of the If this waste I8/ mines and to arrange for insurance | not eliminated day by day it quickly | ang for their retirement on pension. | ferments and generates polson®| One of the government's represen-| | So the hunter kept on to the edge | an increase of 10 per cent for thone of Paddy's pond and then begen to| who had contracts and of 15 per cent fence to assist you to furnish your home along your o the footprints of Lightfoot in the] 45 op eotively Iedividual ideas. Our terms are casier and cur prince ore r ‘ JUST YOUR WORD THAT Youn. pay | “I thought as much,” mut tainifig proper directions for Head-| Gicing coal $150,000 pe and jlying down somewhero near here,|“Bayer” means genuine Aspirin) one coal miners wld the offered wine makers in the Jand I might have got a shot but for |Preseribed by physicians for hine-| increase wan not adequate in view of | region of France were all | [that pesky Beaver, I'l just look the the war, th Hland over, and then I th Ente '*\ abolition of the contract system mark of Bayer Manufacture |nioy anked that the miners be paid acid, exported, and in 1917 20, - - 2 Ry a vote of 6 to 3 Monday after | Want Saturday Off Reductions on }noon the city council killed the pro They o asked that no work be ; d H 28 to January 6; that no more than 150 Fall and Winter bank to bank and six on and after 7 January 1, 1921, ‘They also demand Hats displayed on sales food into stomach —_— light, tools and coal for their homes Wash yourself on the inaide before} The New and governmen versity of styles adopt- ed for street, business lenuse the skin pores do not absorb/tem in its collieries on the ground | choice of models, de- signed from Lyons Vel- walk around it, studying the ground | for the day workers, It was claimed as he walked. Presently he found} this would be equivalent to 35 and n wil . and |mud, where Lightfoot had gone down| Insist on “Bayer Tablets of As-| over prewar rates. It was estimated A} found anywhere. No Extra Charges | to the pond to drink pirin” in a “Bayer package,” cOn-/this would increase the cost of pro hunter. pose tracks we Colds, Pain, Neuralgia, Lum-| would kite the selling ™ = | lant night nat Deer probably was and mation erame ts a ton, teen years. Handy tin boxes of 12] in, cost of iving. They demanded p during ink lt wait (tablets cost few cents G |here a while. If that Deer twn't too |t tarred on the work so suc . o onoaceticacidester of Salicylic- that in 1915 10,000,000 bot. | badly seared, he may come back." f Monoaceticacidester of Sallcylic- | 95 16. gay and about $4.20 for truck 5 | So the hunter went all around the a _____. | ers and horse drivers, Unusually Economical “8, posed jitmey bus ordinance which |done on Saturdays; that all workers was designed to place control of be granted a fortnight's holiday on 4 at $5.00 one shift be worked In 24 hours, and HOT WATER that no coal be dug unless it ts ie occ Wiles | shipped on the male day. The hours . | of work they demand are seven from that they be paid every week and tables in our Millinery that th com pa n ies ive then free . ‘ ' wit hecoke' Ra hont toe tanto’ be Section feature a di- breakfast like you do on the outside. | speaking as an owner of coal mine \'This is vastly more important be-|refused to abolish the contract #y# and dress wear. These afford a wide color vet, which sold former- ly at $7.50, $10.00, Paddy watehed the hunter. pond, looking into all likely hiding fel W. Edwards, former department | piaces. He found where Lightfoot of justice agent in Seattle, who was | had been lying. and he knew that in arrested two months ago for traffick-| ail probability Lightfoot had been ing tm liquor, pleaded guilty in the body federal court here and was fined 35,000. Charles A. Guin and Edwin A. Gib- bons, Seattle hotel men, also pleaded guilty and were fined $1,000 and $500, respectively, All three were charged with transporting liquor into the atate of Washington. Bond Issue Upheld The right of the city council to tw sue bonds to pay for Shilshole ave. | there when Paddy give the danger signal “It's of no use for me to try to follow him,” thought the hunter. “It i too dry for me to track him He may not be so badly scared, aft ler all, I'll just find @ good place and | walt.” So the hunter found an old log be |hind some «mali hemlock trees and \there sat down. He could see all laround Paddy's pond. He sat per: gases and toxins which are absorbed | or sucked into the blood stream thru the lymph ducts whieh should suck only nourishment A splendid health measure ts to |drink, before breakfast each day, a giant of hot water with a teaxpoon ful of limestone phosphate ‘4 it, jwhich is a harmless way to wash | | these poisons from the stomach, liver, kidneys and bowels; thus |fectly still, He waa a clever hunter, | cleansing, sweetening and freshen and he knew that #o long as he did ing the alimentary canal before eat- not Move he was not likely to be no-|ing more food A quarter pound of limestone phos |tatives maid if all the demands of the | men were granted, the cost of pro- | duction would be increased by about | $10,000,000 per annum, which would | be reflected by the consumers paying | $4.80 per ton more for their coal, At a Special Meeting $12.50 and $15.00 and include— . Sailors, Mushrooms, Pokes, Tricornes, Chin Chins and Turbans The assortment comb! ns in model and $4.95 is componed of plaids. which sold formerly at Choice during this sale at $1.95. economical price re- ductions. checks 4nd plain color $2.50, $3.50, $3.95 World Democracy Auto Thieves Are Given Year Term SES f t held by Super 1 ih bat migh B of improvement was upheld by Superior | ticed by any sharp eyes that might) } m 96 || Judge J. T. Ronald, Monday. Suit | come that way. What he didn’t know | . Noland Overmeyer, charged with very little at the a. ge PTSESS&EES SASESSESS EHSSSAERKEK SS SHESEGKASSASESESSH BSFAGS was brought by D. D. Pratt, tax: | was that Lightfoot had been watch payer, to prohibit the cownc!! from iswaing bonds totaling $240,000 ing him all the time, and was even |» en standing where he could see! bathing. phate coats but drug store, but is sufficient to make yone an enthusiast on inside BY THE STORY LADY “It's all fixed,” said Peter the next night. “Mamma said that Mra. Brad. “CREDIT GLADL ee es Delightful Suit Models at Price Reductions Take Advantage of Our When you can choose from a display unsurpassed in the city for distinctive style and worthy materials; when you may enjoy the advantages of paying as you are able, and in addition to these attractions are of- will no longer hesitate to choose that new suit at the “Eastern.” fered a distinct price reduction, surely For Fuall-Formed Our Selection of Waists Is the result of careful choice by experienced buyers in the most ex- clusive markets of the East, and the styles you will see here make your choice a matter of ease as great range as in th and afford the lovely youth and grace. and entire satisfaction. . st., a a or ment after she - ~ the furnace late Monday night. t , tunately she carried the poker with — os her. My “Get!” she shouted, as she flour. Hi] ished the poker in the startled burg lar’s face, He got, Nothing was) “‘Eastern’”’ Millinery Modes Will delight you and the values shown here are as remarkable variety. Credit Terms We afford a variety of suit styles in These specially designed styles cannot make a 46 look like a 36, but they do positively decrease the apparent size ley was 0 proud that if you just went and handed her a bundle of duds she would be mad. But you know Mrs. Bradley is such a dandy cook and Mamma was goin’ to enter- tain the sewin' club #0 she asked Mrs. Bradley to come over an’ make| some drop @ookies that she knows| how to make better ‘n anybody, An‘ she did an’ worked ‘most all day An’ then Mamma asked her to take & little bundle of clothes that was too little for the twins an’ she said she would. Mary Ellen's Mamma brought over that pretty red cont she wore when she was a little girl lan’ she used to look so sweet (Mary | Ellen got rather red at this remark and the twins giggied) #o 1 guess! that Mary ean go to church now But say, Aunt Phoebe, I know some one that is in trouble ‘sure enough | jan’ that is James Augustus Brown. | | 1 don't know what the trouble is but he hasn't smiled for a week.” | “The cook doesn't like him,” said Hal “She's mad ‘cause the kid is there and she blames everything that happens onto Jow. An’ she slaps Gertrude an’ the poor little thing just takes {t And Jim i afraid to tell Mr, Ramsey for Mr. Ramsey is| kinda mad at him ‘cause the cook | told that Jim broke a vase that cost "bout a million dollars.” “Didn't Jim do it?” “No, the cook did it herself.” “I think that I'll have to have a talk with Mrs, Ramsey. Now, you children must remember that this is a secret society and that you mustn't repeat what we talk about in here.” “No'm, we won't.” said Peter, “but this morning teacher asked how it happened that I knew that a fourth and a fourth was a half and I said it was all on account of the K. and L. of the G. P." “And what did she say?" "She said she didn't know what that was, but anything that taught me @ little something was all right.” | —HEL HR MOORE. | Women e regular sizes. long lines of Woman Uses Poker to Rout Burglar A. Johnson, 516 KE, Thomas burglar in r apart Had finished firing For-| stolen, CAR CONDUCTOR FINED For “knocking down" a dime on a Cowen park street car October 28 Conductor L, Barton was fined $50 and costs in Justice O. W. Brinker's court Monday afternoon. Two wit nesses said they saw Barton put the dime in his pocket instead of in the fare box. as the splendid A Bedouin marriage does not take time, The bridegroom kills a p and spills the blood on the sand of his fatherdn-law's threshold, Jand the wedding J- oe 1332-34 SECOND ~~~ BY HENRY D. LINDSLEY | Chairman National Executive Com: mittee the American Legion | November 11 will become a na-| tional holiday in the United States. It will also become the first great international patriotic holiday for ai \) 40) large part of the world. It is inevitable that those powers | which, in alliance, fought the Ger- man empire and brought victory to the democracies of the earth select a common day on which all of their peo will join in the celebration jof victory. November 11, “Armistice Day,” therefore, will be unique in history. | Hundreds of millions of people thru- out the world will look forward to | it# coming. Every continent will contribute to Its celebration, Peoples of widely different habits, history and religion will understand that this day brought to a close the mightiest war the world has ever seen, and that on it the free peoples of the rth knew that their right to work out their respectiye destinies had be- come the determined purpose of the | world In no country can November 11 have greater meaning than in the United States, The ideal# of democ- racy have largely become a world foree because of the American re- public The international annual celebra tlon of November 11 will bind to- gether the peoples of the world, will help promote a common understand- ing among them, and will make easier the efforts of those who, in years to come, strive for peace and 1 will among all mankind. In the celebration of Armistic Day in the United States we have the right to hope that the sacrifices of our country in the ¢ it war will, in measure, be compensated for by an annual rebirth of. patriotism and @ national understanding of what a republic means and what is neces- sary for a people to do for its pre- vention There should be some national an- Union Officials | Sued for Damage William Leonard accuses official® of Carpenters’ Union, Local 1184, with pocketing $600 they received in a collection taken for his benefit in a damage suit for that amount filed Monday in superior court September 15, 1 his leg amputated while working, BE one year later the union each of its 2,200 members for his benefit He $1,100 was collected, of which only $500 was turned over to him, The accused officers are George Johnson, president; A. R. Cook and John Sterns, secretaries; M. A Brown, treasurer, and Fred John son and Fred F ‘son, trustees, assessed 50 cents Urbana, ©,, claims credit for orig: inating the business term, “O. K.,” when a political banner reading, “The People Is ON Korrect,” was displayed on its streets during the campaign of 1840, | Marked by Armistice Day i niversary day, on which the elimina- tion of class distinction within a re- public would be emphasized. We should not celebrate Armistice Day if it has this meaning in a per- functory manner, nor should we ac- cept, théughtlessly the . admonitions willy annually occur on this national holiday, and which are in- tended to make us live back into November 11, 1918. The living forces which create the national holiday should be a part of each of its re- currences, and the baptism of blood which consecrated November 11, 1998, should serve as a benediction to those annual days which for it will be celebrated thereafter. stealing an auto, did not appear in superior court Monday, when his case was brought up for 5 Overmeyer put up $500 bond. case was continued until Thursday and meanwhile efforts will be made to locate him. Harry Hoyes and John Dornoff were sentenced to one year imprisonment when they pleaded guilty to taking the same car, which belonged to N, R. Wiley. Funeral services for John N, Jack- son, pioneer Seattle business man, who died Thursday, were held at St. James’ cathedral Monday, and were attended by a large number of friends and former business associ- ates. The funeral services were fol- lowed by burial in the Jackson fam ily plot at Mount Calvary. cemetery, $2.95 Food Choppers at $1.98 Special for Wednesday — Uni- and Keen Kutter Food Choppers, in the No. 2 size. These versal choppers have 4 sharp knives and will cut up all kinds of meat, vegetables, etc. Special at .............$1.98 No Phone or C. O. D. Orders. cutting aL 75c Slaw Cutter at 49c These Slaw Cutters are made of smooth wood and have 2 adjustable knives for cutting slaw or vege- tables; Thc value at........ecseeeeeeee eens oe ADE No Phone or C. 0. D. Orders. Wooden Chopping Bowls at 19c These are smooth maple woof turned Chopping Bowls, just the thing for tables. Special at:... chopping meats and vege- .19¢ No Phone or C. O. D. Orders. 25c Canvas Gloves at l5c A big special—good grade Canvas Gloves, with knit wrists, pair......15¢ No Phone or C. O. D. Orders. 40c 6-Inch Stove Pipe at 25c Buy ing; 6 your Stove Pipe here Wednesday at a big sav- nch common stove pipe, regular price 40¢c, Special at’ oc. cisewg acces eviginene sew ce-w cit cs eae No Phone or C. 0. D. Orders,

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