The Seattle Star Newspaper, November 19, 1919, Page 15

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“nny "i hi cA ie IN panese Watching American Shippers |. TOKIO, Oct. (Ry mail to the d Pross.)—Japanese shipping in } are paying much attention to Betivities of American shippers meets the Paci The reason is that new American & + mt since the armistice, have | Cueambers Per Opened in competition with the u so tines which had nearly all |? Of the trade during the war Most of the goods brought to the / i American bottoms are ° for Shanghai and Manila, | rennps po oe. eames PBat considerable quantities are dis.|Pranet Batter Per te. ccc. oe in Japan. Certain large Jap- | Prerere—Bulk, pert a have contracted to}" F Wan, Nettel Gem, new 65 oo@tnoe of raw cotton J owing to the more rs 020 .02 rates which are offered by | je brag American companies. CONGO” BOYD QUITS MERCHANTS’ EXCHANGE H. Boyd, known to football & generation ago as “Congo” | eve! Fesigned Tuesday as chief) At the Merchants’ exchange to} in business in Will be succeeded by GC. formerly connected with the | t & Eddy corporation, Price Paid Wholesale Fy conte Beater Lae. 2,0003.00 .2.0000.96 if market at the opening today sterling opened at ott | Meme—Live, Reavy . Live, light Broilers BONDS BOUGHT AND SOLD WE OFFER AN EXCELLENT LOCAL % BOND TO NET ‘Woot, clean ranch, tail grows. es Ps kip sxina, Ne 1, Elltett 1224 PRIVATE WIRE 1OUS QUOTATIONS | _ do Mint Gry weet pele | Patiow, No. 1 @o No 2 Safety for 1¢ a Day ae bon Sfrteton eves conan you can rent a PRIVATE ANBIVIDUAL SAFE _ in our modern Safe Deposit Vault Absolut for bonds, abe I, Sorel aes 90. jadan a charge: FOUR DOLLARS A YEAR and’ upwards, according to size, is the modest cost of owning your own safe. Resourced now over $2,300,000 PUGET SOUND SAVINGS and. LOAN ASSOCIATION Hours: from 9 om, 0 2 Rm WHERE PIKE STREET CROSSES THIRD LIBERTY AND ) VICTORY BONDS If you must SELL your Liberty or Victory Bonds, BELL to UB. If you can BUY more Liberty or Victory Honda, BUY from US. 1919, the closing market prices were or Liberty and Victory Bona ind the high ‘We advertise these prices y in ori is know the New York market and the exact value of your Liberty ory Wonds ‘“ ry i, 4th —-Vietory Victory Int “" 4" she 44a 2, 8h gochh stron 9 onde $9440 992.46 $ a 4 ie ee i 06 io efetat . 910162 Oeil $0748 $00.92 $93.01 996,08 $101.16 101.68 *When buying we deduct 37¢ on # $50 bond and $2.50 on a $ sell at ow York ket plus the accrued interest. On Tuesday, November 18, int 440 $94.50 182 s $90.28 2% 1 9100.33 2.86 $99.42 Local Markets | all New York Coffee and ||, 1 Rk 2 wo eee sane THE SEATTLE STAR—WEDNESDAY, NOV. 19; 1919. ig | Status of the New York || BANK CLEARINGS \| Stock Exchange || Clenrings .....- ———————| | Balances , The stock mar- United ore Mil} $7,045,916.51 1,244, 816.49 NEW YoRK ket opened Nov, 19 requir pokane + 2,269,020,00 $14,854.00 Clearings Balances ... Tacoma $21,818.00 Methichem at 4 ‘Portland at 113% ore ii . «+ 6,619,987,00 +» 1,486,191,00 lock and carried wi we of Inst week hardest hit) were Royal Duteh, Haldwin, and A Bethienem fouth lutetink, palibut cheel Call money, ; halibut cheeks, at 12 per cont, both classes, w SANITARY PUBLIC MAMKET. Stall 111—Cornmeal Lily of the Valley strawt rey. o Jari p ati 10 ao Toard of ‘Trade, od welling follow [Ine Announcement that there will be no| qmbarge placed on freight transporte: | 1! Jing of $1 1the close u. powder, S60) Sle Mb rc medary dates, phe OF spagherts oats opened ‘at inter lomt [Por Portland Market | Report] | PORTLAND . down Ie, and | uriek’ cheese, at 2 cana, abe, © Hall Li—wort an berries, 2 Ib, | for the. mt Olympic Meaican a6 "Nov. 19. ot Good to to good | boo; ' bean 6 boxes matches, abe; wa jelly, be : bulls, $896.60 ROOMOME | Hoge—Recetpts, 17% hea : * x, White Winter Pear ba, delivered, stall 40 14 By, redded coovanut, 400 bisck tea, 1% 1 | butter, 600 Mm 1 Co-operative mii tor with purchase, Btail 6» Whole seimon, 1é0 Ib; smelta, ioe ik, i, Weg eee eee eee | Frisco Market Status ® —— | ns, MM. J, Bh cotter, BOC; pint bottle cate uttor—! sup, 296, 3 dry green peas, and lemon peel, é6e Ib. Albers flapjack f SAN RANCIBCO, Nev. we tra pal- i* Saderntzeg ulleta, Mats, fancy, a0 per Ib, Sugar Quotations a: TORK, Nov. 19.—Coffee—No. ieNe per Ib; Me. 4 Santos, BE | (ail 'ca sausages, 500 To, lamb jamb stew, 100 TM. Stall a Mh $3.00) : chopa, 300 Ib; ut margaring, 260 %, don, 2 dow Pio creamery butter, White, am. beana, # Mall 116 steaks, Ze i white b mali lime ES ed elder, abe pt Lamp te i veal 1; round steaks, 2540 i440 Mh; lamb stew, 206 I, * \senting the managers, Spitzender | plas, $2.60 bow. Stell 192, > cane Sun milk, 260; ¢ large rolls tollet paper, 20 diuing and ammonia, 1c bottle, "Stall | 105, seedless raisina, 220; 2 cane Federal | mitk, % Toa rolled oats, the, Mialle 16-17, dary dates, 3Tc pkg; Loxury wweet potatoes, be ean |Need to Educate New Immigrants “For the benefit of foreign immi- grants tinctured with Bolshevism, | we need not so much a campaign of | denunciation as a campaign of edu- cation.” declared Prof. Clarke P. TA} | Bissett, of the University of Wash- > ington, in an address to the Munict- 14.09 | pal League Tuesday noon. | Prof. Bisnett advocated strongty a jcampaign of education for the pur- |pose of promoting appreciation of ge (the advantages offered by American citizenship. ‘Would Fix Child Labor Age at 14 WASHINGTON, D, C., Nov, 19.— market t# | Tecommendation for an international wea, $6.50 agreement on a minimum wage of} nig employment at 14 years will be te ae sought at the international Iabor con- creas today, Efforts to raise the | AUSTRALIAN TRADE minimum to'18 and 10 yearn were de- POSSIBILITIES TOLD tented in committee by large majort- Volumes of trade await ttle business men in Australia, Mark Sheldon, commissioner to the United¢ | States from the Commonwealth of Australia, told the foreign trade | bureau members of the Seattle Che ber of Commerce Wednesday even: ing at a meeting In the chamber as. sembly room. While wheat, meat, | wool and hides at present are largely | Fans Are Gloomy commandeered by the British gov-| WASHINGTON, D. C., Nov. 19.— ernment, the market is now open for | (United Press.) ns for a wet all kinds of lumber producta, and in return, Australia will export furs, rabbit meat, and many articles that} can be profitably sold in the United) o¢ war with Austria after the senate States. | disposes of the German treaty, it was | pointed out at the office of Attorney General Palmer. President Wilson will not wish to promulgate peace in the face of this __. | situation, it is believed here, even |tho the German treaty may be dis- poned of this week. CINCINNATI REDS ARE ORDERED TO QUIT CITY CINCINNATI, Ohio, Nov. 19.—I. W. W.'s were ser day by the members of the American Legion to quit Cincinnati within two weeks. Two hundred Legionnaires broke into socialist headquarters last night land gathered up a load of radical literature and made a bonfire of it in | the street 660 head; market Top, $14.40; bulk of wales, $13.00 | Bheep—Recetpts, 1,200 head; . Lambs, $12.26 014 Jambe, $12.6 ‘ xceptions are made in the case of Japan, where a child over 12, who |course may be admitted into employ: ment. “Wet” Christnias Crepe paper hats have been de signed for surgeons and nurses to save laundry bille. LOWEST RATES CALIFORNIA san 5 Sa era LoS ANGELES POINTS, Dino. FRNQUENT SAILiNas. 5S. WAPAMA, Ge a COMM LIBERTY BONDS At highest market prices, Also Canadian government bonds, TArect private wire to all impor- tant markets, New York stock exchange and New York curb stocks quoted. YAKIMA, Wash., Nov. 19.—Orville Dennis, 14, and Rollo Goldsmith, 15, played at I, W. W. here yesterday HERRIN & RHODES, INC, |afternoon. Rollo was an I, W. W. Established 1896 | Orville “hunted” him with a .22 rife Stocks and Bonds |which “wasn’t loaded.” Main 1512 119 Cherry Rollo, with a bullet thru his abdo- men, may recover, 64,828.00 | | | TO HALT |. W. W. i | by the com:ittes would organize the has completed the elementary school | christmas today seemed likely to mis-| h en will be in a state ed with notice to-| MEDICINE BOW, Wyo., Nov. With United States troopers, bloodhounds, it cow William nviet, who un- resumed his train rob- career near here Tuesday, was on today, 200 heavily armed, determined men are pecking Carlisle, whose spectacu- Jar escape from Rawlins peniten fiary in a coftindike shirt pack- ing box Saturday, was crowned his sudden appearance in tourist sleeping coach of the Union Pacific's Los Angeles Lim- ited last night, naked, walked among the frightened passengers, collecting the money they held out, Ho Was Chivalrous He was chivalrous to women and children passengers, declining their money, ‘The first male passenger robbed gave up $100, ‘Trainmen stated Carlisio made a “big cleanup, altho other estimates were that he did not obtain over $260, Ioodhounds today picked up Car- lisie’s trail two miles east of Medi ‘ How, where he jumped as the | tre: n was slowing down. Altho armed guards specially detailed to all trains in Wyoming were on the Limited and fired as Carlisle leaped, no sign that he was wounded reriounly was found. A squadron of cavalry from Fort Russell arrived this morning in a | spectal train carrying two carloads of horses for the troops Possemen picked up at way stations also ar rived on the special. Cowboys on Trail Charlie Irwin, picturesque figure | at Cheyenne “frontier day” celebra- tions and a score of hin best cow | boys, are exy here today to join in th an hunt. Carlisle, as a cowpuncher before he | figured in three spectaular train rob- beries hereabouts in 1916, learned to/ know every foot of this rough coun try and his capture is expected to be n diMoult task. Every hollow and “hogback" is being combed by the} pomses, while mountain passes tn! URGE CONGRESS CHEHALIS, Nov, 19.—-Immediate action on the part of the federal gov- ernment to suppress anarchy, the I. W. W. and Bolsheviam in every form, and further restriction on foreign immigration, was urged In a statement prepared by a committee of the newly organized Loyal Amert-| can league here. The statement was sent to Senators Miles Poindexter and Wesley L. Jones for presenta tion in the United States senate. A furthor resolution agreed upon press in a nation-wide educational campaign against anarchy, 1. W. W jem and kindred seditious move- menta, British Rail Men Accept New Offer LONDON, Nov. 19.—The Rallway mens’ union has accepted the govern- nt's proposal giving the union a| The proposal, announced re-| cently by J, H. Thomas, head of the) union, as having been made to him |by Premier Lioyd George, provides for a joint board of control repre the govern: |ment and the unions, Disputes are to be referred to @ similar joint) board. |Exterminate Reds. Says Gov. Campbell | PHOENIX, Ariz, Nov. 19—(By| United Pri A nation-wide campaign by city, county, state and federal authorities against all forms of radicalism was advocated by |Governor Campbell in @ statement |given the press today. | | Declaring the radicals thrive on | publicity, he urged that the cam- | paign be carried on quietly until! the country is rid of such elements. | He expressed the hope that the| recent raids on I. W. W. are mere-| ly @ prelude to a “well directed and systematio crusade having for its unfaltering determination the ex-| termination of these human vermin.” | SEATTLE COPPERS TO ATTEND VICTORIA HOP} Socially Inclined patrotmen of the | | Seattle police department are spong- | ling up their uniforms these days | preparatory to attending the sixth Jannual ball of the Victoria police | department. The party will be hel on No- vember 20, Chief Warren has call- ed for the names of the coppers wishing to attend the dance, so that aceommodations may be furn- | ished the officers during their stay | in the Canadian city. KERMIT ROOSEVELT AND MOTHER GO TO BRAZIL NEW YORK, Noy. 19.—When the |steamer Nubian sails today for Rio| neiro Capt. Kermit Roosevelt and mother will be passengers, Capt Roosevelt goes to Braxil, Chile and Argentina in the interest of a steam ship company, of which he ts an off | clal. Hit by Motor Car Mrs, A, 8. Daoust, 9217 19th ave, 8. W., is suffering a bruised elbow and knee in the Minor hospital Wednerday as the result of being struck by an automobile driven by | A. O, Bentram at Third ave, and Pike st. Tuesday afternoon, Her Injuries are not serious, the hospl- tal authorities declar BOYS FIND DYNAMITE Seattle police are attempting to identify the owner of a quantity of dynamite, percussion caps and fuses |found in an apparently abandoned shack, at 7202 36th ave. ‘s. W., Tues: day afternoon, by small boys. ‘The boys who found the cache live in the neighborhood and stumbled on the explosives while playing in the shack, They » notified the police, Due to the lack of ‘true cork in Sweden, wooden corks are being used there, the substitute being made from quick growing pine. every direction are being guarded Then also, aa on hin first hold-up yesterday, he defied armed guards placed on the trains to cateh him, One guard fired at him potntblank in the tourist sleeper after Carlisle had obtained about $260 from the pas nongers, yesterday, The bandit was believed to have been wounded in the arm, but made good hin escape by jumping into the night when the train was moving at & speed of 20 miles an hour, ne Medicine How, Find His Revolver Ho left his revolver in a bloody pool on the floor of the vestibule of the coach, However, the blood In believed to have come from a cut in the hand, when Carlisle smashed a car window, Tho train was stopped and the armed guards, led by United States Marshal D. F, Hudson, @ passenger, looked for the hold-up. Apparently going to Medicine Bow, Carlisle ran- sacked a passenger train standing there, just after a posse had left the special to take up the search for the bandit. This nervy performance further convinced authorities the hunted man was Carlisle, whose career in 1916 was featured by simi- lar deeds. From the ponne’s train the bandit took three rifles and a large quan- tity of ammunition, With these and another high-powered rifle he car- ried slung over his shoulder when he robbed the limited, Carlisle tx pre- pared to make @ desperate stand if cornered. He fooled the posses hunting for him since his escape from prison Saturday, by doubling hia tracks near Wamputter Tuesday and board- ing @ train for Rock River. At the latter town he boarded the limited through the baggage coach, intimi- dating a baggageman with a flourish of a revolver. Legal steps and moral suasion will used to prevent Japanese from settling in the Mount Baker Park district, as the result of a mass citizens of that ction Mount Baker clubhouse day night Letters were nent real estate men in the city Wedn ay calling on them to “keep up the high resifience standard of the dis tL.” by refusing to well homes or be meeting in the property in that district to Jap eno. The meeting also adopted resolu tions demanding revision of immi gration laws, abolition of the tlemen's agreement” and passage of state laws nibiting Japanese fron further colonization of the state After various speakers had roused the meeting to a high pitch of en- thusiaam and the resolutions, later adopted unanimously, had been in- troduced, Rev, U. G, Murphy, for 14 years a missionary in Japan, asked the privilege of the floor to present the Japanese side of the question. None know the Rev. Murphy was in the audience. Rev, Murphy ad mitted he was not invited to the meeting, but was finally given the platform. “Only 120,000 Japanese have en tered the United States in the last 10 years. Of that number 98,000 have returned home. The death rate is 1,500 a year and so in that 10 years 15,000 have died. This leaves only 7,600 Japanese tn this country today. At this point Rev, Murphy was in. COAL DEALERS __ ASK INCREASE Prominent. Seattle coal dealers Fvery train passing thru Wyo-lappeared before the King county ming today carries armed men in| every coach, on the lookout for Car- Hale. bandit {x not unexpected by the rall- rond officers, but they are certain of hia eventual capture. Veterans Ask for Action by Brown Former City Attorney Hugh M. Caldwell, accompanied by a delega- tion of members of the American Legion, called upon Prosecutor Fred C. Brown Wednesday morn- ing and presented @ resolution urg- ing the immediate prosecution of all 1. W. W. in King county. Prosecutor Brown promised ac- tion and appointed Deputy Prose. eutor T. H. Patteraon to handle the Prosecution. Brown attended a meeting of five county attorneys In Tacoma Tues day at which the I. W. W. situa- tion waa discumed, but he refused |to discuss the meeting. YOUTHFUL BANDITS GET CASH AND WATCH K. Kogima, 6¢1 Washington st., reported to the police Wednesday morning he was held up by two young men at Washington st. and Maynard ave. and robbed of $25 in cash and his watch, er did the searching. dark clothing and slouch hate. The police investigated without resulta. clothes NOW. Another daring hold-up by the | air price committee Wednesday noon to ask for an increase in the retail price of coal, The coal men allege that they are compelled to sell at a loss under the present fuel administration control. Among those who testified before the fair price committee were W. D. Monks, presi Fuel Deale association; Winlock Miller, former fuel administrator for Washington, and N, D. Moore, of the Pacific Coast Coal company. Four Men Held for Being Near Games Four mpn, at lherty Wednesday on $10 cash ball apiece, were ar- rested Tuesday night in room 15 . | of the Federal hotel, Third ave. and Pine st. and charged with being in & place where gambling was being conducted, Officer R. N. ‘Wilson made the arrests. A Nabs Pickpocket ‘W. G. McKerrall, a laborer at the Todd drydock, is @ peeved man Wednesday. He caught a man’s hand in his pocket while riding on a Phinney ave, street car Tuesday night He asked the etreet car conductor to hold the man on the car until it reached the city, where a police man could be called, The conductor refused, and a regular pickpocket, McKerrall complains, got away. MeKerrall furnished the detectives with a description of the unidenti- fied pickpocket, Save money and time. t of the Seattle | PAGE 19 |Mt.Baker Residents toUse Law and Moral Suasion in Fight Upon Japanese terrupted by eries of “What about the birth rate?’ Pandemonium broke loose and Murphy wan forced to leave the platform, amid the hoots and boos of the crowd, Previous to the outbrenk oe castoned by Murphy, Frank %. Kan- nair, secretary of the Anti-Japanese league, had rehearsed the fight against the Japanese, Jack Sullivan, -|attorney, told of the strong antiJap- anese feeling at the recent American Legion convention at Minneapolia, when resolutions enrried similar to those passed Tuesday night. G. T. Swinehart, auto broker, 2242 Hunter drive, ridiculed the student provision of the gentlemen's agreement. “These Japanese students come here to study the hotel business as bell hops and the sewer business as ditch digger. That's all the students they are,” he said, Other speakers were: Will J. Jones and G. B. Cole, attorneys, and lm, M. Dyer of the Puget Sound | Bridge and Dredging company. Frank T. Watson, field secretary of the Anti-Japanese league, told of the campaign being carried on by the league. The resolution demanding the ex- clusion of Japanese from the Mount Baker Park district decried Japanese as “property depreciators.” Copies of the resolutions passed will be sent to Governor Hart and Washington congressmen and sena- tors. Students Report on Needle Trade Report of an investigation com ducted by the industrial bureau of |the Chamber of Commerce and the students of the University of Wash- ington on the field for enlarging the needle trade industry in Seattle, will be made Friday noon at a luncheon at the Army and Navy club. The result of the committee's investiga- tions will be the basis for a campaign to bring to Seattle new clothing man |ufacturers and suit shope. Clothing Thieves Busy Early Today Martin Hall, Hamilton hotel, Sixth ave. and King st, lost a brown suit, while W. C. Wurnsted, Y, C. A, lost @ heavy sweater and a |sult case to prowlers early Wednes | day. T. P. Durkin, Sherman hotel, lost sult and a pair of shoes, |H. K. Brumhall, New Royal {s minus an overcoat. Walter Sim- mons, 215% Fifth ave., is out » suit, NEW DEPARTMENT OF trustees. ation were forwarded to Wi congressmen. STONE BROS. MAKING CLOTHES AS USUAL WITHIN SIX DAYS’ TIME! TONE BROTHERS, Seattlé’s long-established Sec- ond Avenue tailoring house, now has its regular force of tailors back on the job, and is making the high-grade tailored clothes for which this house is known. We are able to make deliveries within six days of date of order. Suits as Low as $75 In spite of the fact that prices all over the country average 30 per cent higher than in Seattle—and the prices on goods for next spring are higher than ever— we are still selling at our low prices of the early fall, be- cause we are greatly overstocked. Buy your new In our temporary location, ground floor of Trans- portation Building, Second at Cherry, we have as fine a tailoring establishment as you will find anywhere. Come in and see us. ¢failors

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