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PAGE 27 Facewash Cost Him |38 Sugar Dealers $150 This Morning. Are Facing Charge It cost KR. D. Diehl, of the Plaza| CHICAGO, 21, — Warrants hotel, Fourth ave. and Pike e#t, ex- | charging a8 Chicago grocérs with actly $160 to wash his face Friday | profiteering in selling sugar were Nov, SEATTLES BEST PHOTOS Phay HOUSE: | soued today Wy annem | he removed his co today at in the and beran to Playa | sound here STARFING TOMORROW —ONE WEEK ONLY— low bub: KARINGS Status of New York Stock Exchange WW YORK, Nov. 21 BANK CI ntly when he had } ; nuly when he had I" | 1% Denmark gets » silee of Schiew now a section of Germany, under incite, to be held soon, her age will be increased by Public Markets LACK Pt BUTTER PRICES |’ _ ARE ADVANCED: BAYARD VEILLER’S : GREATEST OF ALL mm Dealers Claim Eastern Mar- MYSTERY PLAYS— \ kets Cause Rise Here “THE Sin CHAIR” 1 of soap some one lifted Het ec a. ntaining all his money. of The stock mar Diehl manifested signs | rattw 2,414,046.00 ure, the pollee declare 14 p 1,090,169|00 | | ~~ Br SABOTAGE MAKES LESS WORK Hundreds of people, many of them returned sol- Spokane dis Clearings tous clore hanaets prey Portland Clearing Balances . |= | _ = - “SENATOR TO BE USED | ON ROUTE TO MEXICO} The steamer Senator, Admiral] line, will operate between San Fran clsoo and the Mex const, A. F »|Haines, vicepresident, announced! | Thureday ° Claiming that a rive tn’ Bastern markets necessitated an advanee, to 1 whol or rning boosted th ry creamery bi nd, Quotations now are vbes and 69 cents for bricks Seattle market would not r butter would soon be by Pastern buyers, and then al market would be slort of in the way one dealer ex i the cause of the latest Jump. Fresb ranch eggs are firmer Prt day than at any time within the past week. Eastern buyers are also responsible for this condition, accord ing to local dealers. A full catoad of local @xeR ix scheduled to move to ery men Friday of local ents per 68 conts |CHILBERG SHIPS TO ARRIVE HERE SOON Four versels of the new Chilberg |line are expected to be in port the| i, |end Of the week. Two tre now here land two more are expected. The |versels were formerly owned by the 1% and & point United Fruit YOU CAN GUESS FROM NOW TILL LATER— AND THEN YOU'LL the Bast this week, dectared the deal ors. Turkey market continues uncer tain, The holiday demand for this produet has not yet set in and is not expected by local poultry han. ——————_—_______-9 Chicago Market Report | ” on were higher with mmall how , |Austraiian government, F x | WEST HENSHAW HERE |rived from the Orient The steamship West Henshaw ar-| Thureday diers, are out of employment in Seattle today. At a time when the world is suffering from want of sufficient production and when Seattle should be en- joying greater prosperity than ever before in its his-. tory, with work at high wages for all, men are being laid off in many of our industries and people are out of employment in all lines of work, There is but one reason for Seattle’s plight; but-@ne reason why men and women in hundreds are vainly seeking employment—hbecause organized labor, under the domination of radicals, has so restricted produc- tion that the cost of doing business in all lines has been increased to the point where Seattle can no longer compete with other cities and business is going elsewhere. dierh untit Monday or Tuesday of next week. Quotations are between 40 and 46 cents per pound New arrivals on the local market Thursday in expectation of tes holl day tre were Japanese oranges at 5 per box, Cape Cod cran [berries at $14 per barrel and local Goldel Heart celery at $6 per crate any 4 Receipts at the local stock yards Lae Thursday were 673 head of cattle and i ovasw case | 41 hogs. The market held steady in| oe > all divisions, hos ny 3R* Export of wheat and flour from) Fork July 1 to November 7 amount to|%*8.. 9,327,000 bushels of wheat and! wor 4,000 barrels of flour, according | Jan to @ statement of the United States| , hb grain administration or corn, down 1Mo at the open night, after completing a trans tng of $1.92, Inter enti oceanic voyage. The ship was de- jlayed two days because ef pro- |peller trouble, NOTICE TO MARINERS | Notice to mariners was iqsued by Capt. BR. A. Abe hy, cormmander of the Beattie b: h hydrographic office, Priday, that a large creosoted | pile floating on end five feet out of water had been sighted by the steamer Admiral Schley November | | 17 in Intitude 27.01.20 N, longitude 1.80 W. } NEVER GUESS RIGHT! —AND— GUTERSON’S LATEST NOVELTY: HIT “DIXIELAND JAZZ BAND” ; Presented in Connection With the First New HAROLD LLOYD’ eee ae 1% 11% | Eipvered eran 1 Te | the; Cine While Seattle industries are laying off men and so many are going without work, other cities, where or- ganized labor is not dominated by the radicals, are ad- vertising for men to meet the demands upon their in- dustries for more production. small white beans, 3 T S6e; email time | beana, 2 Tb, ibe; bead cider, Ife pt tall 116—Lamb chops, ibe Mb; veal tidal Me 1: round steaks, B8%4¢ Mb; Jan May Comedy “BUMPING INTO BROADWAY” —Two Orchestras— Separate and apart—playing during the same performances —Afternoon and Evening— large employers of labor have organized under govern, auspices “The Association for Conciliation of Labor and Capi been shown that pigeons @imost as fast as a seaplane or t. ELP YOURSELF SUNDAY NIGHT i WINE OF LAUGHTER AP AND ay that Started NY. on @ Pajama Jag Don't miss seeing the great- IF YOU DELAY You will be crowded out at the finish and find it impossi. ble to secure seats. "Nights: 50 to $2.00 | “MABEL” Matinees Thurs. (Thanksgiving) and Satur day: 50c to $1.50, plus war tax. , | METROPOLITAN Officers ring Trouble in Court Trial SPOKANE, Nov. 21.—Charges of contempt of court today fol lowed a Opeman riot staged tn municipal court late yenterday byw Sam Crane, disbarred attorney and alleged 1, W. W. Crane, up on a disorderly con duct charge, growing out of his alleged interference with I. W W. raids last week, started his performange by calling a witness a Mar. Following that Judge ordered him removed. Six officers assisted In the re- moval, Crane sustained a scalp wound when he fought officers who put him back in jail. The clerk's desk in court wan nearly over turned and the proceedings were in turmoil for 10 minutes. Fi Witt Hulk, per m -Par tom Netted Gem, x Orehara ran ; Besaeas —Guatamaia Mm . : "New York Coffee and” ALWAYS AT Mrs.: “I'm going out for a tramp.” Mr. wure to call for something to eat.” It is estimated that France will have about 2,000,000 tons of steel to port as a result of the increase in her metal resources by the mines of Alsace-Lorraine. “It won't be necessary; one is “KNOWN FOR TONE Plays all records with true reproduction of original tone. We take great pleas- ure in demonstrating this instrument. A demonstration will convince you of its qual- ity. Models at $75 to $275. Terms can be arranged. Call and See Us JUST RECEIVED a large shipment of ukuleles from Honolulu, featuring the great BROS. Co. 1623 Third Avenue - DAINTY rropUCTA L Local Markets Te Portland Market Report” x % |) market te 4. EDIE LD rough heavy, S14@14.50 ‘. gts, 62 head: market te siiae@ it — | lenver Market Status Receipta, 400 head: market ¥. Top, $14.20; butk of wales, $12.78 market Frisco Market Status i FRANCISOO, Nov, 21.—Butter tte per fh Extras, tTe per dor; extra pul- T0€ per dom; undersized pullete, 4c | California fata, fancy, Bho per 200 per Ib, Sugar Quotations | cw YORK, Now. #1.~¢ the per ibs No te Oottes—N 4 Bantos, per th. Sugar—Centrifugal, t.2%¢ per tm Liye, Hehe 5 | Brotlers Goese—-Live . ees Belgian Mares—Live, per Th. .. MEAT New Wisconsin } Or. and Wash. tr Badger brick Oremon brick Lim Little Cost Day and By Young Lady A 1888 4th Ave, If You Fail To get what you want, call on us, Biggest and best assortment of Nursery Stock Fruit and Ornamentals of Kinds Holland Bulbs MAIL ORDER SERVICE Send for new pli guide and All MALMO & CO. 1913 WESTLAKE AVENUE dust North of Times Square do ease Green hides, cows Ie, B00 bulle or stags, No. 2 fekina. Wo. i. shearing flint dry 78. 00@80 00 jone et Stockyards +16,60@17,00 1 a The black apes of Guinea have long silky heir and their fur is 2Me| used fg muffs and capes, CORNER rUH.40 MARKET, ¥ ia, 200 Th; i iamb] Mal 120, cranberries, 2 Stall 151, Gerd Russet, Yello i's growna « LIBERTY AND VICTORY If you must MELL your Liberty or Victory Nenda SELL to UR If you cam BUY more Liberty or Vietory Bends. BUY from UB. ¥. November 2%, 1919, the closing market prose were an given the governing prices for Liberty Vietory Bonds ati ever wertine these prites Gally in order that you market and the exact value of your Liberty BONDS heat. W. he New York let ath sue Vietory Vietory 93.87 P When buying we deduct 87c on & $60 bond and 52.60 on soll at the New York market plus the secrued interset. MORRIS BROTHERS, Inc. The Premier Manictpal-fond 3 Central THE GOOD WILL OF THE FIRST NATIONAL | is one of its most valued assets. It has been built up by a genera- tion of congervative and efficient management, and is maintained and inereased by satisfactory service constantly rendered. We want to earn some more good will by serving you. THE MAN WITH MONEY : | can afford to take chances on an uncertain || investment. ' || Consider carefully before investing your savings. and | | get the advice of your bankers. They will be glad to \} help you. Savings Department open every Saturday qvening from 6 to 8 for your convenience. The Seattle National Bank Resourees Over Thirty Million Dollars, Second Avenue at Columbia, Sabotage Is Slowing Up Industries : _ The high production costs which are slowing up the industries of Seattle, which are controlled by organ- ized labor, are not due to high wages; they are due to the sabotage of the radical element of labor, the I. W. W. and reds who have gained control of the labor unions and who make a practice of giving as little work as possible for eight hours’ pay. It is sabotage which is killing the goose that lays the golden egg. Freed of these radicals, the industries of Seattle could again compete with the world and give employment to additional thousands. It is sabotage, the practice of “making the work go around” without regard to the volume of cost of pro- duction, that is strangling our industries and-prevent- ing new industries from coming here; that is th ing our workmen out in the streets. SabotagelsDriving Commerce Away Sabotage is strangling Seattle’s commeree. The cost, of handling cargoes at this port is driving vessels elsewhere. Recently a 5,100-ton cargo was unloaded at a Seattle dock from ship’s tackle to place of first rest on the wharf at a cost of $5,800, or $1.13 1-8 per ton. But a few weeks before, under the same scale of wages and same conditions, cargoes were being un= loaded at 47 to 57 cents per ton. When an officer of the International Longshoremen’s Union was ‘asked for an explanation of the excessive cost of unloading this cargo, he replied: “There are twice as many workers on the water front as are needed, and the only way to make work for all of them is to slow down on the job.” Unless sabotage ceases there will soon be four times as many men as are needed on the, Seattle water front, instead of twice as Many. The only way to give employment to ali is to make conditions so at- tractive that more commerce will come to this port. Renton Mine Is Closed Down Every one in Seattle is interested in adequate pro- duction of coal. Not to mention the present: coal strike, sabotage has been lessening the output and increasing the cost of coal to the consumer in this district for several months. Early last spring the Renton coal mine, working two shifts, was producing 600 tons of coal per day. Gradually the output dropped to 450 tons per day, with the same men on shifts and under the same conditions. In order to bring production up to normal the mine management put on a third shift of men. Instead of the output increasing with the ad- ditional force of men, it DROPPED TO 850 TONS PER DAY, a little more than half of what was pro- duced last spring with two-thirds the force of men. The decreased production increased the cost of min- ing the coal to $6.64 per ton, or $2.70 more than the wholesale price. The operators were forced by losses to close down the mine. ‘ Reduces Work and Increases Living Costs These are but a few of many examples of the effect of sabotage on industry in Seattle which ean be cited. It is this sabotage that is strangling our industries and our commerce, that is driving business and le away from Seattle, that is increasing the cost of liv- ing at the same time that it is throwing hundreds out of work. It is this sabotage which must cease before Seattle can enjoy the prosperity which is enjoyed by all cities where honest work is done today. Put an end to this sabotage and there will be work at the prevailing wages for all. .