The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 19, 1921, Page 4

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INDORSED C. of C. Backs Tripple Plan d at Taxing for Mu- iiicipal Pr Projects ‘Tripple ill, which has been in the legislature, by the bureau of taxation of of Commerce, and in a Of the taxation bureau made today the following statements made: Is recommended that the Cham © on record as indorsing the bin, probibiting taxation of ty for the establishment, oper. and maintenance of municipal other than water and light and ferries connecting high Taxation for payment of obti. u already legally tnourred, such ‘the obligations of the port district, | allowed by the provisions of the Chamber has gone on record times against taxation in sup- Of public utilities not essential municipal government, enunciat- the principle that each public which performs a service for shouk! be made to pay its own ‘The Tripple bill would enact Principle into law, with the ex- noted above. taxation of property i# in conneftion with the op- of the municipal street rail. | System and .development of Utilities, The Coastwise ferry maintained by King county ws been a heavy burden to the tax which would be prohibited, if bis Bill becomes a law. exists as to the power of tity to levy taxes In support of |” Municipal street railway system, Matter has not been tried out courts. Passage of the Tripple f would put an end to doubt and| the taxpayers of Seattle of | threatened burden ‘Accordingty, we believe that the ghould indorse this bill.” N. P. OFFICIALS HERE 0. F. Obison, assistant to the superintendent of the North Pacific raitway, and G. I. Hay assaitant district engineer of company, have been inspecting equipment of the Port of Seattle Jower at the opening today PT4M. Off 1Mc: france 6 marks 1.dSe, Canadian dollars Ye the phate. ek Leaving Flume, Ga-|* @ Annunzio goes to small town where he will stay with _—- Part in Thrift Week Real thrift is evidenced in the purchase of the matchless clothing, furnishings and hats at the remarkable discounts listed al Sale. Take advantage of the specials, SUITS and OVERCOATS $23.35 (Regular Price $35) All coats, Good overcoats, also at a discount of 33 1-3%. Specials---Take Your Choice $11 Hats--$3.95 Hundreds are taking ad- vantage of this great special in C. & K. hats. Values rang- up to $11 now $3.95. is tn. | \Start Brisk k Trading 19—-A Reneral covering movement set in on the day, resulting in really 6 of the shorts ap yesterday NEW YORK, Jan #tock market toward the end of the first hour active ding for the first time in three days parently had taken warning from the action of th | The leaders included United Fruit, whieh reac or the equiva lent of 219% for the old stock; General Asphalt, w got up 30 pont | trom last month's low, reaching €2; United States Realty with an early high of SOW, up I%t Springfield-Kelly, which touched a pew high of @%. op 24) Texas & Pacific Coal & O11, which got above a of 2 points, and California Petroleum with a new high of 36, up 2 Ratis were slow, altho Canadian Pacific gained \ at 116%; Southern Pacific was unchanged at 974 tocks opened higher. Smelting 384, up \) Central Leather 42% wp Ni Pan-American 15%, unchanged Corn Products 70%, up %; Crucible Steel 9%, up & Atlantic Gulf 72, unchanged; Food Products 264, off %; South 97%. unchanged. In the early afternoon ratis Jotned the industrials tm advances led by Reading, which reached 86%; Studebaker was also strong, and reports | were cir¢ulated that the old bull pool was buying the stocka United States Realty made a new high on the movement, advancing 2% to Sit. N. Y; Stock E Exchange '» Quotations: "ih Manning & Ce, Avenue Nigh Low rey ray am ow Chicago Board of “Trade! (Tucmiay’s Quotations) | Furnished by 1. B. Manning & Ca, 619 Necond Avenue High Low 1.78) (OLTe Leow Wheat Open | Maren ‘ May Core aon 08 au “ | May July... Pork — | May | Lare- | Jan... Maren nine Jan May. 1400 1n8e wi 1s (Nominal) X } | Corn. Oa New Haven | orthern Pacific. | 25.000 | mniee, Southern Pacitic Mouthern ¥ Strom bere ke tudedaker $30: ao 18 Sheep —Atecetp 000 ime lower, Lamba, $425@ ‘ a Ng United Retail i San Francisco Produce [i:"A"huster BAN FRANCISCO, Jan 1%.—Dotter—| 0. 8 Extras, she per |d ive Cheese—Callfornia Mata fancy, ah'e0| ¥ per Ib Regge —Extraa, #4 per dos Ate per dou, extra pullet t pallets, 8e per Transit. 2% is 24,400 shares } N. Y. Coffee and St Sugar per tb: m1 Coffee—No. Ne per ib; No 4 Santon 4 @ 9% per Ih to 99.5 Ba 1,100 head: market te i feeders, on York public howpitals, during Cheasty’s Remov- $33.35 $43.35 (Regular Price $50) (Regular Price $65) other suits and over- including Kuppenheimer Clothes and Burberry Fancy Shirts 50% Off All Arrow and Manhattan fancy shirts—just half price. This is your opportunity. These shirts are recognized as on New York Market United States Steel $3%, unchanged; American Nineteen ambulances serve New| THE SEA me News Tides in Seattle WEDNEADAY i] aAN. lr "2 First Low ‘Tite |leer am, Tat || Second Hilal ‘Tide | second ae am, Tat || Rewond Low ‘Tide jt pe om, O46 . TO LAUNCH BIG CARGO SIP Steamer West Lewark, 12,000-ton cargo carrier censtructed for the shipping bodrd, will be launched at | the Twin City yards of the Low An celeg Shipbuilding and Drydocy Co. next month, ‘The West Lewark tn the first veel of her type to be built on the Coast, ee JOHNSON MOTORSHIP COMING From the west coast of South America the Johnson line motorship Balboa will come to Seattle in Febru. ary to load « cargo for Boandinavian porta, Seattie Scandinavian Vancouver, B.C, Tuesday night, ° services, left ISTHMIAN SHUP DUR With a general cargo from the At lantic coast, the Isthmian liner Steel Inventor is expected to dock at Seat | Ue Saturday or Sunday, cee BLUR FUNNEL STEAMSHIP Talthybiog ts scheduled to sail for the Orient January 20, eee HARRISON LINER DUE 800N Steamer Collegian, duo here Feb. ruary 10, in now en route to Beatle from Liverpool. She is in the Har rison line service and is scheduled to arrive in port February 10 eee | Weather Bureau Report |""* 1H LELAND, Jam 108 A Mo Passed in neon; tr | ts |Arrivals and Departures Arrived January 19—dtr at 20 a om. from | mitral Dewey from Tacoma latr Admiral Nedmas fram Occam Fails jac. 4 Sr Forest King from tao nee me Janeary 1S met ore coma, F dre. Char Vessel i in Other Ports fa—Arrived January 14: Mur West from Beattie via Vancouver, B.C, via Port Apest str Otioan for Boston + ancts York at} & m far ed Victoria, 4 ie a. January 18: Mtr tthe via Vietoria, Arrived January from Heat! Tokohama—Arrived Janoary 39) Mtr Meg deenup from Beattie via Vancouver, \ale | Kobe—ftatied January 1%: Str Katert Maru for Meattie via Tokohama and Van- couver, B.C New York@alted January 1%) Mtr Meet Maker for Seattle via 0 4 Portiana tr Moor Janvery 19 ion vie New York, Cris doverume: Admiral eleco for Heattie, lumbia Rive rat 8 p.m: U ® & Rrook ling, Norfolk for Paget Sound naval eta of ary Franciec ee, feattle for ¥ Heattle att p.m. Seattle for Keteni m Heattle at § p.m. Renttle for Yokotiama, 2,7 miles from seat r Vessels in Port at Seattle terminal—tr Weat Hartland, stern Leader Pin Str Talthybion, Great Northern terminal—@te Pashimt Maru, str Toyohashi Mara Pier 6 itr Maquan. Per 2--tr fants Ane. str Jettorvem, Union Of) dock—tr 8 D Bel! at. terminal—U 8 ¢ CG Algonanin © Bir Admiral Goodrich. je Coast coal bunkere—C @ L HT ty ring works —#tr Went Himrod. Str Youemite. hahip ‘moorings—Btr Bag tr View Mantord at. term Kart waterway terminal Inn. Todd drydocks—Behr Columbia, atr Mo bile City, str President, str Westward fr Admiral Dewey tr West lis. Ho, anus, ate Forest King, str Nort ern. | Puget Hound ridge & Dredeing works— tr Patterson, Amen yarde—8tr Ro Heffernan dock—-1 8 © & G ® Lydonta, str Wawona, U 8 Burveyor, or Ketoh- tkan Atream-—ftr West Jappa METROPOLITAN ONE NIGHT ONLY || There are no novelties and no price re MOTORSHIP BUENOS AIRES, | for Buropean ports |" Northwestern | trom | Ww TTLE STAR LOGAL MARKET IS UNCHANGED, Tf the weather changed as peldom | Ae the local market conditions at this | time of the year, the rain and wind | prophet would be out of a job. | | Staple of vegetables and) WIDNESDAY, JANUARY ry, 1921. -PATIERSON CO, SECOND AVENUE AND UNIVERSITY STREET STORE HOURS, 9 TO 5:30 | fruits are moving in fair volume, changes other than the usual datly | variations that are caused by tempo rary shortage or surplus of commod, ities, In Portland em have taken an. other jump, Whether that will in fluence the local market or not ts problematical, sirable | Lawal,: per | Green I joreered| aah, Yame—Viretnia, per hamper FRUITS Local cooking 10ers + 16@1.15 at $22.50 and $25.00. Noney—Comy por crate .. Birained. par BW. veveesccrss color and style. DAIRY PRODUCTS Prices Paid to Shipper Datterfat + Kaus Fresh ranch Maik —Per owt DAIKY PRODUCTS Vaid Wholesale Dealers Butter—Lecal or tek Fresh ranch . —A clearance of serge braided, embroidered garments. Pecks .. Heng— Under 4 ihe and up style. HART HAD STOCK IN FAILED BANK OLYMPIA, Jan. 19.—Gov. Douls F. Hart today admitted that he was the Turkere—Live Mareo— | (defunct Scandinavian American bank of Tacoma, but denied that he had jin any way been connected with the management of the institution. Hart would not comment on the |rumor that he would diemins State 4 | Bank Commiasioner P. Claude Hay. fis@ ase| That it will be to the public ad- AND FEED | vantage to allow the agitation over Whoieaale Price Mor Tea, City Price | the collapes of the Tacoma bank to | die quickly was aaserted by Gov. oee Hart. ses | ee ee i%| 0. K. HIGHER APPLE DUTY ©| Resolutions approving a reciprocal duty on apples between the United | States and Canada were adopted by | the trustees of t Chamber of Com |merce yesterday after presentation | jof facts in a letter from the We natchee Valley Traffic association. At | Present the duty charged by Canada jon apples from this country ts 30) jcents a box, while the United States | | charges but 10 cents on imports trom | Canada. As a résult of the advan-) | tages given in competition the Cana- | - | dian growers have invaded the East- Whent—Minea’ Feed | Altai! |Alfalia Meal. Keratch teed Formerly Priced $15. 00, $17.50 and $19.75 popular late styles in exceptionally priced —Sizes 16 to 44, but not all sizes in each owner of $1,000 worth of stock in the | Special Price Basement —The one purpose of the Special Price Basement is to sell de- Apparel for Less Every garment in the Basement is much underpriced—oth- erwise it would not be in the Basement. Women’s and Misses’ Coats $15.00 —Grouped from special lots, formerly selling —58 Wool Velour Coats; some with large cape and shawl collars of self material; others with sealine fur collars. ity have full silk linings. —Sizes 16 to 44, but not all sizes in each The major- ‘ 55 Dresses $10.00 Each and tricotine models— and beaded. All the A Clearance Sale of All Winter Hats in 3 Groups $1.00 All Trimmed Velvet Hats 25c All Untrimmed Shapes. 50c All Tams Thursday Apron Special 200 Novel Aprons an Apron Diesel Regularly $3.95, $3.50 and $2.95 Qualities $2.39 Each ~—Hand embroidered Aprons bleached muslin, embroid- ered in striking designs. “Mary Garden,” and Flowers,” Blue Bird and many other novel de- signs. —All well finished and eut of heavy un- “Fruit full. HARDWARE MEN IN 2 MEETINGS Two sessions of the 16th annual convention of the Pacific Northwest Hardware & Implement Dealers’ as- sociation, which opened Tuesday, |were held Wednesday at the Elks’ | club, the first at 10 a m, and the sec- ond at 2 p.m. The first day’s program consisted of an opening meeting at the Elks’ club in the afternoon and a banquet | at the Masonic temple in the evening. |F. A. Ernst of Ernst Hardware Co., and president of the association, pre- sided. Stephen L. Miller, dean of the de- partment of business administration, | made the principal address of the aft- ernoon. He predicted a period of prosperity and development for the | Northwes ot At the banquet Prof. Clark T. Bis- | sett of the University of Washington spoke on the “Duties bf Citizenship. A number of short talks were ma by representative men. me convention closes Friday. e : Fighting to Repeal Taxes on Candy DEL MONTE, Cal, Jan 19.—A fight for the repeal of the excise tax on candy wes launched today at the convention of the Western Confeo | tloners’ association, in session here. Walter K. Louis, secretary of the association, in an address to the com vention, discussed the tax, Geoclariag it was really a tax on food. “Candy is a food, and not @ hos ury,” he declared. Officers were elected by the ass ciation as follows President, Leon Sweet, Salt Lake; | first vice president, C. E. Roberts, § attle; second vice president, A. Ta Mathews, Los Angeles; Walter K. Louts, Los Angeles, Jern American ‘market extensively while protected in their home mar- kets from American competition. RAIN MARKET HIT BY SLUMP CITICAGO, Jan, 19%—Heavy mup- | plies of wheat at the pled with Ia aured a decl that grain o | of Trade today Corn and oate also dropped in sympathy with at, on beavy commission house ing. Provisions were lower, March wheat opened off %e at 91.74 and lost _an additional ae in later trading; May wheat opened at $1.66, off 1c, and dropped 3%c addi- tional before the close. May corn was off “wc at the open- dropped an addi- quently; July oe ; off Mec, and lost oate opened “ONE-ELEVEN” cigarettes av ¢ "THs is why One-Eleven is here— jopiay An All-Star Cam “THE PALA DARK w Levy's Musteal Comedy Co. im “THE LOVE MARKET Nights (Sundays), 45c. Mats, Ladies’ Mats. (Except ays), 12¢, Mats. Daily BXx- onday and Thursd 0. Nights 2:15 and 9:18. Mats. 2:30. Nights 7 and 9 hip General Admission Mats, 25e; Nights 40¢, and lost %ec ned off we at 45 additional later later; July oats and lost %e i unchanged at Trade conditions slowed down Europe’s buying in this country. BUNGALOW amnitnas Third Near Pine Bitiott S10 SOLD OUT FOR FRIDAY NIGHT S0 COME TONIGHT Clint Willara Frank: Rippe a er makes of hats 25% off. Original price tags remain. the best on the market. See the other specials. CHICAGO, Jan. No. Portland Market Status “Market steady 19.-Oash wheat— 2 red, $1,90@1,90%. Fine tobacco formerly shipped across the Atlantic Ocean piled up. We bought it and made One-Eleven cigarettes. Result—-a high quality cigarette at a low price. Thur., Jan. 20 “The hit of the season” AMERICAN SYNCOPATED ORCHESTRA AND SINGERS George Edmond Dulf jx Conductor | | 3 Colored Artists || market t= “Values Tell’’ heast GRAVE S. Pres. a Bhoep—Re Buttor—47 ° market ta! quiet and unchanged. per Ib, per dom F Ib. per Ib, BANK CLEARINGS FInatty— try them! Now—Matinees Today and Sat Seattle Thomas Wilkes Sossents woes 85,252,405.90 | 776,872.08 | | Clearings Instrumentalists Merit Vocal Soloists The World’s Greatest Exponents of Negro Music and Melodies 1 | SEATS NOW | Prices 50c, $2.00 | Spokane | . » 1,871,865.00 754,028.00 | | Clearings 5,169,909.00 Balances . ‘ 412,942.00 et | Clearines lip Balances crrReuU SARURY & CO, OR PRISCOR Tacoma Clearings Balances .. 506 402.00 64,762.00 ° op sme which means that f you don’t like “111” Cigarettes, you c money back from the dealer Gordon's Cireus; Comrey Por tand | Brother. POTERSH in PN pMRAT

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