The Seattle Star Newspaper, February 3, 1921, Page 14

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% " <P IMERS T0 ‘Ship News. — NEW _veeest in Seattle RAL RATES =: TRH, 8 iret, Miah Tide 10,5 f | low Tide ft Tide oo ny 10.8 ft ‘neon Low Tide pom, OF Mae Dp ee SEE PLOT T0 ‘STEAL’ SHIPS : | Southern Ports Trying to, Steal March on Us? An attempt ey Los Angeles and Portland to take from Seattle the G35-foot ners allocated to this port by the United States shipping board for trade routes from here to the Orient was seen by the Chamber of [Commerce Thursday, when a tele | |eram came from Admiral Benson, | chairman of the shipping board. The telegram announced that the) WATER SHIPMENT [shipping board has called a confer ence for Monday, February 24, with d by a 33 per cent increase in | l*vepresentatives of Pacifico coast et rates which makes impossibte | ‘the shipment of their products to) ports,” relative to establishing of {trade routes and allocation of ships markets.and sale of them & price equa! to that asked by) from Pacific coast to Oriental ports. mh growers, Western farmers Tt was the first intimation anybody been forced to resort to water| here seems to have had of any such to market their crops. conference, Richard M. Semmes, lo JA Durden of more than $30,000,000 |cal representative of the shipping Wereased rates has made the| board, who returned Wednesday farmer either dispose of his | from Washington, sald there had) below cost of production or/ been no inkling of the conference & to rot in the fleits. when he left the capital, The Pacific Coast Steamship Co., To overcome this handicap, Caltfor- | Bia farmers, to the number of 60,000, | which gets five ships from the board, has heard nothing of it. . Sommer practically every farm Organization in conjunction with 0 a al Various shippers’ organizations, DISCUSS EFFECT ON PORT formed the California Produc | “What Effect Will the Passage of and Shippers’ Transportation | House Bill No, 44 Have on the Port Hon thru which they will| of Seattle? was to be the subject of their fight for reduced rates. [an address by Port Commissioner) will use the large tonnage| George B. Lamping before the En Hed by the association as 4/ gineers’ club at noomThureday. to force down rates. Last ee ‘more than 3,600,000 tons of fruit} WILLIAMS CO. PERMANENT Wegetables were shipped from! Permanent establishment of the alone, The estimated rail-| Wiltlams Steamship Co. In the Coast freight cost for this tonnage | toCoast service here was announced $97,000,000. With the increased| Wednesday when Thorndyke-Tren. now in force it is estimated | holme Co., Inc., accepted the regular it will cost 000,000 to ship | agency for Puget sound and British game tonnagt. Columbia. REFUSE TO PAY MORE the farmers refuse to pay. "yiret ues ‘ m, O4 tt Ship Product by Water to _ Eastern Markets SAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 3-—Farm And shippers of the Pacific! oat fruit centers have declared war ‘on the railroads, They have flatly “Petused to pay the increased freight Tecently granted by the United interstate commerc nmi ‘and will, in the future, ship Producta to the Eastern sea by water until the railroads their demands ‘This act is a last ditch CED TO RESORT defense a HERE AFTER SEVEN YEARS After an absence of seven yeare, agreements have been enter.|the steamship Texan of (he Amet @ into with steamship companies to|can-Hawalian line is again in Puget all the tonnage which can be/ sound waters. The vessel is finishing to them. Not having at/ite cargo at Bellingham, after hav- @isposal any previous rates for| ing loaded at Seattle and Tacoma for of this nature, the asso-| Atlantic ports. Pas * S fast freighter. and the steamship companies arrived trary bh by the railroads. hax Teanensde by water the farmers of | 10 mile hour. dest nigh estimate they can save | st * o'clock a.m str Governor at and considerably more a5 water |ctoudy; wind southwest, 43 miler are further lowered. hour, Passed m: Mteam echr Frank 0. aaeod ar the association and the Unit-|h"f. Kisasiey at 3 pm Pasea oot, California farmers may be en-| i> letter “OG.” at § pm to charter some of the refrig- Arrivals and Departures is made, however, to the fact ‘Whipping board ships are valued |_ Febroary ?-—str February 2—Str Tyndareus from Van- chartered on that basis, while|couver, BC Mm come, C, and Ti fees. from Tacoma at 3:65 « m: farmers are advocating that] perruary the shipping board ships be |New York via 8. Helens, San Francisco to the cost of running the|*" Cristobal AU 4 Pm Dewey fo and that the ships be made|san Diego via Han Franciseo and Sao at @ cost commensurate | Pedro at gon MAN LINE (ES AGREEMENT Juneau—Salled February 2: Str Ad- an agreement with the farm- iz is the United American steam| Vessels in Other Ports London— Arrived February 1: Ste M. than $5,000,000 in the first] ’ Fevruary 2—11:00 A. M—Partly tions are now under way| Stout at 9s m. & P. M.—Cloudy: wind A States shipping board whereby |A three-masted steamer, white stack ships built by the board. Ob- Mara from '® construction cost of $150 a ton | “come st noe. actual cost of construction is} coma at 10 m.; str Rosalie Mahoney Increased cost of construction | Tacoma at February 2a h that of privately.owned ships. * “V first steamship company to|!"s! Watson, westbound, at 2 a i. line, couver, B New York on a number of big cargo y is ot rs. Weekly sailings of these | w: bearing California farmers’ grain, rice, cotton and canned | poistan ftom Beattie Will soon be started, according | “Honcluln—Aailed February t: to © the announcement from the office |"chr Theodore Roorevelt for Seattle vi the California state market com-|°rt* Ban Francisco—Arrived February 2: Mtr | Milenion, under the direction of which | nainier trom Beattic. Arrived Yebrust? | the new co-operative organization has|?: Str President from Seattle via Vic~ formed. toria, BL C., 9 p.m Halied F * ery 2: mr ayeeeka for Beattie at 4 Spee sortie cents © hundred |». 'm.; etr West Notus for Seattle at 6 “Weight in freight charges is being |p. m waved u under the new arrangement, Sag = rad oy 9 + “aed 2: Str Nite rom Seattle and it is expected that this saving Portiand—-Arrived February 2 Will be materially increased as the | trom seattic. “pew experiment progresses and new| Tacotha—Arrived February 2: T 8 ® Both acm and People etr Romaile ahoney from Sao Francisco Are Buying CHICAGO, Feb. —-Retall mer. Reported by Wireless ‘thants have cleaned their shelves of! surplus stocks and have again begun buy heavily in preparation for an buying season this spring, ac Sording to leading wholesale dry goods men here today ‘This means, according to J. V. Pa well, president of J. W. Farwell com- pany, that prosperity has returned “When it became apparent that the lc would not purchase merchan because of high prices retailers led buying,” said Farwell. they are buying what they Want and desire a great deal, which Gpdicates a return of consuming powe! Says Rice Growers Lose Thru Swindle SACRAMENTO, Feb. 2.—Northern California rice growers were swindled out of $1,590,000 thru manipulatio of the market by the rice millers, according to charges made public there today, follow: meeting of the Pacific Rice Growers’ associa- tion. ‘The rice growers’ investigution has not been completed. However, they will ask for indictment of the rice millers said to be responsible for the situation on charges of embezzle ment $. J. Hankina, of San Francisco, feeued the staternent making public the situation. He said that rice mill ere, without authorization, 170,000 xacks of rice which wlored with them by the growers, ‘This amount of rice thrown suddenly on the market broke the market, he wid, and prices tumbled. Small growers, in need of money, were forced to sell, and the price dropped ate NN tr Admiral thboupd, at 3 Naval Commune: 2—8tr Governor, San Fran Heattle, 166 miles north off Cape Blanco at § p.m; #tr Horace X. |) Baxter, Beattie for Ban Francisco. ee from Beattie at § p. m.; atr Yor Linds, Seattle for San Pedro south of Umatille reef; fichley, Beattie far San |taited from Seattle at & p. Orient for Battle, attle at # p Manila for Be attic at § p. lone February timeo” for Admirat | Francisco, wir a Vessels in Port at Seattle amit Cove. terminal—Str Tenpaisan Mare. ¢ Great “Morthern Maru Pier 1¢—8tr Tyndareus. Hell wt. terminal—U 4 © G Algonquin. Grand ‘Teunk Pacific terminulomir Artl- ror Pier & terminal—Ste Katori Str Rosalie Mahoney. Pier 2—Htr Sanita Ana, str Alameda, Pacific Coast Engineering works Westward Ho, str leonium, wtr ern Leader, str Weet Hartiand, | West Himrod. Pier A—Str Adiniral Goodrich, Pier B—Atr BpOkane, Pier D—Ste Admiral Dewey, str City of} Benttle Connecticut at Alaska Steamship way, atr Victoria, Milwaukee ocean terminal: Hanford st. teriminal-—U # L # Relief. Vast waterway terminal—str Went Lvie Todd drydocks—sohr Columbia, ate, For- ent Puget Sound Bridge & Dredging works Mir Patterson, bull Rainbow Amen yardeAte Ko it. Standard Holler works dock t Hulls Abt , Addison, Allenhu: thon, Hayden, Berteand, Bincaya, Black Wolf, Blanford win, vehton, Perv Cagacan, Capraria, Cardia. Charur, Chesterfield, Chaicin, Cinyras, Corus, Cozian, Ci Elissa, Wlectra, Kndyraion, Fort Ata wix, Fort Harrison, Fort Fort Union, Imurka, Loot, ¥isher Fiouring mills dock Cayote. Hetterpan dock Str at + terminal—Ste Yoromite, a moorings Str Skag Str Delight. usCce Abnoba, Aby Ah U8 C&G Wawons, | | GRAIN MARKET THE SEATTLE STAR Pressure on Oils Is | Heavy Thru Morning + NEW YORK, Yeb ure yeu | terday were attacke DThe same stocks which were under prem at the opening of the stock market today, Prof al traders made every effort to the market as low as pomnible ible wan particularly weak, opening 2% off at 90; Northern Pa cific lowt 14 at 87; General Asphalt opened at 64%, down %; Mexican | Petroleum at 155 was off 1% United Statos Steel wae an exception, opening % Murher at § quickly lost all of the gain, Studebaker was unchanged at 66 Pressure on oll #hares continued heavy thru morning trading tle Guif sold down to 66% and Royal Duteh to 60%. Asphalt rallied 06 after @ pwn to 64M Opening quotations included Wleetric 127, unchanged: General 4. but Atlan to 1 United Stdter 4: General ool 824, up Motora 14%, unchanged; Texas Com. pany 49%, up Heara-Roebuck 85, off 1; Mexican Petroleum 155, off New York Central 71, unchanged; American International 45%, onda 18%, off %; General Asphalt 644, off te: Studebaker 66%, acme Reading &2%, off \; Northern Pacific off 1%} Pan-Ame pg off %; Southern Pacific 9 ff 4: International Paper 68%, off $0, off 2%; Brooklyn Rapid Transit 12%, up % josing quotations Included: United States Steel 814, off M4 AEX, off 1%! Pan-American Petroleum 124, off 1%) Atlantic off 6%; Reading 80%, off 2%; Northern Pacific 44%, off 3% buck 85%, off Btudedbaher 56%, off %: Crucible 89%, off ; troleum ff 2%; General Amphait 64%, off Ti; Royal I Pacific 06%, off % off %; 7 iM un can “ Naldwin Hetall Stores 18% N. Y. Stock Exchange tiene SLUMPS AGAIN Favorable Weather Is ” Factor Feb. 23 the Chica: CHICAGO, slumped on Trade today, Grain prices o Hoard of due to an over-abun Favorable weather ditions thruout the wheat belt & contributing factor, Pre were unchanged. wheat opened unchanged at) ing 40 Inter: May wheat wh Ge Ot $LATY and lowt ine ubsequentiy nap 65K, down | Kennecott nal lige be- | Lae Mexican £g, "rater | Missouri Pact entral Lewth M4 MP. ‘aba Cane Bu orn Products Cruciite (General Motors joodrieh at Northern trial Alcohol the opening of 67 se May oats opened off at clone guly at the and ar ped we une enges| later. Readin Chicago Board of Trade (Wedneeday's Quotations) Fernished by t. B. Rees ace. Datler Hote! Nailding Open Tigh ee ghee aa ae eth Binciair On houthern Rputhern Reliway Nirombera Mudebaker Texas Company r lew Cos ety me bee 1. Wheat Maren May May... roduets | Optom OU of Dela | Union Pacttic | United Hest | U. & Renter }c. & me Utah Copper Vanadiutn Bisel Wabash . Weatinghouse | WHlys-Overtand Rapid Transit Juneau al wale, i “ Mores 1% 22.19 28.90 33.10, 145 | iret @ys Recond 4" Third Fourth ¢4's er a Fitth ¢§ =... ‘Total enies, $11.28 eee Railroad Securities ‘8 Quotations) Chicago Live Stock CHICAGO Fed. tho g e—-Prcetpte, 42.000 head; marks Polk of sales, $9.25 49.55; paekin sree my tent, ‘rowshs, nue Le M SSse— receipts, 9.000 beads market strong. Beet, 160 @ $4558; canners mockert and foedera, 14 1 @T, calves, S19 12 50 Sheep--Heceipts, 30.000 hea: market | the to ie lower, Lamba, $T@R1S; ewes, are | Heth, Mteet Ret. 0% Central Pacific tet HAG Joint « i tows, 458 Foreign change opened today with « ting at Lh 53%, france or. madi dpllars P48 San Francisco Produce BAN VRANCIACO, Fp 2-—-Ratter— Rrtras, ber tm “heme—California fate, fancy, tras, 4456 per do; extra! ¢xtre pullets, 46 %40 mullets No. 1, 39 per tthe | Russian 6%" Russian 64's. | Corteney | French 5's, French French italian | Mritisn | Frition Britian & Britten | arteries | Helgiom Restor Relgium Premium German W. L. 6s | Mertin 4's Hamburg Hamburg Leipaig 4 daoipe Mynien PORTLAND, Feb. 2.-—Cattle-—Mecstpts, 3 head; market nominally steady and ws ate tic pe dow Tripietm sho per 1h ws . Stall 119, turkeys and geese for breed ne purposes Mt mild cheene, b.; peanut butter, Mm, Stalie 16-17 49-™. sack Snow (Piake flour, § Ihe, Snowdritt, $1594 toe balk oats, ihe, Stall 34, Webb'e Best & cottee, 200 Th. Mtalie 10-11, lamb stew, 18c ™.; Jowl bacon, 2 he Stall 105. + fig bars, 200 Stell 193, the; Del Monte peaches ™, Stal 120, 3 rolls to 2 cana toma ya White wo | N.Y. Coffee and Sugar NEW fugar—Raw EAGe per Ib , 64 MONO per 9% @10%e per Ib lftedheiblahie Buyers. Hit Grain Prices CHICA 2—A> clique European governmental buye responsible for the instability grain market, Jo ident of the Chic charged here today Griffin urged grain exchanges in this country to bar Argentina grain prices from the American market, al- leging the European buyers con trolled the grain markets of this country and have been using “fake” quotations on the Argentir jto foree down prices in the United | States. ‘ ‘ % C 4 the Kimadow ted Kingdom 1 United Kinga United Kingdon Stat The. a. ‘ Beas ot * are of the SANITARY 109, pure Ameri 8 Woe Gle; Crystal Whit Stall 31, walt aatmon, Stall 11, #plteenderg Stall 20, fal} cream cheese, 266 t margarine, 300 T.; beat | 48o %, Stall 24, 4 % je; 2 phen. Kellogs’s corn Stall 46, 400 pkg. Fisher's rolled oats, 28c; Yong thread cocoanut 20¢ Th. Stall 111, uasorted Jama, 400 jar} strained honey, 1. pples. dow. 1.; Deliol fremh butter white beans, flakes, \Milk Condenseries Stall 18, celery Le can, Stalls sugar hame, 70¢ S50, Stalin 94-96 corned beef, 1c ate .; club sausage, botling beet, 1c , Stall 16 Th; steor mtenk, 22 #tail 102, full cream cheese, ange matmalade, churned butter, 4he 109, salt macieral, bellies, 250 tb. stall 16. Jon cheese, 4 CONOMY D, 206 » 2 ate heavy veal «teak usage » Stall 40, » 166 Stalls 200 ™.; bollin, silver peren » be t.; wilver perob | 2 toe % lamb » f Stall | salmon full or tos | Symptoms of greater activity in | dairying evidenced by the re opening during the past week of Car ne tion condenseries in Western Washington. The plant at Ferndale was the last |to open and at the present time it and the plants at Stanwood, Che. halis, Monroe, Mt, Vernon, Everson and roWoolley are all making levaporated milk, while the canning Kent has also are bert oe , | m1 ™ Stail @bir- pure | tt i ik, 96 Stal pure pork jarb, 2 Toe, a, ‘coconnn Htogers’ peanut bi jell thn, $1 lard, 200 %.; bavon 100 'T. Btall fresh black 04 Oe Mo Th Stall p ™ 4% 9, » ‘Alaska Wood Pulp Is on Way South| JUNBAU, Alaska, Feb. 3.—Alaska's first acht nufacture way to Call fornia to be made into paper. It ar- » ike Ih., |Fved here yesterday on the firat lap 1se th, |of its journey, brought from the QUEEN CITY half or whole hare » 44, lard. k cheese ter, 486M Atail 6, sugar Stall Mn US Surveyor, on mill dock—Str Depere to 41.50 for paddy rice and $3.15 for str Ketchikan, atr Jet- fancy rice. wil 4| Speel river plant of the Alaska Pulp & Paper Co, by W. BP. Lewis, the company's secretary, mararoni, Ue, 200, Fr 4 the "rolled tem, boo Mb woh oreain, peanut brit too a in State Reopening! resumed | SPUD SUPPLY as $15 a Ton Thursday and jobbers who earry | looah whiten w welling them as low a» $15 per ton, Good No, 1 were quoted at $25; select ntock new sacks, Was moving slowly at $40, On this rining pot | flood the jobber generally had t j the buyer's offer ii ace ne car of Northern California | cauliflower wan received, T’ }eold at $2 per flat and $3.25 two-dozen ora Spinach, local and Walla Walla, was welling at $1.60 a basket, ‘Th bent California basketed spine topping $1.75 A car of Goldbt wholenaling at $4.75 to $5. in wearce of large oranges. Freah ranch eggs were cheaper Thur The were 43 te te 28 cents for pullets, Prices Paid Whotweate Deaters tor Vegetables ond Fruit Artichokes “ ‘The street 1 cent hot he %® . per Te Green Presa Green Peppers Fiorida, per ™. . | Moreeradioh Fer Mh Lewal. Califo Cal, per t. oo@ tt 12% | Loe Angeles, per bi Squash ler th Mmeet Potatoes Mer th Tomatéve Mexican. per toe Routhern, pemghamper Loeal, per sack . BR Wash... Yome—Virginia, per hamper 1S: Limborger Hiook wits . Wash. triplets ...... POULTRY Simon heavy Rough heavy Piss. Cattio— Theat eteore Medium to ef Hest cows and — 1 1 ‘ Le 6 Th Wethers Ewes HAY, GRAIN AND FEED Wheleeale Price Fer Tea, Clty frice Whole ‘ plied Wheat—-Mixed Feed Alfaite Alfalfa Meal Serateh Peed Wheat Coroanut Meat Cotton Seed Meni Vish Meal Crystal Grits [Limestone Grite Granite Grits Linseed Meal Kee Prodocer Meat Seraps _Pastern Local =— SAVE Monsy— Travel by steamer 1 ‘Tet iP Including Wat Tax VICTORIA. BC PORT ANGELES - STRAIT POINTS SAN JUAN ISLAND POINTS | _in.00 aidnisnt, Sunday, Tharedar | BELLINGHAM - ANACORTES PORT TOWNSEND [A HOOD CANAL POIN NEAH BAY & WAY PORTS PUGET SOUND NAVIGATION Co IS PLENTIFUL jLocal Whites Quoted as Low Potato stocks continued to Increase the Geme in 7 order to make @ ey were for a} ch was | Mute. kel oranges wan! 4 quotations fresh ranch and 20.00@38.00 oo $¢/ married cluplen found the road to 8 oo an ijarmy supply depot, 7.25) ae THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1921. 75) SAYS RAILWAYS IN SAD PLIGHT (ate! | 36 Roads Fail to Pay Ex- Lewal | Hemttle ag penses, Say Atterbury tiie it Rothell oo 88 | r, Bothell 19) CHICAGO, Feb. 1—Two hundred Beattie 21 | the railroad empl have Ny tees x off by 4 roads the & ent Marguerite egal Beptember 1 ailed ; ‘ . | Thirty«ix railroads | BIRTHS Joperating expenses in Jan riffith, ©. 6319 Keystone pl.) roads did Tust'c and fixed cha Dooley, tements were made av W. Atterbury, chairman board of the Raliroad ecutives’ association in a public tement supporting demands of the railroads for @ reduction in wager gir | LABOR MEN © HARGIS . "girl OFFICIAL COERCION mt Aven! Atierbury cared represented 40 per cent of the i mileage of the country Hie boy. |etatement was tmsued an union } ere declared the railroads were | tempting ree the fede | fead board into hasty action demands for wage decrea abrogation of the m ments. The hearing of the union's side of the question will be continued by | the board until next Monday. H. F. Grable, head of the union lof unskilled maintenance of way land shop laborers, answered the pe |tition filed by the railrosdx last week, asking abrogation of the na- tional agreements aud reduction of wages of unskilled workers. Grable charged that the railroads | are attempting to “trample under feet and disregard the rights of Ia borers who have submitted their interests to the beard.” He waid that if the raltroads faced & financial crisis as claimed, it was to the “chreless and inefficient nagement,” the maintenance of “large unnecessary and expensive seasion of | official staffs,” and contracting “at C. Dalton's | fabulous figures for cost-plus work.” relations court Wednesday| The question before the board, | Grable said, was “whether the re lationship of the employer and em ploye shall be settled by just and legal methods or by economic foree WORKERS DEMAND FAIR HEARING The union leaders attacked the |demand of the railroads for imme: | diate action by the board, demand- ling that the question be given a fair hearing. The hearing by the board today was ‘to determine whether or not “emergency action”! |ahould be taken, or a discussion of |the proposals permitted. |$3,000 Judgment Grable cited figures in efforts to| Against Dynamiter |," his claims that men) Default judgment of $3,000 against | were not overpaid. He said 286,300) Marcus Elon Smith for dynamiting | meintenance of way employes re-| the house at 215 Belmont ave. N.,| ceived an annual wage in 1919 of was taken Wednesday afternoon be 2.60, while 65,000 others received | jfore Judge J. T. Ronald by Harry |oniy $698.88. | Aronron, owner of the property. The 36 roads which, according to Smith te now serving a sentence) Atterbury, did not mike their ex- of one year in the atate penitentiary | penses during January included: Min- in connection with the mame offense.| neapolix, St. Paul & Ste Marie; New | He was accused of dynamiting ® york New Haven & Hartford; North-/ house and endangering human life by | erp Pacific, and Philadelphia & Read-| explosion. pa Casalay, Maa Talika | aaa: te 2 on cir ‘ges in Over Supply Depot January included: The Arizona East. ern; Baltimore & Ohio; Chicago, In- Col. Oren B. Meyer, cavalry, at | dianapolis & Louisville; Chicago, Mil- Martha, Texas, has been transferred | Waukee & St, Paul: Chicago, Rock Is. | to Seattle, where he will assume land & Pacific; Lehigh Valley; Mis-| charge of the general intermediate so@ri Pacific; Pennsylvania, and Pere | according to a| Marquette, |dixpatch from Washington. This is) Gates have sh heir n- taken to mean that the zone system | in force here haa been abolished. No| ‘ference pr hostility to prohibi- tion by falling to enact laws enforc- | orders have been received by | Como, deputy zone supply officer, |!28 the 18th amendment. who has been in charge here, Autos Killed Four Here in January Four persons were killed and 150 injured in auto accidents during Jan- uary. There were 732 accidents re- ported to the police. The number of arrests during the} |month reached 1.660, several hun-| dred leas than during the closing month of 1920, [Vital Statisti tistics) MARRIAGE LICENSES | Ane. | Rob Nywon, | Peritiatt Nias | Murace on, William, Anna Clara, Mex J. J., Beattte laid ot Charles country since to earn ry Tw enty-elght not earn M Ww 1236 xen 4, King wt, 9007 Wo t by W the labor | day ore, oft ardner Jeraon 1 son, ¥, D William j William, J . 30th N, 410 Tt Jolph, boy. H., 1066 | Day. Director st. boy Quinn, 1130 Ralley st. 6058 42nd BW ALM, 7805 Wrem | Holbre these lines 71 reall 901 1 64th, girl orge, 6296 Palatine, . 1620 Dexter, boy . 4034 W. Orchard, boy F, 6219 ist N. #., girl 2 W. 819 Nob Mil ave. Lakevibw ave. n Forres Kens, ho he Mannart, Corn «irl |/DIVORCES GRANTED | Grover ©. trom Marcia, | field, Morace BK. trom Virginia ldllian from John ¥. DEATHS . city hospital B, 66, 612 iret i, 703 Bignth Judge Cheats Divorce Court of 4 Couples Around 4 table, |triendly dincu: at rail the to ¢ and jonal agree Miller, Jen Anna in private and on, four warring harmony at the initial | Justice of the Peace C domestic fternoon. Instead of the usual bantering of witnesses by lawyers in the court |room, there was only the informality | of conversation, With the experi- ence he has had as divorce proctor, Judge Dalton, with the assistance of representatives of the public welfare |department, paved the way for ad-| justment of differehces between the | HUgante Names in all cares were withheld, | but results, the judge said, will soon | speak for themesives, sHIP TRAIN or SALMON One million cans of chum and pink | salmon, the first solid trainioad shipped out of Seattle in over a year, jis on ites way Thuraday to shipping points in the South. “The huge con |signment left via Northern Pacific from pier 14 Wednesday, with appro- | priate ceremonies. M. Everitt and J, P. are the shippers. RRR nes Molasses Dairy Feed Shell Meal—Cal Ovater HOME OF THE BEST Todd, Inc GLASSES ON EARTH Examinations Free Our experience in vision testing enables us to correct your eyes with scientific accuracy, We specialize in the most modern forms of spéctacies and eyeg, glasses, Grinding in our own modern lenwgrinding plant—the popular Toric and Kryptok IN- VISIBLE BIFOCAL LENSES. Always Reliable 917 FIRST AVENUR Near Madison Est. 1906 BANK CLEARINGS Seattle $4,108,646.7: 365.06 Clearings Balances | | Clearings Balances 614,281.00 | Clearings 4 Balances . Clearings Balances 709,216.00 719,412.00 | mernt» (OFFICERS SAVE CAPTIVE GIRLS Two Rescued in Cabin Near Bremerton EMERTON, Wash. Feb, 3— 4d prisoners wince Saturday night ly forest cabin near Silver- miles from Bremerton, by rs of the local marine corps, two Heattle girls were found yenter- by Sheriff Fred Fein and powse and rescued, after having spent three days and four nights of terror, The girls were taken from the elty fail here night when the marines stormed the place to reseue a marine held there, A force of about 60 armed men were) in tacking party The «iris 1 the marines thes away from them taking them from the Jail. Pro ing Attorney Ray Greenwood te ferring with marine corps officers the navy yard barracks for the pose of attempting to identify @ of 20 marines who are said to be plicated, They will be charged seduction ¥ He in @ lor day Saturday who was their ¢ 95,000 Housed at Y.M.C.A. Last Year More than 600 guests housed at the Seattle Y. M. C. A dur. ing 1920, according to the annual port of Arn 8. Allen, general tary. The report shows that the sociation gained 1,250 new during the var HEARING ON STREET T WORK Hearing on the proposition t ® Ninth ave, 8, and streets and the construction of sanitary fill in Walker's addition to be held in the council by the council streets and committee Thursday afternoon, ruary 17. The cost of the pro improvements is estimated at $1,000, 000 A homing pigeon has been to fly 1,190 miles from Rome, to Durham, England. For real quality, food value and fla- vor, there is no bread better than American-Maid. For sale by all good grocers Made from finest Pork best spices only. No cereal, MADE at our Pike Street Store Tie complete investment service of Guaranty Company of New York is availablethrough this office. We shall be pleased to serve you. Seattle Office Telephone: Eliot 4257 Guaranty Company of New York 511 Hoge Building

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