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PAGE 12 TO BE LEADER IN RECOVERY © IL ¥ F| Will Reflect Revival of Busi ness First, Altho in Bad Shape Now BY ALBERT APPL OU, CITY, Pa, Aug. 25.—The oll industry will be one of the first to reflect general business { far more rapidly than many other | commodities. 44 That is the opinion of A. W. Am ; brose, chief petroleum technologist of the government's bureau of mines, Right now the ofl business is in bad shape, with no immediate signs 4] ‘of improvement, except that inde ie pendent refiners. are paying pre miums for oil in some fields. BETTING ON OL TO COME BACK will recover, With Mid-Continent crude oil selling at $1 4 barrel, they are offering $1.50 a barrel for one year contracts and $2 a barrel fer! two years, drove it down to Present depression than the 1913 price. Other grades were similarly cut. Qutput mounted steadily to “1,944,120 barrels in the week ended June 11, 1921. Produc- tion then began falling off. Six weeks later It dropped to 1,97.360 barrels a week, July 23, output began climbing, reaching 1,315,840 barrels in the week ended August 6 Imports of crude off from Mexico have practically ceased. This is cer tain to help American oil operators. ‘Tank stocks may soon be drawn on Wholesale price of gasoline has over-production cent since the first of the year. Here's the reason refiners have not cut gasoline price in proportion to cut in price of crude ofl from which gasoline is made: Demand for Kuso line has been big—turger, so far this year, than any previous year, except as But other by-products from crude oil (kerosene, lubricating oll, ete.) have bad a dull market. Their policy has been to get enough for their gusoline to cover most of the cost of crude oil, Se line's up, while Mid-Conti- nent crude is $1 a barrel against a warhigh of $3.50. Country's using _ about 400,000,000 gallons of gasoline +a menth. Wholesale price is lowest in Kansas City, Mo.—15 cents a gal- lon. ‘The kerosene market is picking up and prices are rising. Kerosene con- sumption, domestic and for exports, in recent months hag been affout a fifth less than in early 1920. AUTOS INCREASE MAUL FROM WELLS In the middle of 1920, ofl was being taken out of American wells five times as much as in 1901 and at twice the 1909 rate. This jump is due to increasing use of gasoline for automobiles. Same story, all over the world. In the first six months of 1921, the world produced 775,000,000 barrels of crude oil. That's 109 per cent more than the yearly average for the four Years preceding the war. ‘This situation makes veteran oil men confident that their business will come back strongly. Since the armistice, stock issues by new oll and gas companies have passed the $7,000,000,000 mark. Vet eran oil men expect a heavy crop of failures. ern} Gee, but Boldt’s Bread ts good! Advertisement, AMUSEMENTS PANTAGES Matinees 2:30 Nights 7 and © New Pinyin; PANTAGES, OPERA COMPANY Joe Whitehend; Rows-Wyse Co.1 ig C0.5 Arn Sinterns King Sauls; Pantagescope General Admission Nights 40¢ atctores” + Jimmy Rosen & Co.; Gene and Katherine King; Gran- ville & Fields; “Hip” erpont, and Veature Vhotop' Marguerite Clayton. uc a STEAMSHIP COMPANY For San Francisce From bag pas thong Ainsworth Dock $. S. ROSE CITY September 5 And Livery Nine Dayn ‘Thereafter Iie Salen Class lacie only) 18.00 Pate beaded “Ai A tares : « obdigttande Ticket Office 1010 Second Ave. Elliott Chilberg &. S. Agency 102 Second Ave. Hiitott 052) OPPORTUNIT BTAKWAN ADS | Es Refiners are betting that oi! prices | $2.25. That's 20 cents a barrel less} The price drop came at a time of} fallen a national average of 30 per} recovery. | And it will recover from depression | t vancouver, B.C. at 11:00] changed, and ck up Ie | 24 air Weat Camak from| September corn opened at 446, up jamburg via Antwerp, Landon, Balboa, | Me, and closed up we De 4 aio. Ran Francisco and Portiand,|cora opened up fc at S446, and se cnddnignt; str Inaho Maru from Mojt, | closed up Se ean Ste KL Luckenbach from| September oats opehed at 34%o See York Sid aitoa, Ban Pedro and San |unchanged, and closed ? Fran et 3} p hu; ate Arabia Maru/comber oats opened at from Vancouver, B ©, via Tacon at} and closed up § vin Han Prancieco, at 918 Bm: tr] ews sala Sa eearpad istee"c C"| Chicago Board of Trade via ports, at 2:60 p.m Sirareday's Gnstations Saltect Furnished b; Ti, Manning & Co, August Str Jefferson for South Dutler Hotel Haltds Alsske, 60 9 em: or ML) whose Open Wikh Lew Gite T Tacoma, at 6:45 a. mi | pene HEE Hae HIT BN geM 0 for Hongkong via Yok | Dee tee iT A180 hame and Robs. at 18:16 6, mj eth Ad- |" ceo | Parragut for Han Diego via Ban | gone 4% ad ey Francisco, at noon. Aus Hd oe miral Schley for San TP noon: str. Wake eet ‘0 via Bellingham. He. 3h © for Prine c., 148 pom eels Barley for Puget Sound Navay Stat co. 10.85 10. Is Pennsylvania crude oil during the | war boom soared to $6.10 a barrel. | Ship News. Tides i in Seattle ‘iecend High Tide 9.06 p,m, 10.8 ff . Weather Bureau Report TATOORM ISLAND, Ave sa M | Rarometer rising, et ight fox dense in straits; wind northeast, 1h miles en hour, Passed in, « lack hull, at $:30 p.m str President at 9.40 am. @ four-mast f, towing, at 10 aa Merehant from | eraidyk from } San Casualty 20 this morning th au Lat, 28 teamer Vessels in in Other Ports Balled, ar str West! Balled, str Delco for Moblie—Aug. 24 North Pacific ports. Ralboa-—Aug. 24—Arrived. str Henry from Beattie. | Reported by Wireless 0. & Noval Ave Str Crom Keys, Yokohama for Seattle tiles from Beattie at & > mm. tr W, P. Burrows. Nushagak for Beattie, 45 miles west of Fiattery at & p.m: str Forest King, San Pedro for Seattle, 230 mites from Beattie at 4 p,m: atr Prest dent, San Francisco for Seattle, 330 mites | south of Meattle at 8 p.m ty of Spokane, Kobe for Reattle, from Seattle at * p. a tle for St. Michael, mak Pass at} p.m: ship abuer ¢ ssbers, Bristol Ray fer Sen Pass, § ir West attic, 168 tiles went of Cape Fiattery, # mm; ate Canton, Reattle for Yokohama, 1.562 miles west of Cape Fiat tery, § p m. Vessels in Port at Seattle Smith Cove Terminal--Pier A. str Wheat jand Montana: Pier B. str Kashima Maru, str Hawkeye State Pier &—Str Arabia Maru, str West Jappa Pier D—Str Admiral Farragut. Union Pacific Terminsl—Str Amerioan. U. P. Terminal—-#tr American’. 1¢RDRR Pacific Coast Engtovering Works—U. & C, G, Snohomish. 1g Board Moors Kastern Glen, Str Anna BE. Morse, Str Det- Ian. Commercial Boller Works—U. Retief. Albers’ Dock—Str West Camak. Spokane Street Terminal— Mo! by Maine Bast Waterway Dock & Warehouse—str Idaho Maru. Todd Dry Docks—Ship Chiliicothe, bit Forest Pride, bkt Forest Dream, str Weat Ivan, ste Redondo, str Roosevelt, str Wenatchee, Puget Bound Bridge & Dredging Co.— Str Patterson. Connecticut Street Terminal—Str Eastern Roosevelt. Str Santa Rite Heffernan Dock—Str Latouche, motor- ship Anvil, Winslow Marine Ratlway—str Morais Star, betn Alb Camano, barge quitiam City, barge Polmyre, Henry Villard Lake Union—tehr C. 8. Holmes. He Said, “Beat It”; She Seeks Divorce arse Charging that her husband has frequently told her to “beat it,”| Mrs. Florence Payton filed suit for | divorce from Thomas H. Payton Thursday She accuses her hus band also of using vile and im: |proper language, of striking her, | and of administering to her “cruel and abusive’? treatment } ‘The couple were married July 24, 1900. ll Charge He Stole Carpenter Tools Found in possession of two boxes of carpenter tools stolen Saturday | night from the Stewart Construction | Co. tool shed, at Third ave. and Btew- art st., Seth Beals, 25, laborer, is charge. them. T WAS TO BE; IT WAS, iNDEED! It wae to have been a grand party, but it's ruined now, L. Berman, 991 2ist ave., of near-beer sit }ting outst his back porch, Wednesday evening. A gan small boys sneaked up on it and took He is accused of stealing jit away, along with a yeast cake The beer was to have provided mer- | riment for several guests, It did. | “Phe Birth of a Nation” ts to be jrevived for special showings thru out the country | Doug Fairbanks is retaining his | mustache for “The Virginian,” his | next picture Or The huge dirigible, in which 44 men perished at London Tues- day, are at the CLEMMER Today and Friday This airship was "bt use in the Unied States, held In city, jail Thursday on an open | THN ‘Heavy Selling Mex. | Oils on N.Y. Market NEW YORK, Aug rading on the Stock which was off int of the years low, There tive, this atoek opening at TO Heavy Mxchange toda sellin y Wy at 90 at the was c % 5 in Mexican olls featured early n the firet sur, Meatcan Pero opening, dropped to 88%, within a yaiderable pressure on Daldwin i 1% points eff, and quickly falling Sugar was heavy Opening prices Inclided: Cnited States Steel, 72, off M4; United States Rubber, 72%, off %: Studebaker, 65%, up 4; Crucible, 49%. off %) North orn Pacific, &0\, off Me; American Sugar, b0%, off %; Reading, 64%, off delair, ip, unchanged; New Haven, I. unchanged; Southern’ Pa Off Wi Bethlehem "B," 46%, off 15%, ‘GRAIN PRICES advan into r ed at $1.18% @ cember wheat ¢ | Cattle—Receipts | Hoge—Ke: sheep N. Y. Sugar and Coffee) change opened strong tode: ing ¢ MAKE ADVANCE CHICA Grain prices Board of due to in wed wctivi« foxsionals Who came again Provisions were ir f pre the market lar ptember whe: t ¢ pened v t eae, chang dD un- 10.52 11.08 Portland Market Status ‘Today's Quotations Market, unchanged ne tatmonaee Market wn changed Ratter——i6e ih Cheeam=tte I. Kage see Hean—i6 6 26 do, + i . NEW YORK, 32.69%) fran mark: $0.0119%; krowen, ° . Hoge—Receipta, 14,0 | Queen Maud, het mostly tammbe, enil | ing weth 7 ult to » Ne 1 Girtics, Gersized pullete, I7¢ doz Court Prohibits Pickets at Mines), %— On petition of the Pacific Coal Co., a temporary order was isnued Thursday prohibit ing striking District No. 10, United | Third «4s Mine Workers from picketing at the | Fourth (ws property of the Pacific Coast Coal company at New Castle. The order is returnable Septem ber 8. ———— —% BANK CLEAR { | Seaitle | Clearings . 656.45 Balanees .. 908.63 | | Clearings 730.00 | | Balances 200. 00 | J | Clearings 626 00 | | Balances .. 045.00 | | | Clearings 361,091.00 | Balances 54,744 mt Anniversary King Haakon, VII, of Norwa, cently celebrated thei wedding anniversary by hav- ing this picture taken, at the royal palace. t and | N.Y: Stock Savhenge | | Coast | iret restraining | Second | | | (Wednesday Yure by bw ‘Mutter Motel Quotations) Manning & Co sliding High Low “ Baldwin | Hethiehem Canadian cM Cube Cane Bugar Products Crucible Motors. 0 Prod nion ON of T nited Retail Stores ited Bates Rubber 44 \4 Willys Overtand Westinghouse Railroad Securities (Wedinemtay's Qnotations) by L. BD, Manning & Co. Natler Motel Baliding Rtock. Atchison Gen. 49 aes Halt, & Obie Gold io Hethiehem Mec! Nef be “ my ary s th ' % U. & Steel & F bs u® ‘ ar ” & P Cony nia Penn ” Penn ‘ C&O. Cony. & bes * Munich 4a... Munich Framktort 4s Japances 4s 3 Japanene ist 4 tou Japanese Ind 4a ey Parte oe see United Kingdom $45, 19f1.. 99% 100 United Kingdom $44, 1922.. 1% 9% United Kingdom 5% mu ° (Wednesday's Furnished by L. B. Batier Motel Come First 3%e Wirwt 44a Second 44 Fifth 3%... Fifth «he. oatt 70 JAPS REPLACE WHITE FARMER Councilman Warns Club of Growing Menace That the Japanehe will control the majority of the farm lands from Ta ma to Bellingham within the next re of years if more stringent laws are not passed preventing thelr im migration to this country, was the statement made by Councilman Philip Tindall Thursday noon in a speech before the Concentric club at Blanc’s fe “It you want the white farmer re placed by his brown-skinned brother. take a negative stand on the Jap question,” Tindal] declared, pointing to the tremendous increase in Jap population in the Northwest in the past ten years, “Consider what the state of affairs will be when, instead of the 14,000 Japs now in King county, we have 50,000 or 100,000." Tindall stated that the white men were being kept out of jot& by cheap Japanese labor. “Look about you,” he said, “and see the Japanese working in the rea. taurants, hotels, railway stations, as chauffeurs and farmers, and remem ber that every Jap means an Amerk can out of a job.", Tourists Held Up by Bears in Park Tourists who have come thru Yel lowstone park in the course of their travels, complain of having been held up along the road—not by masked highwaymen of the Jesse James vari ety, but by the park bears, who amble out into the middle of the road and assume threatening attitudes the tourists come across with a feed, “They know very well. we can't shoot ‘em,” exclaimed one tourist who had suffered the loss of the bet ter part of his larder, “so they fut help themselves. And they won't lenwe until you feed ‘em, either, But just give ‘em a good-sjzed hand-out, und they wobble off, happy.” “But I'd rather lose the baked beans than the family walle laughed Mrs. Tourist CHARGED WITH AUTO THEFT Charged with stealing an automo. bile owned by James Crouch, A. G Smith and Mrank Wise, sailors, were arre the tod sterday and are now in} county Jail, SEATTLE the | until | DAY, AUG \Hill Fixes Blame for Sale of THUR COAL OUTLOOK STAR HOP HARVEST — MARKET HAS | at the ms of the cousltated the wale of a h hipping on Thureday Yakima Reports Good Yield,'No Changes in Fruit and ‘Output From Big Mines Ex-| te Hill, chairman ett Pickers Plenty Produce Prices } pected Here Soon bedi way. Hh, wie | a . Seattle until Saturday YAKIMA, Aug. 25.—The hop har-|’ ‘There were no changes on the local| Before the end of the week coal) gating business conditions veat will be on in another fortnight Wholesale fruit and produce market will be Mowing Into Seattle from) that under the La Follett Thursday. There was a liberal SUP ine principal mines of the state,|4™erican ships cannot be opens with ¢very prospect of an abundance | 11," Gr ‘aii weasonable commodities, | 0° ET te ren a smday jat « profit in competition of pickers. lmost of which were meeting # fair aap ties 4 : _ | foreign vesne Lant yeur the wtate crop amounted demand. Green, fancy pears were| The chief efforts of the opera: | si to 18,000 bales and there iw about the moving well, while the demand for |tors #o far have been in the direc When Henry Ford feels fe ripe stock had also shown an in-|tion of clearing and repairing the} need of a vacation, he mame acreage this year and bearing TP? MOUS Th Mere moving briskly, |mines, which have been unworked| trampling It is restful, A. me will probably be heavier as Ore the calls being the greatest for fancy since last March, when the miners sure, after riding in a fltvver, vines are matured, High winds did tock walked out ene, dam but the crop will ati) shipment of ground cherries! Officiats of the United Mine The production of shoes in pee ory ay. ee wan quickly cleaned up at $2 @ Workers said that their ranks have | bas decreased 20 per cent in the FE gies * Pads [remained Intact and that only in-|*'x months: Many growers are opernting on cmacshenss PB ay ply rec slie Bw longtime contracts, the general pe The tomato market was +4 sso as th: ie wt etled = wd bo riod being three years. A number Good quality toms were strong at $ 1 Vimeie’ adloas’ tapene. cola iad wer written two years on the!a crate. n . — : 45 and cents for the! ‘Thert is a keen demand for coun, | veloped at the ming 1019, ) and 1921 eropa ers try dressed veal and with the sup TRE SR + thie year attempted to contract at ply short, the prices are keeping fares, Peavy, 176-900 tha 15 centa, but found no sellers, Other high, It is believed that the veal t growers will recelve 23 and 26 cents supply will increase Aderably by | Pot ; 4 pound for this year's crop. the first of next month | Prices Paid Wholesale Dealers Krom 1,500 to 2.000 pickers will t | The butter m is continuing o< ee — P °. needed for the three weeks’ harvest.'firm, while the egg market in weak tia po a oe Wages will be $1 a box, it in ex VGRTADLTS Geese Dressed, pet pecte as against the peak pr Prices Paid Whoiessie Desters _— pine gp on Bag P z last year of $1.50. He are matur. Beane Local per & “e rs Aly wg Hh. Py 73 ing rapidly Or at: ébn' bunches 20@ 4 c's is oy Z — - Cabbage Local shen ancy, .. 198 Fortunes in iRieey We buy Wall by the carload and can Cole Are Going to Waste °".,\°:',, Sing county people are losing ys ag ate sell at a saving of ie to| thBusands of dotiars annually. Losing it when there isn't need to do so at all Vrofessor B. 14 by our cash-an ry plan. Kitchen Paper, | Gartio-Per . ANY Lettuce--Local, outdoor | Onions—Cal. per td. Walla Walla, tb Medium heavy Rough heavy A. Blocum, bee SPe-| ieoal green, dos bunches clalist of Washington State college, | Local, do bupehes .. at Pullman, says | ephone, t. on Bedroom Paper. “There are hundreds of acres of fet steecreee so AOE flreweed, wild flowers and fruit blow Hall Paper ...11 some, furnishing literally tons of nec tar—oectar that goes to wast cause there are no bees to gather it,” said Dr, Slocum “Why, there ia no reason under the sun why a beekeeper shouldn't ob tain 100 to 150 pounds of honey per|™ colony, The average price of honey 4 this year will be around 20 cents a ‘Turuipe—Lovai, Aon bunches. FRUITS Parlor Paper, PAINTS Paints have takai Hubbard omalore— B. Ween <M, ore Pat, 4-4, city delivery . HAY, GRAIN AND FEED pound for extracted honey Cy Wholesale F: Fer Tes i “You can easily figure for Lit Cora—Whole, yellow, Ti. pt '@ other drop in self the immense amount of mone eke We are the first to being lost. Why not utilize wha Gre : we have and foster this important | Apriests er prices and the raise them. SPECIALS Diablo Mixed Pai gallon ....... Shingle Stain, | Menapas Cantatoupes Standard Flats Foni« urret Casaba Melons industry? su KS FOR Pa Richard Butler filed ult Thursday to recover $2,040 damages alleged to have resulted from gnjuries he re ceived when falling thru an elevator shaft in the L. C. Smith Building, | PlassPreem, per bo rape Oct. 19, 1920, Thompeon seedless. Floor Paint, qt.. Enamel, gallon .,. Barly, 1-1) banicet: » ts ssazssesz sedhaiitai itt ate pk: Mall 29, corn Oakes, 2 phen te Musil 49, ansorted cookies, the Ib.; mik choco Watnats— French, per th. atew Peannte— Virginia Keystone, t. Lob Beattie supply . BR condensary, owt... <7 peaches, mon, The each Mati Sl, fresh charned bul best fresh eae, dhe do ere. fine peanut, buiter cleanser, Stal 2 Ste, oe Wash. triplets ‘Titamook trip! Stall 1 fancy Serta Stall 14, red snapper, Ibe Te. whole eaimon, 256 each. Stall 116, shoulder lamb, 106 M.; boiling beet, Sc! 1, Stall 108, amelts 2 The. rea snapper, ibe 1.; Norway 206 M. SANITAR Stall 109. pore American tho, § the. Bée,, 1b den's oF Carfation mith tal White » soap. € bare potato sausage corned beet, cheese, ike: 2 | rotted mack Cowe—Country, jp tai o sugar, 4|_ Poor, medium Tor. | Bulle— Pat, Block, taney SATURDAY NIGHT America’s Greatest Orator ‘ lee can: Royal Whit Halls 40-2, Rewedish | veal ir The th.; boneless brisket | MODERN MAGIC Tam Schild of ath a Born in the teetile. t grea seeese Inventor, seeeeee Evolved for the single teeeeee Purpose of lessening eeeeeee The arduous duties of eeeeeee ‘Those whom I can eeeeene Humbly cheer and assist. By the magic of ee eesee Mind of 60, head cheese, Mh. ; feliied ven rolied oats, & Th =—SAVE MONEY= Travel by sfeamer TACOMA 1H World’s Most Versatile Poet-Author _ Aug. 27—Sept. 9, 8:15 FIFTH AND UNIVERSITY 27—Applied Paychology. What Is It? 8—Undiscovered Talent. cat bce of the Subconscious __ ni 30—What Is Love? How to Keep It. 31—Inspirational and Healing Silence. ~. | How to Be Beautiful. 1—Poverty a Disease. How to Double. ~ Your Efficiency. 2—Life’s Greatest Bet. DAILY, 9, 11 a. m., 1, 9, Special Sun. Trip, 7 & m., 50c for One Ticket 80c for Two Tickets Button, Electricity ee eeeee Surges through my body. eeeee Stored Energy is freed eee eeee And I quickly am recreated eee eens From a mass of wood sees VICTO PORT ANGELES lA. STRAIT POINT DAILY AT (Doe: trip avin SAN MIDNIGUT ‘© to Victoria on eattle Sat. Night) JUAN ISLAND POINTS And metal, into an ee eeeee Apatrampnt of Servic eee. Tam ans icine Se eeeee BELLINGHAM - ANACORTE PORT TOWNSEND RA AND MILL IL CONNECT PORTS HOOD CANAL POINTS P. S.—Call for mo at eeeeeee A NEAH BAY & Way PoRTS SEATTLE ELK € PUGETS UND NAVIGAT ION