The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 18, 1909, Page 6

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Member of the United Press, Pub- Hahed daity by The Star Publioh= tow Co OUR “WELCOME” ARCH | Application has been made to the superior court of King] county for an injunction restraining the city from proceeding} further with the erection of the “Welcome Arch” that is being raised at the intersection of Second avenue and Marion street Tt would be unfortunate if the courts should now do any-| thing to tie up the work on this arch, unless it were possible to} couple therewith an order to have that portion of it already erected, torn down. The erection of the arch at this time seems to be one of the) ejeavo, former president of the Na-| tional Assoctation of Manufactur most absurd undertakings in the history of organized govern- ment in Seattle, It is proposed to spend $7,000 on this arch Just where this money can be put into such a structure is not Wiscernible to the ordinary citixen, and that there are hundreds of ways in which $7,000 could be spent to much better advan tage is quite apparent to all of us, If it was necessary to give some one a contract for the building of a welcome arch, why wasn't this step taken a suffi ere in thelr fights againat the cause of labor, when he sald that the days of labor union were draw ing to’ a close because of criminal tactios employed,” said Mrs, Frank ( THE SEATTLE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE WOMAN ANSWERS ATTACK ON THE LABOR UNIONS Mrs. Cotterill Scores Van Cleave for His Fight on Workmen, “Maybe Mr. James W, Van not heard of the criminal iployed by the employ ttertil this morning in reply to he attack made by Mr, Van Cleave on labor unlona | Mrs, Cotterill, who te one of the cient length of time before the opening of the exposition to in-) brightest and best read on labor ltoples of all the members of labor | organtsations in sure its completion upon the opening day? A cheaper affair could easily have been erected and torn | indignant over the allegation that labor unions employed nothing but} efore the s ould make € we down before the sun and rain shou ke an eyesore of it | eiitant- aaethOan tn thane treahlan Welcome arches are all very well for the smaller towns and] with employers, and she smiled . : broadiy at the statement that labor age: Sut Seattle has outgroy at stage areet villages. But Seattle ha utgrown that stage in its caree lwaa taking & downward course which makes such decoration necessary or advisable soon to end In oblivion But now that we have started with it, if the work is not to be continued, then it is better that we should use a little money eet and have that part already erected torn down, than that it should stand as it is today for any period of time will stand throughout the summer as a monument to the imbe- | cility of those members of the city council who voted for its the whe history of re If the courts do not interfere, and the arch is completed, it podts ements reads al continuous string of Viet the workman A String of Victories, ver in the history of union as the cause been ao prowper ous,” she sald) “We won the fight sgainet the hat manufacturers, and Mrs. Cotterill agreed = with Mr Van Cleave that proper organisa itlon of the working Classes waa o@ $$ —$______—— jsential; but she contended that the In the hopeful future the tariff} In none of the safe and sane will be settled, the Calhoun trial/ plans so far announced has there} ended, and the 8 B. company will) been any elimination of the Fourth | have finally decided on the perma. of July orator. nent route for the Broadway and} = Pike cars. | Several hundred school teachers are this evening singing “School There couldn't be any more se-| Daya” In a decidedly sarcastic key crecy about the meeting between - the kaiser and the czar if they were| If Mrs. Gould’s servants are at framing up an Aldrich tariff bill, all baman, they muat be having the io time of their Ives getting even. Of course there may be some re- semblance between George Wash. Sensational fans are beginning to ington and Heney, but it remained assert that the Turks haven't any for Heney to discorer it. cineh on the pennant. Set SS A SYLVAN SEMBRICH, AND THAT'S THE REASON, Listen,—the orchestra begins! “Don't you want your fice bread Ce eee iat test ‘and butter, Anne?" asked her father Dance through the prelude of de-| Anne shook her head. “It’s « shame light: to waste such nice bread and but-| Then sound the horns! Tho wind tor," continued ber father. “I'll eat na fille the world with melody | mree! * if . 7 | coms with big eyes and a look of ‘ ‘Transcendent in its beauvty,—then | expectancy on her face The violins awake again, Finally, when the last mouthful But soon they wed with fairy (utes, | disappeared, Anne asked, With blossom bells and leafy Intes; pa, did it tiokie?* And now 4 voiee celestial! Hust! Tiekle!” said,her father, “Why, SD A sylvan Sembrich sings.———tho no; what do you mean?” I thought Thrush. | it would thekle,” said Anne. “It had —Frank Dempster Sherman in The a long hair on It"-—The Delinestor Delineator for July. i for July, So ) THE DROWSY HOUR BY FRED SCHAEFER. \ "Long “bout an hour after supper (It happens the same time I notice When I'm too tired to play, | ‘The lamp gets awful more bright; © pepe an’ mamma sit talkin’, | a oe to sa p ‘em from hurtin’ 1 can't un‘eratan’ what they any.| | 2ma® ™Y eves from the light, 1 know T wanna be Hx'nin’, |Ev'rything seems to be murmur'n’ But nex’ thing 1 know, I ain't Like @ brook, of the rustlin’ of The words sound bubbly an’ far off,| lenven; Then die away ever yo faint ‘N' my head goos heavy, 20 he: Til it winks to where it's at Pictures of things what I'm readin’|Then, right when I'm good an Act sort o° queer while I look— | comfy Nobody reads pictures easy 1. My:arm token under my chin, That jiggie all over the book Papa ‘sturby me an’ hollers. “HEY! The kid's all all int” OUT WITH DAD (With apologies to Will F. Griffin.) “Td like to go back, go way, way back to the days whon I, a tad, Ran over the hills and ‘cross the flelds to get away from dad To the good old days, when the blood was wild and the eye and step were quick, And dad was close behind bis child with the old time hickory stick I'd like to drag a straw awhile across his thinning har, Or bend @ pin in the good old style for the seat of his eaay chair; And — him reash for the hickr'y atick that hung on the kitchen wall, While I made haste to answer quick the tar off woodland call I love to think of how I felt when dad and I would meet. The loving taps he gently dealt, where coat and trousers meet I'd like to do it all again; I'll tell you it was great, To have to sleep the wrong side up, and stand up while late Yes, I'd like to five it all again, but I know ft eannot be: The playful spells I had with dad will ne 6 baek to mo, Tonight I can only #it and dream of the daya when I, a tad, Ran ‘cross the fields and through the stream, to got away from dad "Fy. BE. HALL the west aasenae! organizations as composed today are perfeetly honorable, which i nied by Mr. Van Cleave "L sappome we have a few scoun:| dréla in our ranks,” but If my momory ia correct sev al large corporations have been i fined recently for violations of the law, and I don't think that employ ers a8 & class are one whit better morally than the toller in feet} T am convinced that many work-| men are far more boaest than) their employers.” Won by Loyalty, “Our vietory over the hat mam | many others could be ¢ ufmeturers was won through the/ts loyalty of the labor organisations) (zations whose only |for the cause, The greatest ald) better the conditions jto the hatter’s victory was the tho workman that Mr Van Cleave stream of gold that poured from/has worked so hard pe genre Every union man wis! And. iW 10 cents for the ald of}a the hatters, and they all responded | Ia it because he so dearly loves the |IN SINGING FOR HIM. royally. That le what will win! workman, aa he would have us be | strikes; and it fs just the point | Ieve, or le it because be And his that is proof positive that the associates love the dollar more? cause of labor is not retrograding “If {t were not for organization bet” 0." Anne watched the pro- | So? >sssseesemmenmemencm sees oes I met a little country lass, One of twins was she; And they were traveling first class On their mother's knee. She had a rustic, woodland air, Her sister had the same; The conductor man to take their fare At length woto them came, “Are they under fiveT” he ald, Meaning the children two; The parent nodded with her head, As parents often do, WHAT EVERY WOMAN KNOWSBy wn ware Just unt 4 WOMAN Sans Gor To TARE Evemy STVICH OF CLOTHES SHE TAKE INTO CONSIDERATION + manr WAN TA TARE A TOOTHPICK wrth ore ttle, was very | ren we years ago, and who were compelled to work from twelve to fifteen hours each day she admitted,” | Vietortos--beeause It hay justice on ite aide COLLAPY BLE WOE oe | MAS. FRANK W. COTTERILL. the wages pald workers . today, would be nearly fifty per cent lens,” contended Mra, Cotterill If we don't demand our rights frot fe they are not apt to forward with offers of ad vances in Wages, of shorter hours ote It is only by « ne firm on these points that loyes will gain the end.” Where Girls Win, Mra. Cotterill, who has heen very prominent in focal labor affairs lately, cited the case of the walt in Seattle restaurants who pald $5 per Week several Now the waitresses are paid §9 |per week,” she said, “and are uilding a home for the care of thetr invalid and homeless mem | i bers im ih “That ts what one union ta do- jing for girla in Seattle and that lunfon will not die as Mr, Van Cleave would have us Hteve, but n Winning right and t will grow and keep Bhe Asks Him Why" “This te Just one instance sMany and uplift why fe Mr. Van web ra worker against unionism? He may try to anewer, but can “And bow about it, little one? The man said to the twin; And in the silence when he'd done You could have heard a pin. “We are two,” she answered low, “And two ts under five; That gives us lote of time to grow After we arrive.” The conductor pondered the amount Ten minutes or eleven; “1 guess,” he said, “I cannot count; | 1 thought you two were seven.” meee begs eOeocererecos j the big, buff-brick apartment | janitor’s quarters in the base | disturb Herr Otto Winkler lvine work of creation. An airy, | jpanel, and then | powerful soprano pealed — & # FR. Leet | COeDeoeoeoeoeee | THE HEART CHORDS eoeee Pocesesesess ree PeSCOreroveooe BY STUART 6. STONE | It was all wrong to have & the Ticonderoga, With due regard to the traits of its tenants, the! lgreat pile should ha » enlled | |the Crescendo or the ture, OF something about Mogart and Meyor beer For the chord twanged in the artboramm deroga, Consequently, when Horr Wink. |’ lerboff, with @ delicious idea of} moonlight upon a abimmering lake | in his head, sat before bis grand | plano to preserve the golden {dea} As & masterplece for there were the toot and the Ot notes from the Moorish minaret ab the tenth floor to the lordly at however, were y did not} tf, In} he shut hie black, snappy | The perforn artists, and the med enticed from the grand piano a thrice beautiful set of opening bara “Himmel! but It tas good,” sighed MADAME INSISTED AT TIMES, the professor, in trae art ecstacy. Mit him i will der fortunes to make! Then he closed the great, burn ing cyos again, and, wagging the bushy head, recommended the dt seductive waltentral twothree from the came one off the revolving stool in hia eo: and bamped his head against the} nymphe in pink and gilt upon the | From the apartment opposite a prano of wonderful range and) con! pt for the black and white! notes which the professor adored, | even to the sixtyfourth degree, “Ah — ha — ha — ha — hee — ah!” caroled the superb volee in an ascending senle of atrocious tech nique, and Herr Winklerhoff forgot! the sheen of moonbeamea on the sapphire lake and banged his fist down upon three sharps with a dis cord that rattled the picture of) Chopin on the wall. } “Dunder and bilteen!” he raged “Buch a nolsiness—euch a stngings | oh, ach! My walta beautiful I forget!" “Ah ~~ hee — ah — ha — ha — \ah-—hah!" sounded the magnificent soprano, In a descending scale of error. Herr Winklerboff brought both delicate hands down upon the key.) j board, producing a boom and blare Iike @ bar from the “Battle of Ma tengo,” then he rushed into the) haliway. The door stood ajar, dis closing a lady so beauitful in her dreamy grace that the professor forgot his frenay and fell down and worshiped Herr Winklerhoff surrendered at once to Mme. Kremmier. And madame, meeting the professor a} good half way, insisted at times on singing for him, At first, Herr Winklerhoff would throw up his) slim white hands, and, pleading sudden fliness, rush in artistic shud |ders from the room: but, as his) }love grew beyond bounds, he ac} quired the grace to ait still while) all the note’ were butchered. He j Wie Klerhoff alone. Winklerboff cherished this one} | thought | “When Etta lofes me shust the! |same like I am lofing, then she vill) \#ing right der notes.” And the! professor worked night and day on |the beautiful heart song which ag celebrate the coming of | jove | At last he had the ballad—as) dreamy and enticing as ever drifted jout from the Blue Danube—and on that day Herr Winklorhoff spoke his heart to Mme. Etta, spoke with the fervor of the love ballad in his |gutteral tones and the soul of the artist shining from his black eyes. And Mmo. Etta responded = in tremulous tones, so that Herr Winklerhoff, having the qQuiek, artistic inatinet, knew at once that |the hour of love had come. Mitta,” he cried, “to der piano jeome quick—nd sing omit pas sion!” And, dragging Mme, Etta into the studio, he played-—-once that the divine chords might sink into the very soul of madame, and again} that she might sing, And madame lifted up that grand, encompassing soprano and rendered every note #o true and #0 compelling that on the fourth floor young Bergers| dropped his flute, and Liederkamp, the German barber, ceased “The! Spanish Cavalier’ on the big tuba to Hsten in enchantment “ach, lofe!” oried the professor “Lofe ts dor king of miractes! Then Mme. Ktta, the newborn opera star, sang the heart-ballad over the second time, in low-toned sublimity for the ear of Herr | olflee, STAR DUST Jonk Wine Saye OM fOr watlin’ th" bette ‘match, rity, |, tinidde | Toe Any Size to 16 Years in Boys? Sai , rolling bis bushy head | S*Pres The more talents the more they will be developed. —C your new chauffeur a « I should may he ia. He spot a bieyele polleeman Detroit Free Press. Frven the love that te bitnd some “What le literature? the typewriter, I9 6 advertisements eo that ¢ more effectively displayed When you have set yourself a task Bvontng Teiegr All te soon ready im an orderly house German That's the third Y must have what they tall the telephone ear. | ou have what meal mush voice “De you mean to - Nirted with your wife at the masked bali and didn't know Take things always by the smooth aod plano, | b* and the professor nearly wobbled | | aaed the entire ¢ ason.”"--New York Bvening stacy. He sighed and chuckled | etam. Oo wrong the hand of fate gonerally | ple. about the man | The woret fon ) the idea ts wel | 1 fom big sncugh parity, but handied with the utmost} ~ —e Meritorious Summer Clothes for Liberal Credit Without Extra Charge — If not yet acquainted with the-working of our Liberal Cool Privilege, you should certainly look into it, if you are man moderate income, and your supply of ready cash is none foo Feel heartily welcome to open an account with us Tor anyt you need in the way of new apparel—pay a little down and a It each week or month for the new Outfit—no extra charge of Come in tomorrow, and we'll be glad to have you compare you'll not be urged to buy. We'll ive pleased to answer any questions you may care to put concerning’ prices and qualities EASTERN OUTFITTING CO., INC | 1332-1334 Second Avenue 209 Union — “Seattle's Reliable Credit House” A Striking Opportunity jy Girl’s Coats at $5,75 This Season's Best Styles; Hither to $9.00, ee to Up Regular stock, man English Piceadilly omake cither style or ries being the famoy "Medutaled fg Serges, Tweeds, Worsteds in F » J weeds, steds an: " Checks and Mixtures, © pe, Sizes for 6 to 14 Years, On sale tomorrow, in values to $9.09 } For $5.75, An Excellent Value in Childros' Hats, $1.00 ' A charming ( tte ( orday in Whit, w, with red, blue or brown | drape of Roman st m4 mestalog Extra special at $1.00 stre Special, $3.45 Wool-finished serges in na’ q all-wool fabrics in greens, graye, boo and tans. Well made in every detail Some lined throughout, A rare opportunity indeed at $3.45, Our 50c Play Suits and Rompen At 50¢ we feature the “Tudor,” the most satisfactory of all “laundry saven? Strongly made in four sizes of fancy denim Any size, 1 to 8 years, 4 “Buster Brown” Overalls of stem blue gingham. Sizes, 3 to 14 years, Girls’ full skirt Rompers of fing F; Gingham. Long or, short sleeves, 74. | Children’s Durable Hosiery A heavy ribbed cotton that will wer splendidly. All sizes. Black op tam | Special, 15¢ a pair; 6 pairs 75¢. Our showing of Two- and Three Piece Summer Suits eclipses any We have previously made, the range of styles, fabrics and colorings being especially wide this season. Particular prominence is given Clothes of the “Bradbury make, which have been our line for several seasons past” perience has taught us that thesef nsous Clothes are all that ean bed sired in point of style, fit and ing—that they are truly “the: best Men's Clothes made yet.” “Brat bury System” prices range $18.00 to $40.00. Our Furnishings Section shows complete lines of new styles in Stim mer Shirts, Neckwear, Underweat Hosiery, Hats, Shoes, ete.—you call outfit from top to toe without leave ing the building. a) Li ae | seon

Other pages from this issue: