The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 18, 1910, Page 5

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Published Co, Press Publishing United The Star Member Daily by of ‘Dirty Work of the Labor Crusher’s Union Under exult big heads, “rat” organs all over the country are carrying the news that that union of professional labor crushers known | as the National Association of Manufacturers has passed resolutions | condemt » International Typographical union for responsibility for the dynamiting of the Los Ange Times. Bet he many just and humane businessmen who belong to this manufacturers union endor ondemnation of all other untontem, we want to present a point Suppose, although there isn't a part! te of evidence tg that effect that anton printers did destroy all those lives, all that property it? i reason for very b comprised of | and law & whole unton, most honorable cond of the cx Is it reason for condemntng-all | whions, sa the manufacturers’ union One of George Washington's « and most trusted fellow-workers was Benedict A rn manufacturers’ | union would probably have Wa i e country because Bonedi went wrong Pick up almost any newspaper and you will see where some min: } of the gospel has fallen, The. manufactur union would ostra 1 ministers and burn the gospe use & and is bad John Brown was a farmer. The gov There fore, says the manufacturers’ union, ane & In London and San Frans h a ors tn for mur @ering women. Therefore, according to manufacturers’ unlon, Jail all doctors The manufacturers’ union, which would make Los Angeles 4 sham Dles for all other union men if it « alone is perfect, according to the mar rs’ union. No act of its members reflects upon It. The Goctrine le or ruin,” which it condemns in {ts expression of sympathy for Harrison Gray Otis (1!) does not apply to the manu facturers’ union, but to all other unions, accor to facts especially Teported by the manufacture union. But, since the directors of the Nattonal Manufacturers’ union have Bot together r at New York cfty and solemnly resolved that untonism ts responsible for that devilish outrage at Los Angeles, we bave some demands to make Put the detectives on the trail of the manufacturers’ union, to @iscover whether that union didn't set off the dynamite! Offer some of that big reward for arrest of members of the manufacturers’ union, who, being union men, might have murdered that score of Times employ Turn the Los Angeles toward the suspicion that Otis and Weehandelaar, being very energetic unionists of the manufacturers’ union, may have themselves planted those bombs that didn’t explode bout their residences! Bah! There's no more sense or justice in crucifying millions of fnion workmen because supposed union men perpetrated that Los Angeles ‘amy than there would be in hagging the eleven disciples Who didn't go wrong with Judas THE GILL administration is in dire need of an alias ° ° ° THE LECTURE PLATFORM is yawning for Walter Wellman a, ° BIG CHIEF BENDER is another who sat down on the hope of the white race.” ee ° HILLMAN CITY as a name is a heavy handicap for any h community to grow up under st ea wae | BEING A HORRIBLE EXAMPLE is not the ort of advertis ing that Tacoma take’ pride in. 0. @ UNCLE KITCHEL PIXLEY says be! Bast in recognizin’ that Portuguese If Bill Taft hurries he'll republic.” eo. «6 je trip to Panama Nove in TAFT has arranged for a nice Most of the election retu ought to b 6s NEW YORK bank clerks are unic , Work bank presidents are already unionized and pl i 4: @ mber 10. by then. better wages. Now ased with thelr pay CALIFORNIA HOMEOPATHIC CONVENTION savagely mentions that there are 7,000 allopaths in government employ and 70,000 homeo paths who are not C47 % PIERP. MORGAN told the Episcopal deputies at Cincinnati that ve in miracles. J. P. nev eves in anything that he doesn't be hy buy perhaps. fell on week. It's SCENERY IN Munich t Writer girl sued him, al! in one all the time for Enrico. Caruso, and a pretty your money or your life” | type ° ° ° THE ONLY Portuguese high-up who didn’t light out for tall timber | > | MeMillan, THE SS Sednonemaees OCTOBER 18, 1910, Seattle a Very Studious Place, Says Library Man; Alaskans Spend All Winter Reading Big Books “Seattle people must be a very atudious They're great lovers of books of Herbert tendant people great the readers This is opinion uniformed at Seattle's public brary, MeMillan | ought to know, He sees them crowd into our nice stone building on Fourth ay. every day, Also he's lived in Scotland, tn South Afric Yellowstone Park and Los Angeles Herbert admitted that he came here thinking attle was a wild, i hot city, where Alaskans spent thousands of dollars in a day or wo, where gambling and drinking and all kindred evils Courtshed He wants to apologize to Seattle now, He was dead wrong, he ad mits, In good South Afrtcan-Scotch Los Angelos English language. wy, afternoon, juat the doors open, there's a ilar mob out tn front of the doors waiting to dive into the books, And y stick around til he doors close at 10. “I cawn't understand ft.” Room Was Crowded on Sunday In the Editor’s Mail! Short letters from Star readers will be printed in this column when they are of sufficient general interest. You may write about anything or anybody so long as personal malice is not your when Manuel did was the premier. He a bad foot and couldn’t|§ motive. Fun. Pretty guilty crowd, that! . 68 UNCLE SAM announces that his corn, rice and peanut crops are all ttle, Wn. Oct. 13, 1910. |for Lake Washington canal, Du hunkidori. Good enow ( for pa, rice for ma, and peanuts for! geattle Daily Star, City wamish project and harbor tm the Kiddies. We'll pull through yet M : provement. If we are to become a lessrs.: I wish to exp o. 8 great world port these projects are TOM WATSON camped trail of Hoke Smith's moral| *ncere thanks to you for your ablejan absolute necessity, Yours very fecord. Don't talk to us abou »ple not being aroused, when | editorial in favor of the bond issue) truly, H.C. BOHLKE Moral records of editors « n issue in Georgia! |=--- — o REV. PLASS, “wanted government on a chatge of get- pel. BOND | OF SYMPATHY Fich-quick fraud, used an a ommendation by Ballinger, Won der what fish that sort of bait would teh, anyhow? o ° ° FOUR CHICAGO LADIES have been arrested for stealing bytter 4 eggs from farmers. Farmers who don't know enough to put Watch dogs, or watch mice, over their butter and eggs ought to be Tobbed. WE pers RELEASES of suspected Times dynamiters are now two ahead of the arrests. But th tives expect to make a big haul, when they locate a San Franciscan who h some strange laundry marks on his pants. o 86 e MANUEL wafted farewell to Portugal with the words: “I leave with a clear conscience. Tis well! Had bh ft it behind they surely would have shot {t full of holes And Manuel's off for London, where bis conscience won't be noticed. Els Ber: COLORADO has lost in Chief Justice Steele. Once, fe a labor war, he dec Guggenheims couldn't suspend | the right of habeas corpus. H one of our distinguished jurists who was not mentioned for the ed States supren urtahip. | cEW YORK, Oct. 18 not years was an advantage to him in Often that a man works double | bis various lines of business, par switch on his name—change ticularly im his pugilistic ambi from the one he was given t ns | parents to another, the t fall a new point of view lapse of years goes back to the esented to Mr. Vaccar iginal. Paul Kelly has do I was arrested in New and in the double shift of mona York for alleged complicity in elec has flopped from an Italian n frauds in Hoboken, and, under | pretty good Irishman, so a ¢ name of Antonio Vaccarelliy} name goes, and then back to the held in $1,000 bail for ex Latin again m to Jersey »ymeone As amateur leader id the magistrate that the prison and saloon keeper, Pa er Paul Kelly, the noted gang beer he for |leader, and the bail was prompt! many \ k w tt increased to )00. Probably that we d the|set Kelly thinking. Anyway, he Littl Great Jones st.|has now been authorized to make and Bow ntil the police|a second legal change, back to his closed it up, @ man had been | original handle | Kelly was the son of keeper, but is In th on parents named Vaccare busir with his br in christened Antonio. He the name of James R. Vaccar old he f wer eli & ¢ In his latest cn the Italian influx had ac m hi erted that the liy gun, and his neighbor name was a serious ha to} full of Sullivans, phi Aj bim in dealings with the firm's O'Briens. Little Antonio an r The nted ed by fellow pupils as to his name,|to know if he is ashamed replied “Antonio Vaccarelli I an It is inter Biff! Bim! Smalj Celts handed not t the f ha on Hitth it Dp mauling nd | wa ut r 1 by Judge De hanty he wasn't Irish n he a ¥ bia ll aha transferred to another he SUICIDE Asked his name, wise lit AL nning } ace with the tonio ed, “Paul Ke k he grabbed a rem. Paul € ph m in one hand and commit envial notoriety t : name ‘ Vasco Da Gama, the firet man ged A omaines 1 | to reach India by the all-sea route o his na r around the Cape of Good Hope Vaccarelli to Paul Kelly, He de-| (1408), and Magellan, who first elared at the name und sailed around the world (1649) ere nat of Por | Were natives of Portugal. The Washerwoman—My poor husband is sick half the time. He works in a paint mill and gets poisoning something dreadful Mrs nal—Well, Marla, I can appreciate your situation My h 4 has to handle money all at the bank, and you know money is so full of dangerous germs Most Popular Late Books Credulous Hojax—You say Dixmyth has a In Boston the past week the fol-| Sublime hin humanity? lowing ton books were most in de-| Tomdix—He certainly has. Why, ae e oven belle his wife be Ailsa Page,” by Robert Cham-| lleves everyth lis hes bers. : aren It Is sald in British political and “Rest Harrow,” by Maurice How-| mijitary circles that conscription le a | will be an Issue in the next political Max,” by Katherine Coell Thurs | Campaign. Simon, the Jester,” by William| pp Pr nated Quarries,” by Mary us ay Lost Ambassador," ’ Phillips Oppenheim Betsey,” by Clara ¢ Disk | | air of D onor,” by Will be Morgan, ne ak Original and Genuine € Motor ald,” b: N. anc sane The Food-drink for All Ages. bicsua rt More healthful than Tea or Coffee, Pa—What {s it, son? Agrees with the weakest digestion. » Delicious, invigorating and nutritious, ca erved on Rich milk, malted gram, powder form, In a minute for A quick lunch prepared Toke no substitute, Ask Gaby is Amer k f break in th a pair of o | bu The Star investigator passed on feet into the general reading room. It . was crowded, though most people, Dreary, Teary October. you would think, hadn't ftniahe A CORNER OF SEATTLA’S LIBRARY. It in now the dreary October, | their suppers yet—or their dinne _— _ ——— The mournfulest month of the whatever vou want to call the even.| “Not at all. They read heavy|That old man over there, for in year ng meal. works on engineering, mining, geol-| stance. He comes in early in the | Accor to Edgar and Allan Poe There were old men with shaggy |O«Y, metallurgy nps, hydraulies,| morning and stays Ul the library] Chr is coming by and by,| whiskers, young men with strong, de and all Kinds of technical | closes, just going out for his] Also pumpkin and cranberry pie. | alert fa young girls and boy meals This is about long enough for apparently from the graded anc You seem to rattle those long| The man was old, evidently not & pome high schools, there were women | Words off pretty ily prosperous, past the time of life) We will now clothes past middie life—all kinds of peo I have need to learn to from| when ho might be starting his edu-| Hoping you are the same—EDDY ple hunting up books and magazines for | cation The Star representative TORR Where do they all come from? them,” she laughed went closer. He was reading the| *N¢ Our regular poet is nick the person-fror beStar asked Who are the reat of the Russian soctalistanarchist Kropot-|/ with the hog cholera. Back next Miss Agnes Harrison, who was| Who read beside the Alaskans kin's “Fight for Bread He was | week helping a youngster find something Bcho iidren, young men and | poring over it, line by line « about dirigible balloons women who have nothing else to do There are a lot of them like Be You Know Mins Harrison emiled durtr paing, ambitious young | that,” said Miss Harrison That Lina Cavalieri has returned The majority of them come ple who want to get ahead—you How do they live—do they have cote: from Alaska,” she said A lot of |can make # pretty wood guess by | money? You and I have to work! That Uncle Joe Cannon will run them, I am driven to think, spend | wate to nee what they road. | to be able to pay the lan 1 and| tor prosident in 19127 the majority of the winter here in Ww only had one eallor ta | the groceryman | That Nelse Aldrich is writing a the brary. They are prospectors I've been at the library. | 1 don't know, ['m ew she | sentimental novel entitled, “Nellie, and miners in for the bad weath-| He asked for a book on engineer |said. “I've often wondered. the Injun Rubber Queen”? r ing. In it always as crowded as thie?” That Carrie Nation had started “What do they read?” The § Old Man's Club. was the investigator's last question. |_ brewery? lady wondered. “Jack London and Then there are a few people An crowded or wor sald)” ‘That Eugene Debs and J. P. Mor- | Rex Beach and adventure stories? [who make this their ‘hang out.’| Mies Harrison gan have gone into partnership? ~ ceed - That W. R. Hoarst and W. J} bat h f 99| Gaynor kissed on the street the| other day? First Call for Breakfast in the Dining Car Paice “Before we were married you you! “Our woman's club denies that it discu: fall hate.” Aviator away all the game on his farm “Houses? Cuba is going to build a fine pal- ace for her president A walters ized in Chicago, Waiters complain that at some swell hotels half of all tp must be given to the head walter dill Cold storage plants in the United States have city in excess of 200,000,000 cuble | used to say I was the sunshine of r life.” And I have no reason to my mind. You are still it hot for a making in Trinidad the hours of STAR DUST Josh Wise Says Its membere—that is, exceptin’ | considerable | dw», yet it) "Your rve dash a eaks down in spota,” Bure! It's an automobile story has story A French farmer who is suing] Farman, claims that the zzing of the aero-motor frightened “What's your son doing now?” “He's a big contractor union has been organ total refrigeration ca-| labor | By° Mail, out of gity—1 r, 9 TE THE STAR EDITORIAL AND MAGAZINE PAGE | matters above th’ heade| ay PRED SCHAEFER month, 2 Wash., Pout attle, af “My vife hase been ferry sick, Onga . “Dot isn too bat, Adolf. n'd “F lowing hans “Vell, id wasn dine vay Kot 1 doctor ung said she wane wufferance from some f by led I fired him und looked up her symptc 0k und ‘towed a had rinderpest. As soon as 1 tolt her she bad a Germa began to feel better right avay % dienes, thy “MIKE”—THEY LOVE HIM SQ FOR THE LOVE OF MIKE, TELL MISS JONES I'm NOT AT Home! wh SESS SANVSSTUUVTESS VWEETezVes _. for clerks are from 7 a. m. to ‘ . i 4p m. | “Elocution,” says little Harold, It's rible that Americas SSB Re. | he way folks is put to death iD | spend so much time and money i | ix billion cigarets were smoked | *M¢ sates is | Europe,” said Wiliam RL Bean ‘= ; ca lobbies, | 200 letters and 260,000 telegrams a| months of motoring on the comb day | nent fornia and Texas lead the . eR: RES aay country in the production of quick His Friends to Blame, silver “And why are ¢, my poor] TODAY’S STYLES TODAY man?” asked t ar don THEN IT HAPPENED. ~ I've got me f it,” answered convict Why, how ts that? parson De judge said it was de ‘lectric chair fer mine, but me friends got bizzy an’ had de sentence chaog’d t’ imprisonment fer life,” explained the of Not a Matter of Money. Stern Parent-—I'm afraid young man is mercenary | The Daughter—Oh, no, he isn’t, papa | Stern Parent--But he knows I am) | worth two millions, docen't he? The Daughter-—Yea, of cour | but he says he would love me just as much if you were only worth a million and a half. | - oa | His Little Scheme. “To what partioular thing do you attribute your start on the road te} ancoess?” we asked | “Well,” replied the self-made mill- | fonatre, “when I was an office boy al | |1 always Inughed louder and longer| Farmer Whiffletree was on the! than any ono else at the boss’| Way to jokes.” | wet the } | w | The way led across the railroad) It Was News to Him, crossing | By the way,” queried the inquia | Farmer Whiffletree did not h She Was the Boss. A suffragette ter Married a fellow named Foucester Two years later she died, And he said as ll, anyway, I never boucester w TISING APPROPRIATION THE EVENING PAPERS. HER xperimenting has cost - sored the/| that) itive party, “when did you get ac-| the advising him to “Stop quatnted with your wife? | Look and Listen. | “Acquainted with my wite?’| He looked and listened, but he echoed the man who had only been| “!¢ stop | married ten years; “why, who ever Nelther did the train | said I was acquainted with her?” | (The End.) | —— | way down In Glouces-| Foley's Honey and Tar has been a | hou: jand j}and | Bar ' Dru THE EVENING PAPER LEADS ALL OVER AMERICA About Advertising JOHN WANAMAKER SPENDS ALMOST ALL OF HIS ADVER IN THE EVENING PAPERS, USING A FULL PAGE IN FOUR NEW YORK EVENING DAILIES EVERY DAY. IN BROOKLYN JOURNEAY & BURNHAM ARE EXCLUSIVELY IN —E 1s | FOR MORE THAN $100,000.00, THREE DECADES sehold favorite for coughs, colds ailments of the thros cheat lungs. Contains no opiates tell Drug Stores Quaker «Co WHAT A GREAT CHICAGO FIRM HAS TO SAY— Ve spend $325,000 a year, and 75 per cent of | it is in the evening papers, and 25 per cent in | Sunday papers Even with our great morning | papers we cannot -make them pay, though the COOPER & CO | | AND THE SAME CONDITIONS PREVAIL IN EVERY OTHER| | AMERICAN CITY—IN SEATTLE CONDITIONS ARE THE SAME THE FIRST CHOICE OF THE LIVE, SUCCESSFUL MEROHANI | 1S THE EVENING NEWSPAPER, THE STAR IS THE HOME PAPER OF SEATTLE. HORLICK'S, J-S> Others are imitations SERIOUS A RRA |S TR NE \ Our excellent line of Furs is the result of expert buying and select- ing. Only the choicest gets the con- sideration of our buyers, and they have a rare quality and finish. In- cluded are lynx, black wolf, mink, fox, ermine, Jap mink, sable, squir rel, etc. You can buy of us with the assurance of getting better values for your money. Buy on Credit At the same prices others will charge for cash. the easiest, m convenient, honest, liberal, conservative way of buying. You will enjoy buying thi s way, because it never requires much cash at one time Eastern Outfitting Co., Inc. 1332-34 Second Av., Near Union St. “Seattle's Reliable Credit House” This is , moe Victrola XI Mahogany, $125 This is the Victrola —the instrument that has Victrola XVI eated such a sensation in QM the musical world. Circassian walnatt, It has a tone-quality such as is po! ed by no other instrument. It brings to you the best musie of every kind her, sweeter and t felike than t was over heard before Come in any time and hear this greatest of all mw {eal ver I'wo aty Vv ola XII, $12 Victrola XVI, $200 and § 0 yles of the ry Pacific Coast Distributers Const Dealere wor VICTOR Talking novay and OOM Machines tn 8 CO Stores a cite Coast /Sherman (¢ 1406 & Ave. Nenr Union St, Seattle. dlay Nineteen

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