The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 1, 1912, Page 8

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4 rHE SEATTLE Motherhood Not Wise for All, Says the Mother of the “Mother” of Mothers’ Congress There might never have been a ress of mothers but for Mre. t A, Tatem McClellan of Atlanta, Ga. This great-grand. @other, who was one of the inter ented delegates to the convention ejust held in Styy Louis, was the m@her ot Mra. Pheo@re Birney, the founder of i be’ anization, At the ting of the MeClellan Mt will be considered a sacred it» Atitutton,, It used to, be a stigma upen 4 woman to remain wamar ried, but that condition is new a| thing of the past. come when are chosen, and the women who are truly fitted for motherhood will then bear the children.” NO WONDER IT BROKE PORTLAND, Or. Apri 1.—Mre. Anna Holden, colored, 180 pounds, was arrested. The officer, in his haste, put her on the handle bars of his motoreyele to take her to the station. On the way the machine broke. She was jarred, and ts con sidering @ suit for damage “He Shall Rise Ag RIVERSIDE, Cal., April 1.—) ing an impassioned plea tn court, | Attorney A. C. Davidson backed | into a hot stove and landed on his! medulla oblongata, the stove on his stomach. The judge's water piteber saved his shirt. Holy week was observed by spe. cial services in nearly every chureh in the clty yesterday. Mrs, Theodore Birney, “mother” mother, Mrs. viet McCh ter of Mre. Birney; in the o The Capita! stock of this bank is owned by the stockholders of The Dexter Horton National Bank of Seattle UED A HOUSEHOLD EXPENSE BOOK IT’S YOURS FOR THE ASKING NY of our depositors have felt the need of a simple but complete book in which a record of household ex- penses could be accurately kept. In accordance thereto we have devised and pub- lished a book of this character which we believe will prove of great value to all who use it. Five minutes each day is all the time required to keep it up. At the end of each month you can ascertain exactly what each living expense costs. Its use will be the means of your determining upon a more economical method of home expenses. Fo all who call—whether a patron of the bank or not— we will be pleased to present one of these books without charge or obligation. ASK ANY OF OUR TELLERS FOR ONE WASHINGTON TRUST AND SAVINGS BANK Second at Cherry (Ground Floor) New York Building Largest Savieins jank or Trust Comeney | Washington’ Ballard Business Directory BE GUIDED BY THE ADVERTISEMENTS BELOW. WATCH THE PHONE NUMBERS. Four generations in the Mother)’ LOOK FOR) Car 3 Congress—On the right, above, on the teft, her ir, daugh- “Easy Money” M. Carbetti and four fellow Italiane arrived in Seattle this mo 9 from Cana on their way back to their homes in Europe. Between them they have more than $15,000 * money.” A ago they went Canada and worked hard in the tumber camps. They expert enced a hard winter. In Vie t last week they “took a flyer” on the National steeple chase run at Liverpool, invest. “ing 20 cents apiece in a jack pot. They drew out just $15,396. ORPSE SITS UP | SAN PRANCISCO, April 1.—Geo | Emerson was found “dead” on the latreet. When the coroner arrived )the corpse sat up and landed w jright: hook in the official's eve, |Then he “died” again. He wae taken to jail instead of the morgue. DON’T MISS THIS * LOS ANGELES, April t.—-Mre. Ruhama Vickers is dead here, aged 96. She was never til, never tasted medicine, always did her own laun- ary and bh vork and attended church three times a week. Sbe died of paralysis. Deadly Feather Duster BAN FRANCISCO, April t is a feather duster a deadly weapon’ John Burakoff says it ia after be ing knoe through a plate glass }window with one by Mike Keller. who must anewer to a felony charge. | SMITH ESTATE OFFICIALLY | CLOSED. | Judge Prater bas accepted the final report of Administrator J. W | Clise of the Washington estate of | L. C. Smith, discharged him on pe tition and exonerated bis bond, of fielaliy closing the matter. estate was equally vided inte three parts, Mrs. Flora Smith Burns L, Smith and « minor daugh ter, Florence, being the beneficia ries. Smith made no will, but the estate was divided according to the New York law. ae ARRESTED FOR PASSING WORTHLESS CHECK Prank H. Thompson. 21, wax ar FEATURES THESE PEOPLE ARE AD. ‘e#'ea yesterday afternoon by Pa VERTISING. THEY ARE RELIABLE AND WILL MEET YOUR EVERY WANT. “BALLARD BAKING CO. ___ WOOD AND COAL ?. 7. aeNsen WOOD AND COAL Cedar Wood a Bpeciaity Our Delivery is the Best in Ballard Residence, 1707 W. 6 | Phone Ballord g03. Raiisrd Wann HOTEL BALLARD Phone Ballard 614 DALLARD BAKING CO. ao grrmngy ody og tinged 24th Ave MW. vasa, a5,95¢ 7" “ICE CREAM i ROOd, Wroieimie and AEC OTS OF ONAN, Datlard Ave. avd Dock Pince |The only strictly modern house te town, Roots $1.75 and op, Tawe brard to denirabic parties if desiren, ‘Re nova Pvmny Bottard sta. 6420 teary Ave. ee CASCADE DRUG co. Fa an eh Bit Paty i Wig oe tant Ont * ee _MICHIGAN LAUNDRY Pbsne Betized Ooo MICHIGAN LAUNDRY tate Yeor Pate eviasainaba sd ® a, Aealcotnii ded Sanna Bt, ° BALLARD © Prices in ‘Reach. GROCER rer that If yon want Good Goods at Lowest Prices for Cash s C. Hotchkiss Is the Place the seasonable staplg and fancy groceries. GIVE HIM A TRIAL t 408 W. Bixty-third Phone Bal. 401. oO. 7. a PRON) 0.8. Ballard a6 TURNACE woRK OUR SPECIALTY .Ballard Sheet Metal Works Skylights, Blow Piping, Conductors Gutters, Hotel and Restaurant, Work, General Mill and Boat Work WALL FUARL, PANES AND Otte Cres Puget Manunng ood Fetiog | Paiove 1665 —-—— ——$$$_~rovenioramnner Ballard Sheet Meta Works trolman Moutgomery, charged with passing @ worthless check upon Al bert Fous, proprietor of the Cub }hown hotel her The cheek called for $ Thompson i* the gon of F Thompson, cashier of tw Home Savings bank, Los Angels, LOST 6 TEETH, THAT'S ALL PORTLAND, Or Apri 1dr outomobdile io Shieh Mire @ Lb. (Camp wae riding turned turtle. The only tajury she autfered wun the lows of five teeth, AMUSEMENTS “MOORE THEATRE AOCAOIRRLOM BeRudEe Prieew <Bie, tbe, Gila Mie, 1 a 2.56, Fhe COeer © Bally we tiege a New V cme n Tews CABIN” IRE ART irr PAPER |~ } KARNO'S ” IN A LONDON MUSIC HALL PANTAGES ville Means os Vandeville SOUL “~ NiauT KISS” ed Other Big Acts 0c and 200 tn your wife # dear if she lets Olson, a Beattie attorney + her husband join the Elke? dentally shot im the side revolver, while at North No details have yet with Bend, been obtained. A METHOD, “Have you thought of any way te keep your beye on the Centra! W. C. T. will hold ite jar monthly meetig tomorrow | 40 at the Plymouth ebureh, Chicago, April 1—‘Leve beans” and “mystic ofl” are the latent things in witeheraft, according to the police, who have arrested three spirit mediums for selling thene | Hismans “prepared by the | replied Mr, Corntos eel; crops an’ turn the plese over to rabbits an’ Hanke, 1802 #ourth , Was struck by a CapitoboHill car yesterday noon at 14th amt 1. Pine st, Her knee win dislocated , Archer 8. Hulbert of whieh he Lag the Indians. Mra. Eliza A. Hammond, widow of Wm. Hammond, a ploneer of Be Dig you ever 7 td beguile an attle; died yesterd@py at the home of! Indian, or a cross buil pup oF. Mra Dexter Hortou, 627 Mth av, N omtins ike that? Chicago, April 1.—After courting Lillian Farrand for nearly three! years Walter KB, Moody has mar ried her mother, Just to there were po hard feeling, girl “stood up” with them, Penta awannnnae e © Rew Knudsen, keeper of the * cee a Woodland park, was the * eet of allratfion yostepday 2% we driving an Alieken ® vine anpund the park, bitehed ® Wewoart the} Chicago aldermen aged seeeeaeee ing they'li Well, that ning. * PROSCAR AHA RHEE sul 4% T. Ronald Saturday de- wit & Gverce to John R. Hamilton, Whe def with bis wife six years| New York, Apri 1.—Alemmdder shew if ale FURNITURE |__ORV @oops “LINOLEUMS PRING stocks are readyg-Printed, Waid and Plain Linolewms im the produced for the purposes for which thegpare intended. The largeat: ] most attractive patterns@we have ever shown-the moderate prices are a festare, * . INLAID— Imported and American makes in new Yardwood and tile efgect®, $425 to $1.90 Yard; also three excellent grades in plain Linoleums at 80c, $1.00 and $1.15 yard. PRINTED ® The best American makes im a broad range of tasteful new patterns, including matting, alkanes ovmventional, tie apd par- quetry effects, 45c to 75¢ yard. This Liaoleum in especially recommended for puiie SAR. ings or agy pkice where extraordinary servien iy eqpeeved, qaarter inch thick—phanw brown; the grade cued ca the bavi ships of the United Stures mary; S170 yard. CORK CARPET— FREDERICK & NELSON, Inc. Store Closes Daily at 6:30, wn? that ed for a divorcee an the grovewie Ga@ he married her within wit monte af the granting of a di Sawyer and Bis wife, poterty etrick en and unable to provide Med for themaclves or gheit two BiGinm oF Neudless, springy, dimeable; a splendid grade for offices ant institutions. Shown in brown, green and terra-cottay, * The) vorée fom Mw former wife. Seattle, Bverdte and Mount Ver BOR Mountwlton yorte way and then dows arfottter teri, witch was opened by thin Keener Motint ainoors, ‘i fered to sa Gaveylingdltiy gid bate for $10@ anes That every strike Is wot wae tive verdict of the auttenee at thy fo claliot debate th te Labor tenple last night, by # vote of 64 to 40 David Burgess upheld the sffiraw tory of thei Uve against Wiltiom Ranke. - United States for . Q then congrens 4 Mary had # tittle lamb wembled for the With worldliness enducd. first time ante} Who, after foiiowing Marie, the constitution We still have th Ht ). WS a ors constitution and we still have com grear, but we look at them) somewhat differ | ently now, THEN the bulwarks of| | #79, wan One of the) days {nh the hi» Apri 1 Anril fool Final arrangements for the locat Hike’ whalt to the ten at Porthend completed jat & meeting ef the executive com mittee, The lodge will prebatity leave here in a bedy Juiy 16, cuentas Wary! eee eeeneanee Hi Mook—! understand he mar- ried & cool million dollars, Cook—Yes; but he's com- plaining now because he hasn't been able to thaw out any of it. onakg assault in the third degree in Justice againet A. FT. Coon Kent, by Assiatant Proweeut ing Attorney Stocle, The com plaint charges that Cook, ac companted by three Japanese entered the room of Chas, FE. Hurley, of Ken, and over bis protest kidnaped the wife of H. Kimura, whe wae left in hts care. marebat New York, April 1—in « test! » here today Wm. Vernon Cole, | Heivtian Science practitioner, | was fonod guilty of # criminal ac-| nin viginting the Kare code reb-| ve to the practice of medicine by } the supreme court imposed s nominal , id. eee eee anne ‘= | OUR ISE ARTIST Campaign for the raising of $14,.) eeteseeeeeeteeeee Seoveeeeeeeeeeeee 000 for a new church edifice for the University Presbyterian church will be lnuneted tonight, when 100) business men will be the guests of the chureb at Ye College Inn, Unt @ hundred passengers, the steamship Prince George arriv ed in port yesterday, after encoun-| ‘tering & severe storm while croaw ing Queen Charlotte sound | Bernarr Mactadden, physical cul- turtst, Inetured fo a good sized #u-! dience at the Arcade bal} last night. | Mactadden declared: Those who any that they have not time enough to. take exercise will have time enqueb i attend thelr own faner a" SALEM, Or., April 1.—When Joe Pellerin and his fianere announced thelr enmageunent wicl's Feothee co smother seid they wand not any mere, bit would live two lovers. JOWN WHALLEY DEAD Jobn A. Whalley, prominent real estate dealer, and @ former rmeur JW. Gangows the tantous Cam-/ber of thy state legislature, die dint carteoniut, was the guest of | yesterday at the home of his eis the execative mon Mee of the Can Mrs.. Geo. Beametom, in San Anwet adiag chr at a luncheon given at mo, a suburb of Sun Franc the Arctic eub Whalley tad heen 4 two months’ vaeation in and was seridloem with twat trouble which resoibe 2 Mik death, ten ago. Be was # member of several local het. The renmains will be brought te Seatthy for inter. ment, The Maou will have charge }of the funeral CUSTOMS CHANGE —3 BY DERTON BRALEY REO We were taught to be Puritans proper and prim, In the days that were prudish and staid; When “leg” was the worst of bad language And a spade wasn't ever a spade; When people put skirts on pianoforte legs, And talked of the “limbs” of a chafr, And “leg” was tabooed along with the nude Which was something that no one could bare work with the | Werking over thne. ERIGIBLE. “The wowan | marry,” he said; “oust be able to blush.” di “Oh,” she replied. “!t can do that. | blush every time | am aven anywhere with you.”— Esato for “limb, To limbo they'd re-leg-ate “legacy” At “legal they even demurred, For they couldn't conceive how a.mind that was pure Would even dare hint at the word; So we gazed, deeply blushing, at “leg-erdemaain,” Though “ledger” wes saved by the “d,” While the leg of a compass would Fa stump u— It wvas easy to shock os, y ou see! sure, For now wi say “leg! with the greatest of ease, . And when the wind ichances to blow, We see the skirts gripped in the clutch of the breeze And hope it will newer “log-go.” We choose the frontseats at eoch musteal play, And we gaze with) delectable awe, For custom now “legisiates” that we may say, It was “legs” and-not "limbs" that we saw. 80 here's to the leg, which we now understand (it has long understeod us full well), Though once underfootewe can lend it a hand Among proper phrases to dwell; Far back into limbo we cast the prim And in steps the leg «to the throne, Where it daintily glowwin the finest of hose— For the leg has comesinto its own, ° “Hmb,” HAPPY, HAPPY JOE ji ootor ; $1.50 and $1.60 yard, Second Plone, AieeR> ° Plain and Hammered Art ~a large and attractive display of useful pieces im the brush brass dnd hammered effects, including Jar. _ denieres, Baskets, Hanging Umbrella Stands, Wood Bokes, Vases pieces, all at very interesting prices Some specimen values :— Ferneries, and other Hammered or Plain Brass Fern Dishes, with zine lining and three claw Hammered Brass Jar nieres, 10-inch size, with @ ball feet, as ilustrated, sp $1.50. Hammered Brass Handi Baskets, 8 inches high, } 35e. Hammered Brass Vases, inches high, in trumpet shape: special $1.50. Umbrella Stands in bru brass, 22 inches high, with head handles, $2.50; “ “SUNFAST” DRAPERY FAl HE Drapery Section is showing a select Jin “Aurora” and “Diana” Sunfast Fabrics-ft materials whose colors will withstand strong: quent washings. They are shown in a color enables one to make sat.- factory selection for tive scheme; they may be made with or finished with one-inch hems or feather-edge frit The “Diana” with change Fifty inches illustrated, feet. 514-ineh 50 each, size, special 6% each inch size, special 65¢ Hanging Fern Dishes in 414- inch size, plain finish, special SOc each. The “Aurora” fabric is pat-} y terned with open-work designs) “and has a soft, lustrous finish. The Vogue of White in WOMEN’S FOOTWEAR is one of the most attract- omen’s Fi For Easter UR lines have been fi greatest care from thet supply and embrace the styléy colors that will provide thescah the fashionable Raster teiliett@ Suggestions'— Long Glace Kid Glowégpi6 im black, white and celers, $35 button length, in Wlreky white $4.25 pair; 24-bacton Tenge, in pair. Suede Gloves in 12-bitten le 25 pair; 16-buttem leggfh in and colvrs, $3.75 pair; $4.50 pair. Glace Kid Gloves dt w wide 7 ment, inchoding bhect argh white, $ Ly $2.00 anid $2.25 pate, Ra Suede-finished Frengh> pair. Cape Gloves in ree fome-ehasp styte, $1.00 8nd $1.50 pa { Orte-chisp: Mocha a $1.15, § $2.00 pair Sille Gloves: with 4 oxttetipped fi $ 200, 73c, $1.00 and $1.25 pair. Long Sik Gloves wite doul gers, re $1.00, $1.50, $2.4 $9.50 and _ pee EASTER SUGGESTIONS IN JEWELRY ao extensive range of refined designs, featuring aewest cifects for streegy and wear, from which one may make the happice selections for personal adornment of5 A hint ag the dieptave: da Valfierws and Neck- laces, 65¢ to $20.00. Ear-rings in novel designs, 65e¢ te $45.00. Bar Piys and 50c to $10.00. ive featares in Spring Fashions and is gaining impetus daily with the ap- proach of Easter Our showing of White Boots and Pumps in- cludes the following ex- cellent: numbers, in of materials and work- which fineness and com- 3 moderate manship, style comfort are bined at 20-but prices: White Buckskin Button Boot on a modish high-arch last, leather heel, $6.00. White “Nu-Buck” Button Boot on a new with Goodyear welt sole and 30D) cael $6.00 hant-sewed, with vorud-toe last, leather or covered leet, $4.00, $ “Nu-Burk” Polo Pump cor reitndtite hast, with white autab koeckle, dvtwelved tomges Goodyear welt sole and Ojy-padp cowenad. Cuban hnevt, $4.00, akin, with broad |-imch heel amd huwd-sewed sole, $5.00, —fiew Poor, Back Combs, Side Combs, Bgaid Pings and Barrettes, 50c to $15.00, Lockets and Crosses, $1.00 | to $8.00, Cuif'Links, Mesh Bags and Vi $2.50 to $40.00. © Hat Pins, 25¢ to oe Belt Pins and to $10.00. Fans, 50¢ upward FREDERICK & NELSON INCORPORATED, Brooches, 50c to $9.00. ~ Malt. Ord Orders Carefully PP ray

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