The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 22, 1912, Page 8

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)

Mormon leader says the sugar trust ls @ great biessing. What does a man with 20 wives know ab out blessings? MeRE’s A TIP, YOUNG MAN= YOUR @IRL HAS ANOTHER FELLOW ON THE STRING. OONY YELL WHO TOLD You. lf Your Life Should Be Lost Would your dren be provided for You R 1 wife and chil may open joint ac whieh be at counts hee can by of er used them once in case regency. cheBank for Savings PIKE STRECT ATHIRO AVE NUE = JOLLY SCRAMB All other pulsating political q tions will be sidetracked this week in the jolly scramble of the pre: \dential primaries to be held next |Saturday, between the hours of 3 jand 5 p.m. The public ery for a |voice in the selection of delegates has been heeded by the insurgent leaders, who toyed rather skillfully with the steam roller that the stand. patters wanted to play with. And |now the insurgents are confident WESCO WASHABLE WALL for your Kitchens and Bath Rooms. Nelle & Engelbrecht Co. Main 779. 1529 Fourth Ave. NOBODY—By Meek. IN PRESIDENTIAL PRIMARIES THE SEATTLE — ‘ve SUSPECTED THAT FOR SOME Time. NOW IM * GOING AND PUNCH NS MEAD tt TAB FLAT-W I am not nervous or Disturb me In fact, no tumults Tt Jolte my n It cbur my 1 cannot # As that car goes by # ves to ry LE COMING — ans and demoer which ts ar ranging the primary election for next Saturday bas about 115 more polling places to get before its work is concluded, The been generously supported by vol unter offers, and is hopeful of get ting all the necessary places free, The headquarters of the committee is 7 Ellers building. The phone is 1389 committee has! tele | led STATE DENTAL WAR) A GOOD THING FOR THE) | ] PEOPLE Dentistry at Your Own Price tal War tn this state start: | en the Dental Board | fed that all Heense should subs Society's which code jes that Sentists combine to establish a scale of prices, it fs unprofessional to eak the scale That it was unprofessional a) dishonorable to guarantee Dental work. Feat it was dishonorable to vertise prices, and that wny Den who fatled to pra Tules and regulations of the comb should have license revoked an to practice Dentiatry in the} e of Washington. ‘The « is what I refused to sign. the Dental War started will drive Brown co Bm They said: “We from the state T do not comp work, but Ww te with cheap ¢ » the bigh-pr tal Sthte Conibine Dentists for less t half work You save « dollar, be WD their price. I guarantee I make o dotinr ont will lowe do your Dental) | Dr. Edwin Brown, D. D. S.! Seattle’s Leading Dentist | 713 First Avenue Union Block. One Door South of t graph Build Open evenings until $ and Sundays until 4 for people who work Toric Lenses we will fit eut), giving #4.00 wold-filled 50 complete Marking the completion of the|the building were in line, After includes a enrefal, set- I} new St. James’ cathedral school,| blessings on the new school were| mination with mod Hl inoressive dedicatory services| *#id, services were held in the par Although ential ve The joint commitige of republic. vote. ‘Late Snapshot of Titanic’s Captain | Capt. Smith of the Titanic, from a recent snapshot when he was |in command of the sister ship, the Olympic. another medicine,” Gov Hay has 1 throw | ty hoping that the public will turn out at the primaries and vote. has ask Taft pret e entire ‘NEW ST. JAMES CATHEDRAL SCHOOL DEDICATED YESTERDAY AFTERNOON Here's the most amusing bit of political news that has yet bobbed up: Both Taft and Harmon men in King county say they will not par: ticipate in the primaries next Sat urday, because they're afraid they won't get a “square deal.” | 1 cal For the keen promoters will run a line Past every place that And whether I ride o! A fiat-wheeled car is ‘Ti on my soul ls @ de Exactly the shape of Ab, well, at last, whe And I go where the Stygian trolleys run, I hope | may have the joy to see DY FERTON BRALEY That I start at telephone bells and such, And the sound of hammers that Save the thumpety-bump of a fat-wheeled car! p and my spirita slump Yet, though | maveefrom the get free of w flatew pat on steel r nolay ! y patience fn acute stage, to boiling rage, ith ite “bump-bump-bump,” I take for mine, n the “L” or street, py daily treat, p red sear a flat-wheeled car, m this life is done, All the transit magnates that there may be, Packed like a mess of sardines ar And jolting through bel! on a flat-wheeled car, —<o- Kennel show ended after a sucees away many honors. $0 FUNNY “1 wonder,” said the head of the family, surveying a con- templated purchase of a family steed, “if he will kick.” “Oh, pa,” giggled his daugh- ter, “it's funny, but that’ actly what George asked about you."—Baltimore American, state, King « CAN YOU BEAT THAT? have presidential pr Now, no one will deny that Taft will in every way embra and Harmon interests have cause to ures of the Oregon law, and King | be afraid, in view of recent history county has one-fourth of the state's in {ilinois, Pennsylvania, Oregon, pop Ev will have | North Dakota, Wisconsin and Ne a chanc express himself at braska, Of course, Taft and H. polls, not merely for whom he de mon are afraid of the peopie’s * to represent him at the con- votes. That's why the insurgents in but also whom he prefers Seattle had to grab the steam roller away from the standpatters in or-) Ider to give the people a chance to j | } ochial hall and addresses giv senate W. E. Mason French star gaxer. been has pointed assistant astronomer of the ap famous Paris observatory-—the first woman fo be so honored CONFUSION OF EFFECTS “Things didn’t seem to work together in your series of dra matic representations.” “They didn’t,” admitted Stormington Barnes. “When we played tragedy the box of fice receipts were a farce, and when we played farce they were a tragedy.” —Washington Star, eee ee eee ee ra * *% Steamship Prince George * # arrived from the North yes |® terday, bringing 100 pasnen- & *® gers. D. H. Hays, brother * * President Hays of the Grand # * Trunk Pacific, who went down * # with the Titanic, was one of # w the passengers. He is hurry: & * to Montreal to meet the & *& members his brother's ® *® family * i* * [PORE ERE Geneva, April The members { a scholastic ommission, — sit « here, believe women are too old to teach after 20 years of age, and in the «ov ernment schools, ) beginning at once, teachers are to be dismissed on reaching this age. Madison, Wis., April 22-—That its feminine graduates seldom become old maids is a statement Isaved by the University of Wisconsin In the new alumni directory. Of the 1,037 women who e graduated at Wis. consin between 1867 and 1911, 663 or 64 per cent, have married Speaking of spring changes, Syivia Unnewehr lives on Betts st., Cincinnati. Bighteen yeats experience were held yesterday afternoon in| pishop O'Dea and the Rev. George}, TWenty-seventh anniversary of Fourtt in Seattle the cathedral, in ‘which several|Mahoney, pastor of the Sacred|the Seattle Turnverein was cele « the | hundred people participated, Fol-| Heart church brated with exhibitions of gymnas jlowing the mass in the church, a] ‘The structure, which is a rein-|tes and a dance at Turner hall _— procession was formed, led by) forced concrete building, was erect-|1819 Bighth av., last night Bishop O'De 1 his clergy, to the|ed at a cost of $60,000, a large part Soe W ROBSON Oph D site of the new structure. The! of which consisted of private dona . 5 + We Bschool children who are to occupy | tions. 470-473 ARCADE BUILDING Phone Bring Rab Learn to dance days, Guaranteed. miand, Seventh and VEGETAB UNOEKWEAKH AND HOSIERY Like Bik, Costs Ous-fourth Peovie's Bank Bldg. Beastie Prof. two Di in| toi | form “Ie A WISE TRICK that a garden you are making? } replied Mr «of the yard as my wife , | mer. Washington Evening Star. “Yes, “Nope; n Post suggested int Private. |they have holidays. for AN EXPENSIVE TENDENCY “They have a great many holidays in Huropean countries,” replied the looks moreé Crosslots; statesman practice, Washington Evening Star. DIDN'T MAKE HIM “He's a different man sinte he “Wife made a new man of him. we will allow me It's just that much less territory to run the lawn mower over she had made it's a subterfuge. I tear up as much to and then let it alone all sum. but if we manage to put all the will have as many election days as married,” hb? an old man of him."”—Hous. Riters Kramp editor would b Office Boy—Guesso. city editor say ¢ ink the Do you any of my humor? I heard the boss is all oat of bumor YOU'LL FIND IT HERE News of the Day Condensed for Busy People cond annual Snohomish county ful three days’ run, Saturday night Seattle entries at the show carried ! Fishing schooner Athena of the | | THIS DAY /N HISTORY April 22, 1847, Gen, Winfield |Seott'’s army took the castle of Perote, one of the strongest one of the sugar coated pellets you read about | |Gloucester fleet arrived bere lant | in the advertis-| night, 163 days from Boston, The | ing columns. Athena encountered severe gales | Thin narrative | Hig rH demon strate s/f | that in war it takes sand inj the men as well an sand in the /f mortar to make mere stones a |] Often does & man go from the | fortress. house of entatives to the | senate, but fow The fathead is the man who |i are those who| never laughed enough to shake | go from the, the fat down. | house to the — ill senate and (he Pee eee Ree Re back to the|® * il house One of @ Memorial services for Wil the latter may|# liam T. Stead, the noted Eng } be William KE. w& lish newspaper man who was # |i (Billy) Mason, @ drowned in th of the #9] who has been|# Titanic, were held last night * |} nominated by @ by the Samuel Watson Church # liiinois repub\® of Spiritualiem. A. J. Speck © licans for com @ or delivered the address of * Kress man-at|®& the evening large, He serv |® ed in the loWer Bee eee Ree ee ee house in 1887-91 and was in the Proud is the man whose rad- 1897-1903. come up. Lethbridge, Al berta, April 22 : Heeding the} | warning which | has been issued i | by the govern: if ment with regard | to rock slides |i there, the busi hess men of | Frank, Alberta | are removing | their offices and} stores from the | town Wi | i | | Chicago, April 22—David J. Win-| found dia-| ff der, a North Side cobb HH monda valued at $5, ler 000 in the of @ shoe he was about to repair i While looking for a ticket to/lf identify the shoe, the owner's maid | jrushed into the shop and, showing H| much excitenent, inquired for the shoes ] ) MOTHER'S PRIVILEGE “Don't talk back to your pal” “Aw, gee whiz, maj you want all the fun there is in the | ff house.”—Detroit Free Pr } i | l i} i | Percy—My guide says tnere's |i }salmon fn this stream, but he joke me, donchaknow | | comes in tins. Salmon Berjin, April 22. |down with tape m Kino thea —Police swooped asures on all the tres and moving picture || |houses and abruptly closed half a dozen of them because the means ote too narrow, the seats her, the aisles too fire escapes tnade- |i on wel close Jamal or quate. tog the i} — | Chicago, April 22.—Because he re- | fused to pay a second five-cent car |i f Jos, Bush is today carrying a | bullet in his anatomy. He was shot ina melee when the sought to eject him. conductor Springfield, 11., April 22.—Hen.! rletta Itked John Cochran so much that she let him wear her ring valued at $30 to keep a “date lice Schober When he failed she asked the po-{ to find out why | Chicago, April 22,— “Hungry” Jack Hogan, today admitted his de-| jfeat In the race for th democratic | nomination for congressman at. | larre. He was a joke candidate, but} carried Cook county by 6,000 | Dixon, 111, April 22.—Calling her mother over the telephone to tel! | her she was going to commit sul cide, Mrs. Frank Messer drank car bolic acid and was dend before her relatives could reach her. | fortresses of| Mexico, with as) much ora | though It were | ‘The latest fad ts to Wf he's pretty when he #4, 60 he mg vem mirror In @ man's hy a lady, FREDERICK & Btore Closes The New Waist Arrival Are Most Attractive in sea FURNITURE DRY GOODS which we ho i treet or and illustrate the zeal with © anticipated the h of the “diffe Thing wear, quirements of the waist style, Whether for dre ste, and new te. There are smart new models in soft clinging 1 marquisettes, imported voiles and Franct t i net ceits in allover laces ar in ecru and Also Cossack styles, sailor-collar waists, coat waists and dreds of high Dutch-neck styles ‘red in this: speci and feat showing Prices range from $3.50 to $15.00 The W with Macrame lace collar and cuffs. by t illustrated is of sheer voile, in white e Price $6.50. Second Mail and Telephone Orders Carefully Table Linens Specially Pri IVE exceptionally strong values in desirable Table Damasks are to be fe row in the Linen Section, First Floor, as follows: Irish Linen Double Damask, 72 inches wide, extra quality, full bleached, in Rose. Lily-of-the-Valley, Coin-spot and ferent stripe designs, mostly with fi | ders; special 9O@ yard. Pansy, ‘Spot, Scroll and Poppy designs, spe- cial $1.35 yard Irish Table Linen, 70 inches wid Irish Linen Satin Damask, 72 inches wide, | ed, in a good range of patterns, fine grade and free from starch; Fleur de | yard. Lis, Tulip, small Shamrock and Spot pat special $1.10 yard Extra-quality Silver-bleached _ Table Linen, soft-finished, free ing; excellent for every-day hou special $1.00 yard. : “Nainsilk”—A New Drapery Fak ‘ ] Nainsilk” we have ing qualities of silk, t will be found ¢ adapted for bedroom draperies, china cabinet and bookcase curtains, baby quilt forter co terns; Irish Table Linen, 70 inches wide, a good, serviceable, smooth-laundering cloth, in a soft, smooth, lustrous fabric that has the appearance with superior wearing qualities ngs Nainsilk is printed on both sides in daintily-colored floral effects on'whiite grounds ; 30¢ : Ms ine yard Interesting Values in White Materials For Summer Dresses, Waists and Underwear WHITE VOILE for Summer Dresses, 38 inches wide, a soft, evenly-woven quality movable silver-plated lining. Eight-inch size, special $2.50 each. that drapes well, special 25¢ yard. WHITE DRESS POPLIN, 27 inches { —~~~....~ Deseen wide, highly mercerized finish, 25¢ yard LARCHMONT BATISTE, inches wide, a fine, sheer Dress and Waist material with excellent laundering qualities, special } [~~ 1Sc yard ] 36-INCH LONG CLOTH fér Undergar- Size 4 feet by 7 fe ments, finished soft for the needle, a quality 7 feet 8 inches, $2.75 to $6.50; free from starch; bolt of 12 y special charge for cutting anJ hanging, 75 $1.75. —First Floor. —— - BASEMENT SALESROOM Very Attractive Prices on Untrimmed Hats, Flowers a Novelty Trimmings O' R present show- ing in the Base- \J 2 ment Salesroom covers & the newest effects in = smart shapes for walk- ing and dress Hats and extensive selections of imported Flowers in the popular Summer varieties. The very moderate prices that pre- vail throughout provide a strong incentive to econo- mical purchasers, HATS— Chip Shapes in large and medium effects, with brim rolled slightly upward at side black and white, $2.95 and $3.50. Black Neapolitan Shapes in large Basement Salesroom. | Azure Shapes in small effects, $2.25. Leghorn Shapes in large, medium small sizes, suitable for misses, | TRIMMINGS— geen Large American Beauty Roses with iol for dress wear, also smaller shapes suitable age, 25¢. | for the tailored hat, $1.45 to $2.95. | bg | Small Pink Rosebuds, 354 | | | Milan Shapes in black, white and burnt i color, large, medium and small effects, with | Lilacs in a good range of colors ime straight or rolled brim, $2.45, $2.95 and | black and white, 25¢ to $1.45. ‘ $3.50. Sweet Peas in red, yellow, pink and ¢ White Milan Mushroom Shapes, $1.95. | °7 jlossoms to the baa J Chip Shapes in blue, gray and burnt-color, et bmi 3) +95. also white with black flange, $2.95. pat Hemp Shapes in small and medium sizes, black, white, blue, tan and brown, $3.95. Hemp Shapes in white and tan, medium Feather Stick-ups in white, blue, fat sizes, with velvet facing’ $3.98 | and red, $1.95. et nt FREDERICK & NELSON Imitation Aigrettes, straight and cif styles, in black and white, 35¢ te ; Fancy Ostrich in black and white, Direct-Action Gas Ranges

Other pages from this issue: