The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 3, 1912, Page 3

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= y's ; gerd) re aa Your ield —_— it any Taher, stu More ! wolk ffy rooma in have your toe or any colors run PER the social af that you Will never lor be in perfect min ‘armw-pit, pers Peder ehich is packs i PERSPIN 8 er money ratt & simp with 0 x tter ne re is for sale at ye cpt. ot box. price, incon Ave. ¢ “ah Owl Dros sent t» Ads Bring Re- | STONES, FINE G SILVER oF hervr of the repu Whe cinimn + A te Sew tbe compet ic Bamesake, Hom, (hy grabb Oo move next who in am te va fe for OF DENT ral NUR ¢ ytd ON lows Mt 713 Kien Ly a Brown, D. D. 5. TO BE SHATT LES charge th, 19 + DENTIST 5 Leading Dentist é : First Avenue Block. South o: the Postal ph Building. until 8 and Sun- til 4 for people work. ‘| HOW TO WED have WIFE'S FAITH ~ THOUGHT DEAD (By United Prese Leased Wire) | BUTTE, Mont, July 3—Jobn Rrown, an engineer on a Northern Pecitic passenger train running be jtween Butte and Logan, left for dead by doctors, recovered in a re markable manner and returned to run on the road Brown was by lehtaing When aid came to him he appeared to be dead, and an attending physician so pronounced hint Rrown's wife, a devoted Catholic, ce upon the seene after Brown | had ) apparently for 20 minutes. She ran into the church | and procured some holy water, with |which she bathed bis face. Soon he showed signs of life, and half an lhour later was able to walk home. | The Hghtning had burned all the! hair off the back of his head, melt} ed a collar button at his throat welded the two hands of bis wateh together at exactly 6:50 o'clock.) melted the chain of his wateh, tore | the heels off his shoes and melted }the eyelets on the shoes, and left streaked Hines on his body from the crown of his head to his toes As he took the train out of Butte declared that he felt no i ef [fects from bis encounter with the lightning ‘GIRLS TOLD — his struck he | hy United Press Leased Wire) | WASHINGTON, D. C July 2--} j Alexander T. Stuart, former super |intendent of schools of Washing-| mn, in an address gave the gradu) jates of the Washington normal school some sound advice at the! commenc nt exercises as to what kind of & man to marry \ Young ladies, if you ever decide! to take unto yourself a husband he sald, “see unto it that he is our with an imagination and keen sense ofa amor s He «s old will not be crabbed when he and will be entertaining later years.” ie Pa BY H. M. RICKEY (Specia! to The Star.) BALTIMORE, Md., July 3.—A sit uation without precedent in the his |tery of American politics was cre | ated at the democratic national con vention by the uncompromising de! termination of William Jennings [Bryan to com the party to oe [honest with itself and honest with }the people of the country. it is | difficult, so close to the event itself, to analyze @ or of such epoch making character, For this ua [tion is epochal both in its relation |te the democratic party and the | country. | As briefly as possible I shall g've i my views of the events and the mo jtives. In the firet place it is tm portant to remember that the per} | sonality of the candidate for presi-) jdent was a mere incident. The! | question of nominee was the point about which the battle raged meet | flereely, but the irreconcilable con i flict is between the privilege hunt-/ ing favor-secking interests and the/ progressives for control of one of jthe great polith parties. Privilege. through the Ryan-Helmont Murphy triamvirate, battled to control the) ‘By Urited Prees ire) | party in the interest of dollars, and| EAFORD, Del, July 3.—Visiting! the progressives, under the leader about £060 women while touring) ship of Bryan and Wilson, battled) the United States in a vain search| to control it In the interests of men. | for a fifth wife, James H. Furbusa.| The tremendous growth of pro} a& wealthy widower of Wetplpquim,| gressive sentiment among the bon | Md., has returned home, and will/est men of al! parties, and the spend the remainder of bis life on| knowledge that unless something bis farm. . | was done to prevent the expression) Mr. Purbash, whose estimated of this sentiment through govern) wealth is around $50,000, has for! ment, the common people were in a) the last four or five years been|fair way to come into thelr own,| secking the fifth woman of his| struck terror to those men occupy-| heart. Through bis advertisement) ing the citadel of privilege } his desire became notorious, and he| Immediately after the presiden was deluged with letters from every|tial election Wall st through state. Crane, Penrose and Barnes, and Two years ago Mr. Furbush start-/Ryan, Belmont and Murphy, began ed out to visit his correspondents! the campaign to thrott prog and journeyed through the western|sivism by controlling the nom j and southern states | tions and writing the platforms of On my trip I met but two wor-| both in 1912, Wall st. soon discov whom I might marry,” Firbust)ered that Taft was putty, and that said, “I visited more than a thev-/ bis nomination would satisfac sand, too, but they were all after|tory from a reactionary standpoint {my money and not me.” }That Taft was nominated by the | Wall st. crowd on a Wall st. plat ‘STAB SAVES ig pe es cots dee tiae arene | A DIAMOND led more difficulties to the Wall st plunderbund. The to overcome to accomplish its par fed Press Leased Wire) pose with the deme was Wil YORK, July 3.—Jar Ham Jennings Br and his great wore a $2,500 diamond) progressive follo The rule re in the bosom of his even quiring the two-thirds vote to when he entered the subway. (nate a presidential candidate at stud flashed temptingly | democratic convention, and the fact st theft by a weird per iahment invention of tened to the jewel is a that Bryan, with the guard with a needle point When drawn, could control over a third of the delegates, and thus prevent any one tuoches the diamond the 1ard enters the flesh of the owne the nomination of an out-and-out Wall st. candidate on a frankly re actionary platform, was the prob lem which Wall faced. Bryan As he stood waiting for the trait| could not put himself in the post Them felt a sudden pain. He) tion of supporting a single candidate fingers closing upon the $2,596) for the nomination without subject mond. Mr, Thom grasped the hand Policeman Walters took charge of the stranger, who said he was John Lair. NOT OVER IT YET ‘How was that } “I was sleeping under 4 crazy quilt.” MAN VISITS 1,000 WOMEN 68 its st Mr | ing himself to the charge of want ing to dictate the nomination He was known to be more in fa vor of Wilson than any other candi date, and Wilson was the one can @idate which Wall st. feared When. the Clark candidacy was announced, Bryan put upon it the weal of his approval, just as he did jin the case of Wilson, The strength lof Clark in many of the most pro- | gressive states at the primaries was a surprise to, Bryan, and aroused his suspicion’ that Wall st. had lsomething to do with it. Yet he ‘continued to lend his influence to both the Clark and Wilson candi ldacies, hoping that his suspicions las to Clark were not well founded | When Bryan got to Baltimore and/ found that the Clark delegations |were honeycombed with men more or less under Wall st, Influence, and |that Clark, elther with or without PHILADELPHIA, Pa., July 3.—| his consent, was being used to help Frightened by the blowing out of a} the reac tonari to control the con fuse on a car, Miss Helen Pohnsod {vention, the Nebraskan was in ko 22, leaped in a panie from the car| most awkward position of his pollt- and broke ber left leg when sho|ieal fe, He had put the seal of | tripped on the curb approval on Clark, only to find that Harry Nogt, 17, of North Mana-}the Clark managers were willing to yunk, also suffered a broken left|trade with Wall st. and accomplish leg in a similar manner. Clark’ nomination with the help o! Wall st. influence. Bryan saw cles: BEES STING MAN TO DEATH. ly that this meant disaster to the! PARKSBURG, W. Va, July 3.—| progressive cause. He determined | Drury B. Badgely, a wealthy far-|to expose the deal and attempt to} | mer residing 4t Pleasant Hill, near] crush it, even at the risk of suffer here, was attacked today by «| ing personal defeat and humiliation. vere a at boon Which settled sf bis| Bryan fully’ realized the tremen: | hair and beard and stung bim to] dous difficulty to be overcome, and death, the man in politics never had his} RR te KR CORK CARGO YIELDS BODY NEW YORK, July 3.—The shrunken body of a man, half buried in a cargo of cork from Spain, was found by longshore men today in a remote part of the hold of ‘the steamer Fran cisco Clampa, which safled & from Seville, Spain. for this * port June & The man was a * stowaway avd had given his ® life as the ptice of passage to # America, He had starved to ® death sed | * ” * Ce MHA LEGS ARE BROKEN ON CARS. | adjournment D obstacle it had) e * ‘THE S'AK—WEDNESDAY, JULY 3, % ——_—_—_— eee _IN THE MUSEUM, JULY 4, 19—? moral fiber and courage put to aj hunting with the hounds, (hat hel ® severer test. Doring t week which elapeed after Bryan's arrival at Bal timore, Sunday, Jone 28, and th of the convention after the 26th ballot Saturday night Bryan played the biggest and most brilliant polities in the history of national conventions Five minute fter the con fention was called to order by National Chairman Mack, Bryan forced the Clark people to show their hands by offering himself ax a candidate for temporary chairman againat Parker, Wall at. candidate. The} Clark people gave Parker enough Votes to elect him, and by #o dolag proved to the country the truth of Bryan's conviction, that there was & Working understanding and ali ance between Wall st. and the Clerk managers, Whether Clark had in! tiated this alliance or not, the fact was clear that by silence he bad af least consented to it. In abort, that be was ranning with the hares, and pacar ore by September 16, 1911, 8,273,684,211 descendants. Thus it will readily be seen that the successful swatting of a healthy female fy will rid the world of just FOWL CAUSES TWO DEATHS BISMARCK, Mo., July 3 women of two neig boring families Iron Moun tain, Mo., starting over the owner ship of a chicken, is blamed for a fight in which James M. Hall and Gentry Gibbon, 35, were killed iff John Marshall of iron ‘Troub ween the near SWAT WHILE THE SWATTING IS GOOD ee 912, “Mamma, what were these things ever used for?” BRYAN’S HISTORIC FIGHT AGAINST THE PLUNDERBUND was willing to cept the nomina through the tion for president At that point! of Wall st. fr declared war on Clark, an] wery move which Bryan made after that time was to make Clark's can @idacy so obnoxious to the real pro gressives that !t would be imponsi-| ble to nominate him. Bryan's reso tation putting the convention on record as against the nomination of any candidate under Wall st. infiv-| @nee, followed by his statement to the “onvegtion that he would no} longer vote ax a delegate for Clark é@ven though hin state had inetract ed him for Clark, because New York's 90 delegates were voting for him, were both carefully worked out parts of his general plan to nak? }t impossible for any real pro gressive delegate to continue to yote for Clark And Bryan won the most brilliant political fight fm the history of na Henal conventions. = = It is not every living that can con struct an entire genenlogical tree with nine distinct branches | within the course | of six brief months But a fly has done it and a Washington scientist, Dr. A L. Murray, has carefully preserv ed the data on the subject. Dr. Mur-} rays investiga-| tion showed him that one female fly, born April 10,) 1911, laid enough/ exes to produce, | #0 many billions of other flies. Dr, | Murray's chart, showing the sys-| The tematic increase in the fly family | prices he had under observation makes) an interesting study eos 3 cquaty later arrested James Sink and his stepson, Harvey Shrum, 18 years old, who are accu of hay ing participated tn the fight. Hall was single but Gibbson fs survived by a wife and two childre. Norwegian Singers dance at Atlanta Park July 4th plenic and Madison car LOW EXCURSION FARES ON THE “MILWAUKEE” Fourth of July ‘ lebration ELLENSBURG A OtheF points within 200 mile one-third. ‘Tickets on sal limit J TACOMA’S MON And Autor Tickets on sale July 2, 3, RETURN $4.80 | foana trip rate of fare and nity 2, 3 and 4; return by ARA FESTO mite Races 5 and 6; return limit July 7. SEATTLE’S GOLDEN POTLATCH Historical Alaska Pageant Tickets on sale July 15 to 19; return limit July »? MOUNT RAINIER NATIONAL PARK Summer Playground of America lickets on sale daily; round trip fare from Seattle, $6.50, For further information, please call on or A. P, Ct address 1APMAN, Jr. J, L. CRISWELL, Gen. Agent, Passenger Dept, City Ticket Agt. Second and Cherry St. Seattle, Wash. Main 6960 etteeeee eee ee ee creature | LONG WOOING COSTS SUITOR JUST 31,000 (My United Preas 4 Wired LA CROSSE, Win., July 3.—Waat- | “keeping company auar, In which time she missed whatever chances she might have had to marry, was worth | just $1,000 in cold cash to Miss! Anna Smolek, according to a verdict r red in the eireult court here Ming Smojek's testimony was to the effect that Bauer eourted her} for a decade and a half and then went to Montana to provide a hom: for her, The first intimation she) had, nccording to her testimony,| that she was not to become mistress of the Montana ranch was when} she read in a newspaper of Bauer's} marriage to another woman. Hauer's unsuccessful defense was that the most honora thing he could do when he ceased to love her was to give her her berty and wed some one he did love She asked for $5,000. SWINGS SCYTHE AT 91 YEARS (By United Press Leased Wire) | LENPXA, Kan., July 3.--Henry] w an early seitier ¢ | Johnson count at | still swings the ne | Recently on ne has carried this old-time farm im-| plement on his back to his] great pasture and cut a wagonload| of hay just for the fun of it | Wedd owns a farm worth than $100,000. He raises and hogs and always the shipm: the | mar There & and feeders and out to bis farm. CREAR ie |® ON BUCKBOARD CAMPAIGN * MUSKOGEE, Okla, July 3 * —J. C. Denton, of Muskog * republican candidate for con gress in the Third Oklahoma district, bas ad novel method of campaigning. Denton has obtained an overland traveling outfit which consists of two teams and two buckboards He will carry with him a fife and drum corps and when he approaches a town be send the nolsemaker ahead long enough gather up the crowd and then he will appear at the proper moment to make a political speech the 1 the eral occe age of ions he mo ttle accompany K as City ut pens them ts to he buys ships ted a Stee eee ee eeeeeeeee a kha eee hee NOW POP KNOWS Father~Why ix the mouth called the pa Sonny-—Because that's where the | tongue sleeps at night, I guess THE MARKETS | roof of the} ? | aid. « pald by inafoners 1m farmers Jand the | under ie | othe a, are for strictly Irst grades Exes—Buying Pr Frat—Seliing Price apples 1.76 | Wenat Navel ora Dresse a Beats 1, full cut 1 ‘ tounds oe |Ox tongue, fresh LAVOE wees coon lieart | Mutton— Ox tongue Dried beef Poultry—oval x " Buying Price, ) bre 16@ 18 Hen 10@ Turkeye. twe « jhoosters, live pring ducklings Ducks, live, tt Sauab: 215 = piee—Selling Price. Potate Bermuda ¢ ifornia ear Head lettuce | Cucumbers Peas Celery, dos Fehubarh New potat Cantaloupe ¥ dow Fastern timothy Puget coun Alfalfa Wheat peton a’ ‘timothy: ney 48.00 00@40.00 35.00 40.00 STORE CLOSED ALL DAY THURSDAY, JULY 4TH Open Wednesday Evening Unti 10 0’Clock | McCormack Bros. Second St. at James. The Store That Saves You Money. L, O. HENDRICKS, Prop. Office Phone Bal, 475; Bal, 974 Salmon Bay Wood Co. Wood and Coal. Weight and Measure At Stimson's MIIL, Seattle, Wash. Res Full Everything for the camper, Stoves, Chairs, Hammocks and Baskets, at reason- able prices. BALLARD HARDWARE. Phone Ballard 19. TOYS! TOYS! TOYS! Come and See. PALACE OF SWEETS. Big Assortment, Best Prices. 533; Ballard Av. Imported Norwegian and Swedish goods, including Fish Balls, Anchovies and Sardines. Complete line of Helng’s Pickles and Bot- tled Goods. old Shield, Crescent and Folger’s Coffees. Prompt service. TWENTY-FIFTH AVE. GROCERY Ballard 231 25th Ave. and 67th St. N. W. FOURTH OF JULY Basket Picnic AT PLEASANT BEACH 2—BASEBALL GAMES—2 Lowman & Hanfords vs. Magnolias of Magnolia Bluff; Roya) Heights Good Music, Dancing, Races and all kinds of Outdoor Sports. Fill your baskets, bring your families and spend AN OLD-FASHIONED FOURTH. Navy Yard Route Boats leave Colman Dock at 8 and 10:30 a. m., 1:30, 2:30 and 5:30 p. m. Fare, Round Trip, 50 cts.; Children, 5 to 12, 25 cts. NO CHARGE FOR ADMISSION TO GROUNDS OR loth Signs 4O' PER Yo.2223~ jcc Wht OS. REY SIGNCO Ov SEGTTLE Was. Seattle Jew- elers vs GAMES, 127 AMDSTAO/S: Hotel Milwaukee A Now Motel, Centrally Located Over $20,000 Worth of High Class Furniture in Rooms RATES per week ib, per week Steam Heat | Mot and Cod | Water | Kleciric Lights Telephones IN RYERY ROOM 82.50, Month $10.00 $5.00, Month $20.00 Single Re Room and Inspect this hotel — Every. bing complete—A beautiful lobby and co: spondence roum CORNER SEVENTH AND KING STREETS 000 Dining Room in Connection, Phones: Ind, S071; Main 4594 OHIO CUT RATE DENTISTS Second Ave, and University St., Opposite Stone-Fisher Co. Our work is so good and we recommend it so highly that we gladly give every patient we do work for—a guarantee in writing for 12 years. $10 Sets of Teeth $5 Fillings 50c Up ; $8 Gold Crowns $4 $5 Bridgework $3 They enable you to get Don't overlogk our Cut-Rate prices. the highest class work at the lowest Cut-Rate prices, Come in soon (today if you wish)—for free examination and estimate SEP LE HIS Noice Undertaking Co. BROADWAY AND UNION Our easonable prices, efficient service, he ke surroundings Phone East 300, features

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