The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 8, 1912, Page 6

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THE STAR—MONDAM, JULY 8, 1912. sae to Win the 5-Mile Race at. ‘Olympiad--Use a a Luncheons | in the City are the kind served here Phat's a pretty strong state Motorcycle! orm by. Scha ACH, I B€@ WHy ADF VON — He RAN A [en f° VIN DISS RACE, I WOULT DROP ovDT. >) a DERE HE ISS ANEAD OF pe HALF HOUR MN IN FIFTEEN ‘iC 79) f | | RUNNING LiKe A | | Minures! ment of course, but we don’t see how better things to eat can be served by any one, We buy the best ma terials on the market and C< & $ our chefs who prepare them : : are as skillful as can be ob 4%, ¢ nec yrices are mos a tained, Our prices are most Wee . moderate, Lunch with us i }“HOUSEHUSBAND” HAS ARRIVED; WHAT IT MEANS this week CHAUFFEUR WH BY GAR, 4 KILLED An inbound Alki Polat strest ex | driven by J. R. Pleres, 0h S. W., struck Chris Costa wr | chauffeur employed by th nd Taxicab company on Firat ay, | yesterday morni a |taken to Seattle and died in three hours, Smith was out in the, BATTLESHIP (5 RAMMED BY OTEAMER, (My United Pree or vEe NEWPORT July & sponsibility for o battleship New Hampehire by the big passenger steamer Common: | wealth of the Fall River line will) not be determined until the board} of steamship inspectors completes ite investigation. The owners of| —THE— Fniddale Cafeteria THIRD AND JAMES. Sines Ithe Commonwealth say the battle . chin ship was anchored directly in the| t avenue the cute an lehannel. The warship’s crew and| elephoned tothe” hat aaa |commander tnaint that the fighting | and 4 other car th ‘ad |machine was anchored exactly at} thé passenger tan the ordered by the admiral) commanding There is no question that t al) cause was navigation throug a foe. Although running at reduced ‘ the steel prow of the City f nwealth opened the stern of the New Hampshire above the protec tive k and smashed both het | sun and berth decks | | Fortunately there were no pert | sons at the point of impact on lelther craft, and there were no cam Ualtios. Temporary repairs were made od ithe New Hampshire at her anchor: age today : Smith then started the car that struck vs tha jhe noticed the empty j street car came down the trades slowed up, but seeing Bo o around, he put on fall oe Fs did not see the chauffeur ust iy I" right on him, Smith had been living \tor the last five years, at 1100 Maly eet. He was uni ¢ bs 6 live in England, $4 mber of Seattle Court, pendent Order of ries tees CORNING, N. Y., July &—The story of the wreck on the Lackawanna ralteoad, near here, like poem City has sone the A ‘LEADER OF which have recently preceded it, was one of the steel cars as havens of refuge, and wooden cars as death First Baptist church of | (apes None of the 41 dead wae in the steel cara.—News Item. jand will secept the WOMEN, DEAD = ve es land preached at ning at {My United Press Leased Wire) evening services, ee Fs BAN FRANCISCO, Joly &.--"Py NEW MINISTER } | CUSHMAN HERE i Rev Jones is one of - , lery woman in the National Feder- Pilgrim Congregational church | Judge Edward E. Cushman, who| Preachers of the South iis eam jation of Woman's Clubs will feet yesterday decided to call Rev. Hugh | arrived in Seattle yesterday morn [ot Okiehens an yar done 3 % ~ % ‘= Me retella ere soled or Brown of Hartford, Conn. This ing from Alaska to take up federal | there. ee | | Mire P. V. Pennybacker, newly cali in made necessary by the ree | court work, in charge of the West- | — Sines | : 3 A Golden Opportunity for You to Make Money An Investment where there Is no chance for a loss. Good rich potato land close to Seattle markets, on easy payments, The opening of the Panama cana! should double the value of every acre of good land on Puget sound. | Ind A. B, NEWELL, 120 Spring St. Even when a girl tam lelected president of that organiza ignation of Dr. Smith, who leavet | ern Washington circult, will be the \brained ehe can go wild MR. AND MRS. ISAAC DANIELSON — ear crite marek Pie September 1. Mr. Brown t# con: guest of honor Tuesday night at|iow plume, And she APRA AE AHHH HH Hine was doing howework of bie Baxter of Denver, for 20 years sidered one of the ablest of the!ihe Arctic club, The dinner will |go to a picture show wis tooo prominent in the pmeR's move. eer —— in the Congre- ~ Kew a a poe bureau of | than to — opera. wi i Sai TO HOUSEKEEPERS * “Yo , . ment. chure ithe New amber of Commerce. eron.—Galveston a * By a Househusband ' Yon ae” he sa ee ang After four hours’ unconscious] gucust Koust, 19, and. Julius | commen at Pil ree ” Don't hire girls if you can #|When I used to work as janitor in /ReM* Mrs. Decker died in the Adler eb ma ta _ & help it. They waste too much, #/|an office building we had to hire |“#Mitortum, where she was oper Rian wenle eempeag ee: Lae $ % Economize in the kitehen by @/a girl to do the housework. That a ee leny eee Sea Washington, pear Fortuna Park | : : * learning bow to cook inexpen- & | Moar ya eens ent ri Nr yeaterday afternoon, were over: | ’ iz # sive foods and leftovers in ap # | wages, and I don't know how much | Wornan's prs i ne Denver) umned, Krabn kept afloat till as | a4 % ® petizing ways. * more for what she wasted in care- sistance arrived, but Knust sank E *& “Do it now” is as good a & less cooking and buying. “ ge ea i grey —_——— - — — pee & motto in the household as in #| “in those days we were always COUPLE IN Gad never rose. His father, moth: | . 4 ® business, # ranning behind. er, and many friends, who we ® It's easier to do one big & “Finally we fired the girl, and pienicking on the shores of Mercer! es we. #& washing than two little ones. #|a# | was making leas money than island, saw the accident a Nd * Have a regular schedule and #|my wife, I quit my job and began The young men had gone with! Ht] 0d oS @ § en ou : *® foliow it, with cooking, scrub @| doing the housework myself. HALF HOUR | tries to the Baeron Riese plenic DR. C. F. LATHROP x cree OE ACRE card St #) | Mace see Wo bare Seun Sble to at the home of Hermann Bolta, on TT . C.F. * the baby and everything else. & get ehead. My wife has plenty of C 8. Gilbert and M. F. Niel, in} the east side of Mercer island, about et X 2139-14-15 mane Bank Bidg, |* But, once in a while, | work, and I ran the house.” the launch Afrow, rescued Willlam|a quarter of 2 mile from Fortuna re ere a § or OF he ind Pike. * smash your schedule and do #/ “How do you get al with it?” |) Dicting, and a young woman who|Park.’ They had neither had any ’ x *® as you please for a day, so you 7 ‘Come and see.” bh answered, gave her name az Mise Black, lastlexperience in cance bat the lake a #& won't get tired of it. and took the visitor on @ tour of |night, after the couple had been | looked #0 peacefut that they thought oe — ‘% Nourishing food and a quiet, # |inspection. immersed in the chilly waters of|they would be safe. They paddled ee) 0 Be Pie f orderly home are the best #| The kitchen and pantry were|Lake Washington, near Lesehilout, Koust waving bis band at his es # guarantees of domestic hap #|neat and orderly. 80 were the oth-| Park for half an hour mother be they left . ie vi piness bs of bale gg ann gp an| The two ers taken A werng and! In & few minutes the rest of the Otherwise” : ie i m em. gone out, when it snddenly | , We bought the entire high ixakeett tt ete te & & & The floors were Immaculate, The iSized When they came te the pot aaagragh Sosa W briyd Me se Soot Ente eck ot. Mile Curia ace “al table was set for the evening meal Itace they grabbed the sides of the!” Knust was employed at the Clark During the past eight days our Company has been telling % : vi 3 cial to The Star ¢ windows were n. The ¢ ; > A ‘ 304 Re sys: pile cu Rea aioe er gt ' 4 ; ae te dana ) ele cur leanoe, hung on and called lustily | Sheet Metal Works, 604 Railroad the citizens of Seattle of its growth, methods of operation and ie a ki CHICAGO July 8——"Housekeep- | '4/ns hung as curtains ought to | for help, Their frantic cries wer $25 & $20 Willows... .$8 & $10 shang. Everywhere there seemed to| heard for a distance of two miles $12 & $15 French Plumes. .$5 [ing is the lonesomest work in the! be touches of a woman's hand ' , rn French Heads, each......... $2 | world” eays isaac Danielson, | “L Go it all,” said Ieunc. “Mre.lsqarchlignts nnn NOT | Knuat, Is caahlor of the Pauheuser HEFTER HAT & PLUME CO. Isaac ought to know. For Isaac Danielson is tired when she comes ‘ and woman in eur city to keep our factories running full time. 361 Arcade Bidg., Fi home, so I take care of everything, * a 2 et Den meseant Ane int;|even the baby—he's three years|OUR PRECISE ARTIST QUAKE SHOCK : Most of all, we have urged upon Seattleites the necessity of buy- brawny, well-setup househusband 414 « AT FAIRBANKS ing Seattle-made goods. he is. “And the mendin, This will be the last of our present series of talks. Before and lived with his parents at Eastlake. His father, Henry business ideals. We have told of our six clay product factories employing 950, Seattle workmen, with an annual payroll of $1,050,000, We have told of the millions spent by us in Seattle, of the millions brought by us into Seattle. We have attempted to show flow we are trying to furnish continudtis employment to our workmen and how we need the support of every man “And what's a ‘househusband’?” “l do it mostly he said. “1! you ask. ‘ ‘ . Tut, tat! Surely you know that cerecinds aah ‘and my wife's the sexes are changing places.) Remodeled, cleaned. blocked. re sewed, dyed, trimmed—made ike new. When the housewife goes out par N IN my, United Prose Leases wire) MODEL MILLINERY J husties for a living, somebody's 0 JUNCTION Y G RUANKS, Alaskans July &—| closing we want to say as emphatically as we can ‘ fi Bank W to stay at home and do the Aca BZ sae ye ‘violent earthquake ever rs ) a Pd s —— work. Hence the househusband. | ON RESTRICTED | {known here took pla , “Buy Seattle-made products when you are offered a dole | Fe Ball d Busi Dir Let Isaac do it!” said Mrs. }Saturday night, the lar’s worth for each dollar spent—not otherwise.” # a Gil LAS ectory Danielson. 80 Isaac obediently fell | DISTRICT | mo) Jcontinuously for 10 seconds. Lexs | ote cks Beattle ix ‘ : ; into line with modern economic! NOW violent shocks occurred throughout | Support Seattle manufacturers, spend your money at BE GUIDED BY THE ADVER.| home, give Séattle-made goods every show, but only when Se ~ tendencies. | There @ c the night. Louis Anderson fore ; TISEMINTS BELOW. THEY aArE| ‘2% ere is no injunetion today ‘ : GELLAME Aue WL MRE act, 2 representative of The against the operation of the re ae ee Ce pee Cet attle manufacturers offer you a first-class article at a reason : q YOUR EVERY WANT Star ealled at the Danielson flat he | stricted district maintained during was killed as a result of the earth- | able price. If the article is inferior, if the price is too high, if 3 found Mr. Danielson at the wash-|the regime of Former Mayor Hi| ~ quake. He was suffocated beneath | an Gere 1 : DAIRY tab, putting through a big washing Gill. ’ a huge slab of earth which the| he service is poor, buy elsewhere, Do not spend a dollar on ‘ eae - —|with the skill and speed of a $2 The injunction was dismissed Sat “Fast black.” quake loosened from the roof of the Seattle-made products if you only get ninety cents’ worth im | ae BRICK ICE CREAM aday laundry woman urday by Judge R. B, Albertson, in tere mine | return. : Three Flavors Dressed in an old pair of trousers|the case of James B. : “Which is the lightest, a ton of ont | eae ee . —— e. dards ess and a sleeveless undershirt, Isaac| against H. C, Gill, as sce eae coal.or @ tom of feathers? The carthquake shock was re- Our Companf makes a 3 Try It. You'll Like It. looked more ke a shot putter or| was filed May 4, 1910, The order| “A ton of coal.” Leni se Dn note ye Ma bat. 18 ; Royal Dairy, 5426 Leary Av. 1 = washwoman, had been directed against Gill, | University of Waxhington. “ALL ” Be fa x as manipulating a wringer.|Chief of Pollee Wappenstein, and ' bee Se i EMBALMERS Fine a pda and things were going | the owners of the bawdy houses STARRETT HERE | ars i: a deal Wight or Day oe Poa og bog white heap. | By stipulation, each side pays its Hoth Phones 8108 " : ange Our product when it leaves the factory is the best produet ‘ 1 is Erom & r was at his|own costs of the action W. A, Starrett, a member of the producible. Our sales force is efficient and glad to serve, Our i : Fs side. Clouds of steam rose from| Of course the law against the re Ayers company which is seeking to selling lad pe Seer we SCE t Pa Ww. a, MAYEInLD pie. & ash boller on the stove |stricted district {s still in force negotiate with the port commis. th B le includes a reasonable profit and no more, Im o ; ure!” he said heartily, when |the injunction order being unneces |sioners for the operation of the | other words, d [ BALLARD 9 |the Interviewer asked hi other | “4 MAS, LOUIG JAMES) ) ‘ ; | : 4 ra oe Pecan tn bod is Mie wenger sary Sem 5 ee IN Barber SsiAne termlRels, scrived! ta We offer Seattleites a full dollar's worth for each dollar bal ce ELL LE LES EES]: CECE CEE “HOLDING A HUSBAND” member of the Thompson-$ | — \ Z ae oe men of the Thompson-Starrett ve E Ballard Shack Metal Pte \* ~ Other Orpheum Acts cting firm of New York, and We are done for the present. We have t« people of ? oO. Tt. i ao CARRIES GLASS IN JAW pe nr as A | rame here to study the hydro. our city th Impo s y "I y t n i ae diy “PUmm ace wore whe F th WASHINGTON, July 8.—Rather a remarkable experience was % |xraphic and engineering features of | concern in this a Wal et be ral ap uss nee <a Un SPECIALTY lw at of George E. Diggs, head waiter in a fashionable apart # | TESS the terminals, he declared this | at e have asked them to helt to keep she d Ballard. Sheet Metal Works | 4 sent, who, for almost a lifetime, unknowingly carried in his & | morning. our workmen employed and our factories busy. We know that 4 Getabio, Hae Pising, Contactor anatomy a piece of glass one-eighth of an inch wide and five. # Ni i - Seattleites will see the fairness of our plea and respond heartily. | Gutters,” Hotel and Restaurant : pone F an Inch long. Although the glass had been hidden in * “A WYOMING R i] B H ng e flesh of his jaw for a quarter of a century, Diggs did not #| OMANCE” = | HIT Y CAR : _Gonerst mal'sa mons worn _|$ heesn'tahyct, ne Mm {OF quarter of a century, Binge did net | so coupeya and Cowpinee0 || « , : Denny-Renton Clay and Coal Co. : |* siclan, who prescribed a liniment, which had the effect of draw. «| WUITE'S UNRIDABLE MULE Milford” ‘Tonmant, 0). Sam tence . i. * ing the glass to the surface of the skin. Feeling a hard sub> ba, & Fyn Se eae er | : : % stance in his jaw, Diggs pulled it out and found it was a frag *| Th PAN eer ar Nag lo ae ~ % ment of glass. He explains that when but 4 years old, he pulled e ‘AGES, was taken (o the elty hospital, un- —_——-- lis i : o * a window down on himself, and that pieces of giase stuck in his #|Matinee Daily Twice Nightly conscious, suffering from “concus : ae a * jaw, but at the time it was thought that all of them had been & ~ Hon of the | braia,. He., crossed = a . p a feneved. * ruKo- Merine aiesee Westlake, evidently expecting the A ; % ‘i #| Sensational Japanese Acrobats | #8 would, stop at John. Tennai ° . oo oe eee ee ee ee es l-Keature Bt is a street sweeper, living at 36: peony KKK RHR Me and 20, Mertdtan av; —_ . Bi. ie

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