The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 8, 1912, Page 3

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)

THE STAR—TUESDAY; OCTOBER 6, 1912. HIS COACH IS TOO MUCH FOR ALL-ROUND CHAMP--JIM THORPE|+ °\'"* “*¥® oF storms « " PITTSAHURG, Oct 7.—James| WashingtonJefferson game. The | "a Wee atom Thorpe of the Carliste Indian school, great Tndfan athlete strayed from Adopted by U winner of the all around athletic| he path of prohibition, and War WASHINGTON, Oct. 8.—The championship at the recent Olym pa dd eo € wasnt him nipping “barocyclometer,” an tnatru ble games in Sweden, it today com | SHHHSCHSHHSHSHO HOH OOOO HHO HOO OOOSD * THEY'RE SINGING IN ENGLAND: “THE * ° LAND! THE LAND! ’TWAS GOD WHO . ig GAVE THE LAND!” " HOH HHHHHH OHHH HHHHHHHHHHHOHHE : BY WILLIAM SHEPHERD LONDON, Oct. 8.—Folks in English cities are as much stirred up ever politicn just now as are the folks of Seattle r to The problem here in England itself is not home rule for Ireland, or 5 Restores color ¢ vated more battleships, or woman's suffrage, It's the land faded hair; Cleanses, cools They're talking about higher taxes for land on the streets, as| and invigorates the Scalp, y Americans talk trusts; they're discussing it in parlors and saloons, and ‘ 4 moves Dandruff-there- the labor unions are all talking against landlords, ‘Theyre even| 2 © winging songs about It, One of them, to the tune of “Marching Through| by giving the hair a chance Georgia,” is often sung at the land meetings, It goes to grow in a healthy natural way and stopping its falling ! —— | Piaelielelel Relat ehet tel OVE TROUBLES HAVE OVERWHELMED WAR HERO “Give me that bottle,” shouted) g pent 9 sensitive as to detect Delled to acknowledge the suprem- | Warner, arrrienee 600 miles away, acy of Glenn Warner, coach of] Thorpe refused and @ lively nabling a to wt Carlisie, after the decisive manner | nc rimmage ensued, Warner finally in which the latter “trimmed” him) got the bottle and Thorpe, who had in the lobby of a hotel here | momentarily resorted to the pracy Warner waa sore, it ie said, be | tice of his ancestora by emitting a cause he belloved Thorpe indulged | series of yells heard for blocks in too much fiery Muid during the| meekly accompanied his conqueror WHO PAINTED tloar of storms, is to be install ed by the navy department in all of the naval stations on the Atlantic coast, and perhaps on the ships of the Atlantic fleet This instrument is the inven tion of the K Jowe Algue, di rector of the Philippine weath * * * * * * * * * . * * * * * # * * . * * FRR RRR RRR RRR ae * * Petteee eet tee ee eae “Tho land! ‘Tho land! "T'was God wh > th ! . . or bats “ “" who gave the land Is P bureau The land! ‘The land! The ground on which we stand! out. Keeps hair soft and |* If your paper is not dell W/aARRRRRRA RARE Why should we be raKare, with the ballot in our hand? flossy. ——Is not a dye. A I ER T ANK?!: Be. pr ee hag ye it any vot a an eve See eee ve ERO’ plete $1.00 and $05 st Drug Stores or direct | every afternoon, an a ee vooa receipt # lealer's came, e . Baltimor, Ma.—After bein t “Why 7 9 = ow 1 ell « . c o Why does the land play so important art in English ities?” 1} Bend Ie tor trial bottle Philo He tank” nat ia itn rbd water | pr yt ay i gt try hd gen S6t,tha than four months, the| asked Joseph Fels, the Awericun millionaire, who is greatly interested | Seecdee Coy Newerk, N 2, Us B. ation that is - bark Daylight, Capt, Charles Ander-| in English politic : likely to revive the hostility be | * ™4naer, Main'9400, The Star ®} non, from Be ‘ " : “ y bel, aubscrib * »mbay, i in port here Recause #0 many English people are starvi About 600,000 peo tween the freshmen and the soph LS ae They ate coc, a | teaay with three of her crew dead] ple in London alone, or one in onary 10, ure atiaye on uke 000 veo: | KEEPS YOU LOOKING YOUNG freshmen say the snyeraity: TBO! © tied to an early and o resuiar #| 70m, der-berl and six more’ suffer-| starvation, and London te supposed to be the richest city in the world h #aY the sophs did it, the! : ; ing from the same disease. And there's as great poverty in the very cente f the fi ing FOR SALE AND RECOMMENDED sopha crows their fingers and point | * dellvery., Boys who franme * ‘ pend , y centers of the farming)" BY BARTELL DRUG STORES he the mB oy. | #& Up or otherwise mutiiate the * ae ‘ Sendak penta tie aa weit | paper whould be reported. «| At Fountains & Kisewhere There 1s going to be such a row kicked up in the session of parlia-|—— — —— for repainting that reaches over|® * Ask for ment Just opened that the govern t will have to give attention to the| ra the hundred mark and says “pay.” |®***® eR ee Aenean question of untaxing labor and the trades and placing the taxation where | Are You Not Happy? Hut he says it to the freshmen, and st J ee ath “ go | it belongs, on the social value of land ares: tae rah, 9 “The American people don't know anything about the land question, Why? The freshmen say the sopho 9 as compared with EngliMimen. The average Mnglishman, whether he's i ine teh mores painted the tack with froeh:| yer &S @ merchant or a tramp, knows more or leas intimately about the land PF IB nt les» ee men numerals to bring down the| The Original and Genuine problem. 1 don't mean about the land problem in England alone, but aventuele. ye ser yong — the wrath of the powers to be on thelr | Sbout the world-wide problem, which exists in the United States, as|f| dyspepsia, ulcers 4 e jon, in fact, heads. The sophomores come back | well as anywhere elne, an to the right of one man to own vast quantities| 4 with the remark that their fepaaes | arsd pa fl a ' MALTED Mw 1 LK of land, when other human beings haven't a place to put their feet.” all diseases of the stomach and | | to the school would not permit} = ES Ee ee Rowels, appendiotiia, soute oF poe = - =2 : them to be guilty of such an act of | The Food-drink for All Ages. [OO Naka RRR RA RRAR RRA AAD a* Sootigath ale soi teins peniata Vandalism, } Ayer’s Sarsaparilla is a tonic, | At restaurants, hotels, and fountains, | * iT Tt have cured. 2 Sacramento—A requisition from|a regular tonic. ‘There is not | Delicious invigorsing and matarne, | Faris true that old mason iv atone oenild asking questions 2. Private sanitarlum and office, Oregon w Ronored by the F-aegpel | Range Me or ayo in it. Cy Keep or ee F ORS | * that a man cannot answer,” remarked Popleigh we ip 5517 22nd N. Ww. ce today for the return of] have the steady, even gain } t trav * “What's the trouble now?” quesied his frind Singleton * y. hp a i comes from a strong tonic. | A quick luoch prepared in a minute | * “This morning,” replied Popleigh, “my little boy asked me *, Dr. Nuernberg ehanan is under arrest in San Fran-/ASk your doctor all about this. | Take no imitation. Just say “HORLICK'S . Fahey men were sent to congress, and 3 couldn't tell him, ¢ eer wg ae ape, claco $0. Aver Gn, Kewell Seen, Not in Any Milk Trast Saeco eee eee ee ee 2 ee et. aapnmemesni GEN. SICKLES AT GETTYSBURG On the afternoon of July 2, 1863, Gen. Sickles—Sickles of ‘Third army corpe—Sickies of the wheatfieid—Sickles of the bloody ground between the Devil's Den and the Peach ped an undying fame on the field at Gettysburg— gad left a leg bebind! Gea, Sickles with bis Third army corps held the left of line right in front of Round Top. Confederate Gen. had his eye on Round Top, and had he reached it taked Cemetery ridge and routed the Northern Meade had given Sickles orders to stay where he slong about 2 o'clock Sickles got the idea that the only Longstreet wes for him to make a mad rush across from Devil's Den to Peach Orchard. felock the famous Third corps started across; all the band-to-band battle, Sickles riding up and down . giving orders and cheering his men. kles noticed blood on his leg; he had heen shot any attention to it at the time. He took a leath- and buckled it around bis leg, just above the wound, himself from bleeding to death. And still he led the + desperate charge! AtT o'clock he had made Peach Orchard and had done more a apy other general to defeat the Confederate forces at * night his leg was cut off and buried on the field of It Is this wife who, after a sepa- of Maj. ration of 32 years, a few days ago ea, the dashing civil war soldier came to her aged husband's ald, | ef Gettysburg, would paying his debts and saving his lees ff it were not| war relics. fact that love scandals have | “The Other Woman” "emeng American war) Now, however, comes the revela- tion of the “other woman”—or rath- jer, of two other women, Mra. por] omy formct|Sickles has declared that the gen- to Spain, scion of one eral's housekeeper, Mies Eleanor proudest families, at| Earle Wilmerding, has an improper ‘@ &7, sits alone in bis, influence over him, and has had ®F. Mitnsion, surrounded by; for many years. The so cusa- ‘Wieden war relics and his|tlon, however, is more startling. ‘editions of beautiful books,|He avers that for 19 years, begin- these Or ning In <879, his father maintained - oo gimme ~% We leproper relations with a New His life is now revealed |York society woman and present guceession of love tragedies, | religious worker, whose name, for | the end is bitterness. obvious reasons, is not given here. the corner, iu a fashion-| She was married in 1899. The son apartment, ia the gener. | has printed some of his father’s al wife, the proud |lesed love jetters to her, which ofa Spanish grandee, long {how his ardor still unabated as re- by her husband as un-|cently as 1897. and still rejected after) Gea. Sickles now angrily denies her jewels to save his | the rges made by his wife and collection from the auc: #00 hammer distance away lives an-| still beautiful, though Prime of life—the wife of 4 social and religious that all her years of atone- te pel a Rot buried the sins of /paid by the retatle: | sioners. ze - | ae gd at sea is Stanton | Sum paid , the aged general's son, | | made a shameful exposure t@ hi these prices, unless otherwise indl- and is planning to/| cated, are for strictly first gradox revelations. . fs an humble car | Eggs, ranch “ 9@ 140 old, who, after 27 Prult—semag Price. Ne apples 6o@ 1.75 to learn the secret of | Yew apples oo Row declares that he be-| Pears .... the veritable son Of| Dreamed Ments—selting Pr by the general's first | Chucks trees Was involved in a love | Joins, No. J. full eut.. Over half a century ago. on ie | Cows, oan i i #7 ef i oletfs s 2 ag E i E E i SSeeseeeee eee eeeeseeeeeeeeeeeeete RIDGWAYS TEA _We know that Ridg- ways Tea is the best tea grown, absolutely _pure, has the true Ori- ental garden flavor, \S and that you will con- | — C sider it the most de- lightful beverage you Te ever drank — but you Ns es mee NY. will not know it till __— a you have given it a trial. You want the best tea, so get a package of Ridgways-today. It is more economi- cal than ordinary teas because it goes so much farther. Sealed in air-tight, dust - proof, quarter, c Avor Yo pale A RETAINED "rou GARDEN J a and pound pac ~ $1, 75c, 50¢ a Pound yer Teresa Bagioll, Antonio Bagioli, a fa Halian musician. She became A love affair with Phitip , then United States Sttorney at Washington Key to death, and sep his young wife. It is fred “Summers Moly Hoboken now declares to| mother, and he like his belief that she Pork sausege, wife, and that Gen. | hive f fs his father, though | tape"! eet may never have ‘ Smoked Meats—Selling Priee, rth. Hama . ‘ Sickles’ military career is . He came out of the}; * § | Dressed hogs ..+++++ | Trimmed sides . ire # ff i ham . tongue, each figure. At Gettys-| Dried beet r th Fal Fat Beha pom oncnl sory | an tgeheukeene samen Schwabacher Bros. & Co with the loss of a| Spr py 10 , Salat BE Tis tons, however, aid not | rereya: vive’ |. pa . - \ Distributors Midinies the general's gallantry, | Roosters Mve, ‘ib “¢ ~ ‘i Berns soldier oF a woven He |e sa Nive H : Vion Yo an ever the dashing | Geese sallix that % : S S Taner the stn a is » At All Grocers Bickles was given the post of Catrots, local v.cesscs ABD 88 wotssedor to Spain. Th he | Beets, local .. 1.25 the love of Senorita Greagh, sack Wen me daughter of a Span- aon” ee Of state, of ancient | Tomatoes, 20-1b 50@ . 40 They were mar-| Cauliflower, dow Hothouse lettuce, er'te .85@ 1.00 " tuce, dow vaio sildren were born of this |t ibers, dow. 1 Who has become “ bitter enemy, and Edna, now | Cantsloup: "y doz, Feed, Selling Fi Crackenthorpe, wite of Capt.| wastern Washington Crackenthorpe of the British em- y okyo, Japan, The same thet had marred the rat marriage overtook | He charged his wife | norte «+. ¥. and separated from | Cra. 2 @ has always pro her innocence vr

Other pages from this issue: